What happens when an institution built to project American generosity becomes the clearest mirror of America’s contradictions? In An Autopsy of American Altruism: The Rise and Fall of USAID, Bosco Mutarambirwa delivers the most comprehensive and unflinching account ever written of the United States Agency for International Development—its birth in Cold War aspiration, its evolution into a global development empire, and its collapse under pressures both foreign and domestic. Drawing on six decades of geopolitics, field realities, institutional memory, and the shifting moral landscape of American power, this book offers a panoramic narrative of how an agency created to uplift the world became trapped by the very ideals it was meant to champion.
USAID began with Kennedy’s soaring vision of enlightened modernity: engineers drilling new wells, educators modernizing classrooms, and agronomists helping nations feed themselves. Yet behind the inspirational imagery was a deeper tension—development that preached self-reliance while imposing American frameworks, promoted partnership while dictating priorities, and claimed neutrality while serving strategic interests. These contradictions followed USAID into every decade that shaped global affairs. Vietnam exposed the impossibility of separating development from war. Latin America revealed the limits of political engineering. Africa unveiled the mismatch between donor blueprints and lived realities. Each failure hardened into structure, each lesson into bureaucracy, and each criticism into another layer of process.
By the dawn of the 21st century, USAID was a paradox: globally present yet strategically uncertain, technically sophisticated yet operationally constrained, rich in expertise yet poor in agility. The War on Terror delivered the breaking point. Development merged with counterinsurgency, aid workers traveled in armored convoys, and projects became instruments of stabilization rather than transformation. A well was no longer a well—it was a grievance-reduction tool. A school was no longer a school—it was a symbol meant to shift allegiance. USAID’s moral distinction dissolved as it became a junior partner to the military, its humanitarian identity overshadowed by the logic of war.
Meanwhile, the world changed faster than Washington could adjust. China built roads while America issued reports. Gulf states, regional powers, and emerging economies filled the spaces USAID once occupied. The Global South matured into a landscape of pluralism—choosing Chinese infrastructure, Indian pharmaceuticals, African fintech, and indigenous governance models rather than any single Western blueprint. USAID was not rejected; it was outgrown.
The agency’s final challenge came from within the United States. Populist skepticism, congressional hostility, and a rising belief that “America must fix itself before fixing others” eroded the quiet bipartisan consensus that once shielded foreign aid. Without a domestic constituency, USAID became politically vulnerable. Budgets tightened, oversight multiplied, missions shrank, and the institution’s psychological core weakened. Officers who had dedicated their lives to global service found themselves packing boxes in silence, their purpose dissolved not by scandal but by shifting national mood.
An Autopsy of American Altruism is more than institutional history. It is a sweeping meditation on empire, power, legitimacy, and the illusions nations tell themselves. It examines how development became both a tool of influence and a burden of identity, and why the world ultimately learned to design its own path once American supervision faded. Bold, elegant, and deeply human, this book offers the definitive explanation of how USAID rose, fractured, and fell—and what its story reveals about America, the world, and the century ahead.
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Da: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. For more than six decades, USAID served as the outward expression of American goodwill and global leadership. Created in the optimistic fervor of the early Cold War, the agency promised partnership, stability, and development to nations struggling with poverty, conflict, and institutional collapse. Yet behind the soaring language of altruism lay a more complicated reality-one shaped by political agendas, competing bureaucracies, strategic interests, and the shifting tides of U.S. foreign policy. As American influence expanded and contracted around the world, USAID became both a tool of national strategy and a mirror of America's evolving identity.An Autopsy of American Altruism offers the most comprehensive and unflinching examination to date of how USAID rose to prominence, how it functioned, and how it ultimately unraveled. Bosco Mutarambirwa traces the agency's arc from its founding under President Kennedy through its heyday in the 20th century to its fragmentation in the decades following 9/11. Drawing on global historical context, development economics, and geopolitical analysis, he reveals how misaligned incentives, ideological battles, and recurring waves of policy experimentation slowly eroded the agency's effectiveness.From Vietnam's nation-building failures to Afghanistan's reconstruction nightmares, from Latin America's political crosswinds to Africa's ambitious development experiments, USAID's history is inseparable from the broader history of American power. Mutarambirwa shows how aid projects were frequently shaped less by local needs and more by Washington priorities; how competing visions within the U.S. government created chronic instability; and how global rivals-including China, Russia, the Gulf states, and emerging regional powers-exploited America's inconsistencies to expand their influence.As new development models took hold across the Global South and traditional Western institutions struggled to adapt, USAID found itself increasingly adrift. Its identity blurred, its credibility weakened, and its strategic purpose questioned not only abroad but within the U.S. foreign policy establishment itself. The result, Mutarambirwa argues, was an agency unable to reconcile its founding ideals with the realities of a multipolar world.Urgent, deeply researched, and written with clarity and analytical depth, An Autopsy of American Altruism is more than the story of one agency's failure. It is a lens on the transformation of American global power and the limits of what development assistance can achieve when strategy, politics, and values collide. For policymakers, scholars, development practitioners, and citizens seeking to understand the future of U.S. leadership, this book provides a rare and essential guide to the past, present, and uncertain road ahead. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9798993665382
