May’s books of the month

With the end of the semester, I can now proceed with this month’s book selections. The international relations book of the month is The Silence of the Rational Center , by Stefan Halper and Jonathan Clarke. Halper and Clarke offer up an attack against The Big Idea in foreign policy. They argue that the media ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

With the end of the semester, I can now proceed with this month's book selections. The international relations book of the month is
The Silence of the Rational Center
, by Stefan Halper and Jonathan Clarke. Halper and Clarke offer up an attack against The Big Idea in foreign policy. They argue that the media marketplace tends to generate ideas that are provocative but wrong. Furthermore, the demand for 24/7 content reduces Big Ideas to empty slogans. In crisis moments, these forces overwhelm the "rational center" of experts that are capable of generating sound policy advice. Everyone comes in for attack -- cable news networks, think tanks, and academia. In many ways, this book is the bitter chaser to Jeffry Legro's Remaking the World. Not all of Halper and Clarke's book is convincing. Indeed, in their fusillades aaginst the idea entrepreneurs, they engage in some of the simplifying, disingenuous tactics that they claim to abhor. That said, as rants go, it's an interesting rant. The general interest book is
Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism, and the Economics of Growth and Prosperity
, by William Baumol, Robert Litan, and Carl Schramm. The authors are interested in the holiest of economic holies -- the sources of innovation and growth. They are interested in determining the optimal mixture of firms, policies, and government institutions that can foster radical path-breaking innovations. Their conclusion? A mixture of small and established firms, small barriers to entry, flexible labor markets, and -- wait for it -- free trade. Go check them out!

With the end of the semester, I can now proceed with this month’s book selections. The international relations book of the month is
The Silence of the Rational Center

, by Stefan Halper and Jonathan Clarke. Halper and Clarke offer up an attack against The Big Idea in foreign policy. They argue that the media marketplace tends to generate ideas that are provocative but wrong. Furthermore, the demand for 24/7 content reduces Big Ideas to empty slogans. In crisis moments, these forces overwhelm the “rational center” of experts that are capable of generating sound policy advice. Everyone comes in for attack — cable news networks, think tanks, and academia. In many ways, this book is the bitter chaser to Jeffry Legro’s Remaking the World. Not all of Halper and Clarke’s book is convincing. Indeed, in their fusillades aaginst the idea entrepreneurs, they engage in some of the simplifying, disingenuous tactics that they claim to abhor. That said, as rants go, it’s an interesting rant. The general interest book is
Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism, and the Economics of Growth and Prosperity
, by William Baumol, Robert Litan, and Carl Schramm. The authors are interested in the holiest of economic holies — the sources of innovation and growth. They are interested in determining the optimal mixture of firms, policies, and government institutions that can foster radical path-breaking innovations. Their conclusion? A mixture of small and established firms, small barriers to entry, flexible labor markets, and — wait for it — free trade. Go check them out!

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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