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Academic Journals
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From:The Monist (Vol. 89, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedOften regarded as the father of realism in international relations, Thucydides was a historian and an original political thinker who described and analyzed social and political events that occurred during the...
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From:Political Science Quarterly (Vol. 112, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn the second half of the twentieth century, analysts of Middle East and world politics have focused great attention on the causes and implications of war in the Middle East. By comparison, little attention has been...
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From:Digest of Middle East Studies (Vol. 17, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the contents of the concluding statements of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) sessions from 1981 to 2001 concerning political and security issues. In particular, the study...
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From:International Journal on World Peace (Vol. 16, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedAt the dawn of the twenty-first century, both North and South Korea find their politics, economies, and societies in transition. The DPRK in the north and the ROK in the south have coexisted for the past fifty years,...
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From:Presidents & Prime Ministers (Vol. 8, Issue 3)The article provides the text of a speech given by Secretary General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, on Jun 22, 1999, in St. Petersburg, Russia, to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the First International Peace...
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From:NACLA Report on the Americas (Vol. 38, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIF I AM REMEMBERED AT ALL (WHICH ISN'T LIKEly), it will probably be for having said in my first op-ed piece in the New York Times after leaving the U.S. Foreign Service back in 1982 that "Cuba seems to have the same...
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From:World Policy Journal (Vol. 19, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn the new world disorder of the post--Cold War period, United Nations peacekeeping has moved far beyond the patrolling of cease-fire lines to encompass a wide range of administrative, humanitarian, and reconstruction...
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From:Middle East Policy (Vol. 6, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn order to develop a unifying strategy for solving problems in the Middle East, the United States should stand up to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and demand the finalized negotiations establishing an...
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From:Foreign Policy in Focus (Vol. 7, Issue 5)Key Points * The U.S. role as a superpower with strong strategic and economic interests in the region often conflicts with its role as mediator in the Israeli-Syrian peace process. * Syria has moderated its...
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From:International Security (Vol. 22, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe differences between history and political science in the field of international politics lie in three areas. First, the phenomenon to be explained; second, the way in which these phenomenon is conceived for purposes...
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From:Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 71, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMigration is polarizing societies around the globe and has become one of the most important political cleavages of our times. We spoke with Michael Doyle, the Director of the Columbia Global Policy Initiative and...
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From:World Policy Journal (Vol. 12, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe development of a successful foreign policy by the Clinton administration depends largely on the inclusion of a program to define Russia's relationship with Western countries. The US government's support for Boris...
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From:Presidents & Prime Ministers (Vol. 8, Issue 4)A transcript of Rumanian foreign affairs minister Andrei Gabriel Plesu's speech regarding international relations is presented. He discusses the Stability Pact for Southeastern Europe, and Romania's role in promoting...
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From:International Organization (Vol. 55, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe intellectual stakes at issue in this symposium are very high: Donald P. Green, Soo Yeon Kim, and David H. Yoon apply their proposed methodological prescriptions and conclude that a key finding in the field of...
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From:Strategic Review for Southern Africa (Vol. 33, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT History remembers India as a vocal and consistent supporter of the anti-apartheid movement. The existing literature on relations between India and apartheid South Africa describes an antagonistic...
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From:Strategic Review for Southern Africa (Vol. 32, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedSelected documents and commentaries on negotiations and constitutional development in the RSA: 1989-1994, M Hough and A du Plessis, ISBN 0-86979-956-8, 248 pages, Ad Hoc No 31, July 1994. Price: R25/US$20. Africa:...
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From:Design WeekAs we went to press with the Hot 50, Emily Campbell's job was in the balance, along with those of many of her colleagues at the British Council as it sought to streamline its 'creative' line up. Campbell's position...
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From:The Contemporary Pacific (Vol. 21, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedNew Caledonia is gaining more control over its own affairs, due to negotiated accords that promised it economic "rebalancing" and evolving autonomy. Paris has continued to delegate more powers of self-government to the...
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From:Insight Turkey (Vol. 9, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedMore than three years after the opening of the ceasefire line that divides Cyprus, the island is closer than ever to rupture. When the Green Line first opened in April 2003, there was an initial period of euphoria, as...
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From:Alternatives: Global, Local, Political (Vol. 32, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis experimental essay attempts to show how alternative methods and approaches are valuable in interrogating the ways in which orthodox theories of international relations (IR) approach peace. Drawing on a broad...