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How did the United States shape neutrality? A measured study of statecraft. Syngman Rhee’s PhD dissertation, presented to the faculty of Princeton University in candidacy for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, offers a methodical examination of the neutrality doctrine and its encounters with US foreign policy in the world war one era. Produced in the early 20th century, this academic research reference blends disciplined argument with a comparativist eye, treating neutrality not as a static legal formula but as a strategic stance shaped by shifting diplomatic pressures. Rhee places American action at the centre of comparative political analysis, tracing how debates within american political history intersected with emergent international relations study. Clear and precise, the work reads with the deliberateness of graduate-level politics training yet remains accessible enough for general readers curious about the origins of modern diplomatic practice.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Its historical importance lies in recording an early scholar’s effort to locate neutrality within evolving diplomatic practice; the dissertation contributes to the archive of Princeton University scholarship and offers a fresh vantage for those studying the interplay of us foreign policy and European balance in the world war one era. As a PhD dissertation of the early 20th century it is both a primary witness and a reasoned exercise in comparative political analysis, making it valuable for university libraries, diplomatic history collection curators and independent historians. Casual readers will find directness and intellectual rigour; collectors will prize a carefully edited heritage title that connects academic provenance with broader narratives in american political history and international relations study. A subtle, instructive window onto the ideas that shaped twentieth century diplomacy.