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Academic Journals
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From:European Social PolicyPeer-ReviewedEtienne Davignon was industry commissioner during the first steel crisis. Given the state of "manifest crisis" in the sector, he set up a steel production quota scheme in October 1980, as allowed under the ECSC Treaty....
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From:Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies (Vol. 15, Issue 43) Peer-ReviewedThe Democratic Party (DP) government, covering the period 1950-60, is seen as one of the most important stages on the road to democracy in Turkey. The Republican People's Party (CHP), which ruled the country from the...
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From:Nature (Vol. 500, Issue 7462) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Kelvin S.-H. Peh 1 Author Affiliations: (1) University of Southampton, UK One route for the smuggling of wildlife parts, such as rhino horn and elephant ivory, could be closed without the need for...
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From:Journal for the Study of Antisemitism (Vol. 3, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedI want to share with you the strong commitment of the Obama administration to combat hate and promote tolerance in our world. The president began his administration speaking out against intolerance as a global ill. In...
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From:Science (Vol. 306, Issue 5705) Peer-ReviewedWith climate change and stem cell research near the top of the national agenda, and with science and technology (S&T) playing a crucial role against terrorism, a new AAAS seminar proved to be a hot ticket this fall....
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From:White House Studies (Vol. 1, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT Nearly all presidents face confirmation fights with the Senate. Both the White House and the Senate have allowed the presidential appointment process to become unnecessarily lengthy, unwieldy, complex, and...
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From:Journal of Southern History (Vol. 78, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedHISTORIANS IN RECENT YEARS HAVE TRIED HARD TO INTERNATIONALIZE the study of America's past. They have brought transatlantic and borderland perspectives to bear on events ranging from the eighteenth-century "age of...
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From:NACLA Report on the Americas (Vol. 36, Issue 3) Peer-Reviewed* Two high-ranking Cuban diplomats from the Cuban interests section in Washington, D.C., Oscar Redondo Toledo and Gustavo Machin Gomez received notice from the U.S. State Department on November 1 of their expulsion from...
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From:International Organization (Vol. 54, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIntroduction "Let's unite. And the world will listen to us" was an ad campaign used to mobilize the pro-European camp in France during the 1992 referendum on the Maastricht Treaty on European Union. [1] This slogan...
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From:Information & Culture (Vol. 48, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWorkers in information-intensive professions live in an information ecosystem in which they create, analyze, store, and communicate information as their core activities. This article illustrates how that happens through...
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From:The Catholic Historical Review (Vol. 92, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe radical changes undergone by the Church in 1917/18, and the course subsequently taken by religious affairs in Russia, had an impact on Europe that has not up to now been given the attention it deserves. (1) The tsar...
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From:Demokratizatsiya (Vol. 14, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedLuis Moreno, a Spanish diplomat, was the first European Community/European Union ambassador to Ukraine, Belarus, and Moldova. He served in the EC/EU Delegation in Kyiv from 1993 to 1998. Demokratizatsiya: There is a...
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From:Global Governance (Vol. 16, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn transitions from war to peace, mediators and other foreign interveners identify "spoilers" as one of the main threats to peace processes. Profiling would-be spoilers and developing appropriate typologies to prevent...
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From:Science (Vol. 281, Issue 5385) Peer-ReviewedDiplomacy is often noted for its slow pace and bland language. But last week an unusually fast-moving National Academy of Sciences (NAS) panel offered the U.S. State Department some plain-spoken suggestions for improving...
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From:Trames (Vol. 21, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract. Jean Monnet is known as the father of the European Union. His involvement in the early stages of the European integration process was crucial for the later development of the European Communities. His previous...
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From:Social Research (Vol. 69, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedI AM not a philosopher, a scholar, or even a journalist; I am a practitioner of diplomacy who holds great respect for the academy and for the work of the conference at which this collection of papers was presented. I...
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From:The Journal of Civil War Era (Vol. 6, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedOn July 16, 1841, President John Tyler nominated Edward Everett to be the United States' minister to Great Britain. The Senate debated Everett's nomination in executive sessions; this dragged on intermittently until...
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From:Biography (Vol. 33, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe Lebanese diplomat and philosopher Charles Malik is hardly an unknown figure in the recent history of human rights. Indeed, few accounts of the development of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) have...
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From:Ahfad Journal (Vol. 29, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAuthor: Tsion Ayalew Tekle Title: The experience of Ethiopian diplomat women within the country and abroad Serial No: 3-2012 Supervision: Hirut Tefere Key words: Diplomat Women, Foreign Affairs, Diplomatic...
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From:ORBIS (Vol. 41, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedSoldier, scholar, diplomat and author William R. Kintner died on Feb 1, 1997 at the age of 81. A veteran of World War II, the Korean war and the cold war, he did not relish conflict but sought to build friendships beyond...