Diplomatic History

Editor
Thomas W. Zeiler, University of Colorado Boulder

Associate Editors
Nathan J. Citino, Colorado State University

Kenneth A. Osgood, Colorado School of Mines

Assistant Editors
Daniel M. DuBois, University of Colorado Boulder
Benjamin C. Montoya , University of Colorado Boulder

Board of Editors

Kenneth A. Osgood, Colorado School of Mines (2012)

Amy L. Sayward, Middle Tennessee State University (2012)

Thomas A. Schwartz, Vanderbilt University of Melbourne (2012)

Sayuri Guthrie-Shimizu, Michigan State University (2013)

Paul A. Kramer, Vanderbilt University (2013)

Zach Levey, University of Haifa (2013)

Laura Belmonte, Oklahoma State University (2014)

Mario Del Pero, University of Bologna (2014)

Amy Greenberg, Penn State University (2014)

Mark A. Lawrence, University of Texas at Austin (2015)

Andrew Preston, University of Cambridge (2015)

Christopher Endy, California State University, Los Angeles (2015)

The University of Colorado Boulder is home to Diplomatic History, the journal of record for Historians of American Foreign Relations.

The History Department at the University of Colorado Boulder welcomes graduate applications to its vibrant program in American Foreign Relations, of which the journal is an integral part. For information on studying United States Foreign Relations in the graduate program, please visit the History Department's website.

Diplomatic History is the only journal devoted to U.S. international history and foreign relations, broadly defined, including grand strategy, diplomacy, and issues involving gender, culture, ethnicity, and ideology. It examines U.S. relations in a global and comparative context, and its broad focus appeals to a number of disciplines, including political science, international economics, American history, national security studies, and Latin American, Asian, African, and European studies.

Current Table of Contents

Guidelines for manuscript submissions. Please submit manuscripts electronically to diplomat@colorado.edu

Thomas W. Zeiler, professor of American Foreign Relations at the University of Colorado Boulder, is the Editor. From 2001 to 2011 Professor Robert D. Schulzinger was the journal's editor-in-chief

Scholars may subscribe to Diplomatic History by becoming a member of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. Founded in 1967, the Society is the only association devoted to the study of American diplomatic history and foreign relations. Its distinguished membership roster includes a diverse group of diplomatic historians, researchers, and scholars from the United States and around the world.

For more information about how to subscribe, please visit Diplomatic History online or contact Wiley Periodicals, 1-800-835-6770.

Officers and Council of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations

Diplomatic History recently founded the Colorado Foreign Affairs Seminar (CFAS), a seminar series dedicated to engaging graduate students of CU's History Department with scholars and practitioners of U.S. diplomatic relations. Also, CFAS is a forum where our senior graduate students of American foreign relations can share their work with colleagues and get critical feedback. There have been three CFAS meetings. Last December Doug Snyder shared with colleagues his article,“‘Fantastic and Absurd Utterances’: The Vietnam War and Misperceptions of Anti-Americanism in U.S.-French Relations, 1966-1967," which was recently published in the Journal of Transatlantic Studies (issue 10, no. 1, March 2012, 84-103). This winter Tim Borstelmann from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln came to share about his recent book The 1970s: A New Global History from Civil Rights to Economic Inequality (Princeton University Press, 2011). Finally, in late February Mike Hammer, Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs and Spokesman for the State Department, met with graduate students to discuss careers in the State Department.