Few historians of the Vietnam War have covered the post-1975 era or engaged comprehensively with refugee politics humanitarianism and human rights as defining issues of the period. After Saigon''s Fall is the first major work to uncover this history. Amanda C. Demmer offers a new account of the post-War normalization of USVietnam relations by centering three major transformations of the late twentieth century: the reassertion of the US Congress in American foreign policy; the Indochinese diaspora and changing domestic and international refugee norms; and the intertwining of humanitarianism and the human rights movement. By tracing these domestic regional and global phenomena After Saigon''s Fall captures the contingencies and contradictions inherent in US-Vietnamese normalization. Using previously untapped archives to recover a riveting narrative with both policymakers and nonstate advocates at its center Demmer''s book also reveals much about US politics and society in the last quarter of the twentieth century.
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