Results 181 to 190 of about 13,452 (244)
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U. S. Foreign Policy and the Soviet Satellites

The Review of Politics, 1949
The term “satellite” clearly indicates a relationship of inequality and dependence between master and “follower” states. It stands to reason, therefore, that dealings with the present satellite states in Eastern Europe cannot be viewed in the same light as relations with completely independent nations, but must be considered special problems within the
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Devil Theories of U. S. Foreign Policy

Worldview, 1970
Devil theories of history and politics are the offspring of curiosity and frustration. Sensitive participants and observers of the human drama want to know why events have turned out as they have, especially when they end in disaster. Why World War I? Why the "fall" of China?
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U. S. Influences on Foreign Monetary Policy

Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1992
While the determinants of U.S. money growth have been intensively examined, the determinants of foreign money growth have been relatively overlooked. This study employs an IS/LM/aggregate supply model to examine what variables influence money growth in seven countries. Particular attention is devoted to the impact of U.S.
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U. S. Foreign Policy and the Balance of Power

The Review of Politics, 1948
International politics, like nature, is a system of processes. There are no simple causes and effects of historical developments. The record of the past tends to determine the present — until circumstance intervenes. Peoples, like individuals, are at the mercy of what is called chance, and an apparently meaningless combination of circumstances may ...
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The British Labour Left and U. S. Foreign Policy

American Political Science Review, 1951
Perhaps it is the absence of a substantial communist opposition in Great Britain that has caused Americans to be less concerned about the reactions of our British allies than of the continental nations to the recent foreign policy of the United States. However, if Americans assumed an almost universal British acceptance of the foreign policy adopted by
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Challenges to U. S. Foreign Policy in a Changing World

NASSP Bulletin, 1990
U.S. Secretary of State James A. Baker in this lead article describes the challenges the United States will face on the world front during the 1990s, The country can meet these challenges through an edu cated citizenry, he writes.
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U. S. Foreign Policy and the Education of Black South Africans

Comparative Education Review, 1985
Since the Soweto student uprising in 1976, interest in the education of blacks in South Africa has grown appreciably within the United States. Of particular interest is the Reagan administration's high profile on this issue. Both Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Chester Crocker and Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Lawrence
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U. S. perceptions of Soviet foreign policy, 1945–85

Socialism and Democracy, 1986
(1986). U. S. perceptions of Soviet foreign policy, 1945–85. Socialism and Democracy: Vol. 2, No. 2, pp. 17-25.
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Alternative Governance in the Northern Triangle and Implications for U. S. Foreign Policy

2015
This study examines different forms of alternative governance in the absence of a strong state presence in the Northern Triangle of Central America—along part of the Guatemala-Honduras border—a region notorious for its soaring homicide rates, corruption, violence, and emigration to the United States.
Douglas Farah, Carl Meacham
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U. S. Foreign Policy.

Pacific Affairs, 1944
E. K. Williams   +2 more
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