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Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. For more than six decades, USAID served as the outward expression of American goodwill and global leadership. Created in the optimistic fervor of the early Cold War, the agency promised partnership, stability, and development to nations struggling with poverty, conflict, and institutional collapse. Yet behind the soaring language of altruism lay a more complicated reality-one shaped by political agendas, competing bureaucracies, strategic interests, and the shifting tides of U.S. foreign policy. As American influence expanded and contracted around the world, USAID became both a tool of national strategy and a mirror of America's evolving identity.An Autopsy of American Altruism offers the most comprehensive and unflinching examination to date of how USAID rose to prominence, how it functioned, and how it ultimately unraveled. Bosco Mutarambirwa traces the agency's arc from its founding under President Kennedy through its heyday in the 20th century to its fragmentation in the decades following 9/11. Drawing on global historical context, development economics, and geopolitical analysis, he reveals how misaligned incentives, ideological battles, and recurring waves of policy experimentation slowly eroded the agency's effectiveness.From Vietnam's nation-building failures to Afghanistan's reconstruction nightmares, from Latin America's political crosswinds to Africa's ambitious development experiments, USAID's history is inseparable from the broader history of American power. Mutarambirwa shows how aid projects were frequently shaped less by local needs and more by Washington priorities; how competing visions within the U.S. government created chronic instability; and how global rivals-including China, Russia, the Gulf states, and emerging regional powers-exploited America's inconsistencies to expand their influence.As new development models took hold across the Global South and traditional Western institutions struggled to adapt, USAID found itself increasingly adrift. Its identity blurred, its credibility weakened, and its strategic purpose questioned not only abroad but within the U.S. foreign policy establishment itself. The result, Mutarambirwa argues, was an agency unable to reconcile its founding ideals with the realities of a multipolar world.Urgent, deeply researched, and written with clarity and analytical depth, An Autopsy of American Altruism is more than the story of one agency's failure. It is a lens on the transformation of American global power and the limits of what development assistance can achieve when strategy, politics, and values collide. For policymakers, scholars, development practitioners, and citizens seeking to understand the future of U.S. leadership, this book provides a rare and essential guide to the past, present, and uncertain road ahead. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9798993665382
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Da: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Regno Unito
Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. For more than six decades, USAID served as the outward expression of American goodwill and global leadership. Created in the optimistic fervor of the early Cold War, the agency promised partnership, stability, and development to nations struggling with poverty, conflict, and institutional collapse. Yet behind the soaring language of altruism lay a more complicated reality-one shaped by political agendas, competing bureaucracies, strategic interests, and the shifting tides of U.S. foreign policy. As American influence expanded and contracted around the world, USAID became both a tool of national strategy and a mirror of America's evolving identity.An Autopsy of American Altruism offers the most comprehensive and unflinching examination to date of how USAID rose to prominence, how it functioned, and how it ultimately unraveled. Bosco Mutarambirwa traces the agency's arc from its founding under President Kennedy through its heyday in the 20th century to its fragmentation in the decades following 9/11. Drawing on global historical context, development economics, and geopolitical analysis, he reveals how misaligned incentives, ideological battles, and recurring waves of policy experimentation slowly eroded the agency's effectiveness.From Vietnam's nation-building failures to Afghanistan's reconstruction nightmares, from Latin America's political crosswinds to Africa's ambitious development experiments, USAID's history is inseparable from the broader history of American power. Mutarambirwa shows how aid projects were frequently shaped less by local needs and more by Washington priorities; how competing visions within the U.S. government created chronic instability; and how global rivals-including China, Russia, the Gulf states, and emerging regional powers-exploited America's inconsistencies to expand their influence.As new development models took hold across the Global South and traditional Western institutions struggled to adapt, USAID found itself increasingly adrift. Its identity blurred, its credibility weakened, and its strategic purpose questioned not only abroad but within the U.S. foreign policy establishment itself. The result, Mutarambirwa argues, was an agency unable to reconcile its founding ideals with the realities of a multipolar world.Urgent, deeply researched, and written with clarity and analytical depth, An Autopsy of American Altruism is more than the story of one agency's failure. It is a lens on the transformation of American global power and the limits of what development assistance can achieve when strategy, politics, and values collide. For policymakers, scholars, development practitioners, and citizens seeking to understand the future of U.S. leadership, this book provides a rare and essential guide to the past, present, and uncertain road ahead. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9798993665382
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Da: preigu, Osnabrück, Germania
Taschenbuch. Condizione: Neu. AN AUTOPSY OF AMERICAN ALTRUISM | The Rise and Fall of USAID | Bosco Mutarambirwa | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2025 | Darwin Books, an Imprint of Sterling Analytics Med | EAN 9798993665382 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand. Codice articolo 134370678
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