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African-Americans and American Foreign Policy: "Voices in the Wilderness: The Role and Influences of African-American Citizens in the Development and Formation of Foreign Policy 1919-1944"
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Abstract
This paper will demonstrate that African-Americans did articulate their concerns regarding American policy formation, to become more than voices in the wilderness. African-Americans mobilized and demanded that their issues be reflected in American foreign policy decisions. Blacks understood global issues and created linkages with people of color throughout the world to gain insight and allies in the struggle for equal rights. Whether the influence came from civic organizations...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Lucid stars: the American foreign policy tradition.
World Policy Journal
; One of the most remarkable features of American foreign policy at the end of the Cold War is the ignorance of and contempt for the national foreign policy tradition on the part of so many prominent statesmen. Most countries are guided in large part by traditional foreign policies that change only
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Hamilton's way. (foreign policy)
World Policy Journal
; ... order were the signs of a new and more difficult era in American foreign policy, and those in power began to read the foreign news with increasing interest and to embark on a major program of naval rearmament. The close of the nineteenth century and the opening ...
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The "Sole Organ" before the Court: Presidential Power in Foreign Policy Cases, 1790-1996.
Presidential Studies Quarterly
; Few substantive areas have merited as little empirical scrutiny as the Supreme Court's decisions on the conduct of U.S. foreign policy. The Court's edicts on diverse domestic policy issues such as civil rights and liberties(1) and economic regulations(2) have been given a considerable degree of
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United States Foreign Policy in the Twenty-First Century: The Crisis and Renewal of the Republican Empire.
Journal of Power and Ethics
; Abstract The last decade of the 20th Century has been a consistent record of bi-partisan failure to develop a coherent foreign policy successfully confronting both the unprecedented opportunities and threats of an evolving world in search of a new geopolitical equilibrium. Attempting to exercise
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Leaders and followers. (US foreign policy)
Foreign Policy
; ... intention to close 25 diplomatic posts in 1996. And during Clinton's visit to Ukraine in May 1995, National Public Radio provided news coverage from the BBC rather than from American sources. But often the implications presage longer-term dangers. Japanese direct ...
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A moral core for U.S. foreign policy.(Essay)
Policy Review
; IS IDEALISM DEAD? Should the promotion of American values of liberalism, democracy, human rights, and rule of law be a core element of U.S. foreign policy? Where to strike the balance between principles and interests is one of the most enduring debates about America's role in the world. But since
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The Empire Has No Clothes: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed.(Book Review)
International Journal on World Peace
; THE EMPIRE HAS NO CLOTHES: U.S. FOREIGN POLICY EXPOSED Ivan Eland Oakland, CA: The Independent Institute, 2004 298 pages, cloth, $24.95 Since the United States' response to the September 11 attacks in Afghanistan, Iraq, and through homeland security, there have been an increasing number of
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Seven in Ten Americans Favor Congressional Candidates Who Will Pursue a Major Change in Foreign Policy ; Most Americans Say Current Policies Increase Threat of Terrorism, Diminish Goodwill toward United States
U.S. Newswire
; To: National Desk Contact: Stephen Weber of the Program on International Policy Attitudes, 202-232-7500 WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Going into the November midterm elections, seven in ten Americans say they prefer Congressional candidates who will pursue a new approach to U.S. foreign
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How the United States sold its soul to win the cold war, and now cannot develop a coherent post-cold war foreign policy
International Journal
; Distinguished Research Professor of History at Montana State University. This is a slightly amended version of an address delivered to women historians at the annual meeting of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations (SHAFR), Toronto, June 2000. AT THE END OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY,
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Can realists redirect US foreign policy?
China Daily
; It is widely agreed that the biggest threat to the United States comes from the Middle East, which is the central focus of US foreign policy. Yet, it is exactly in the Middle East that the United States finds itself deeply mired in a strategic limbo. The United States has not won the war in Iraq
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