University Press of Kansas Logo

The Presidency of James Earl Carter, Jr.

Second Edition, Revised

Burton I. Kaufman and Scott Kaufman

September 2006
288 pages, 14 photographs, 6 x 9
American Presidency Series
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1470-7, $35.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1471-4, $17.95 (t)

Book cover imageHe has been called America’s greatest ex-president, a man who lost the White House after one term but went on to become a respected spokes-man for peace and human rights.

Burton Kaufman’s book on the Carter years was hailed as the best account of his administration. This new edition probes more deeply into Jimmy Carter’s approach to the presidency and the issues that he faced. It features more information on his foreign and environmental policies and expanded coverage of his personal background—both his upbringing and naval career—along with insights into his wife’s activist role.

Drawing on Carter’s previously unavailable Handwriting File, as well as on new oral histories and Carter’s own books, Burton and Scott Kaufman show the ways in which Carter had the opportunity—but failed—to be a successful transitional president. By the fall of 1978 he had become a more effective leader than during the first part of his presidency but could not undo his earlier mistakes and continued to make serious errors of political judgment.

Weighing achievements such as the Alaska Land Bill with shortcomings such as disarray within the White House and strained relations with Congress, the authors re-examine the world events that shaped Carter’s presidency, from Koreagate and the Cuban boatlift to the Camp David accords and the Iran hostage crisis. They explore bureaucratic infighting over his human rights policies, describing how the administration’s position changed with greater emphasis on security issues after 1979; they also examine the issue of arms control in the light of newly opened Soviet archives and argue that the Vance-Brzezinski dispute was more profound than had originally been thought.

In the final analysis, the Kaufmans fault Carter for not crafting a coherent message that would offer the American people a vision on which to build a base of support and assure his success. As his reputation as an ex-president continues to grow, this updated book offers an even better understanding of his White House years.

“Based on wide research in the Carter Library and a mastery of the expanding literature about this troubled administration, this study is an important contribution to an understanding of the emergence of the modern presidency.”--Lewis L. Gould, author of The Modern American Presidency

“A balanced, comprehensive, invaluable guide to the
Carter presidency. The Kaufmans sharpen their portrait of Carter the man and deepen their account of his era and influence.”--Bruce J. Schulman, author of The Seventies

“Remains the best single account of the Carter presidency. In fact, no other book comes close.”--Leo P. Ribuffo, author of The Limits of Moderation: Jimmy Carter and the Ironies of American Liberalism

BURTON I. KAUFMAN is former dean of the School of Interdisciplinary Studies and professor of history at Miami University in Ohio and author of eight other books, including The Korean War. SCOTT KAUFMAN is associate professor of history at Francis Marion University in Florence, South Carolina, and author of two books including Confronting Communism.