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A study of the United States-Korea Treaty of 1882Pak, Rai Won 01 January 1957 (has links)
This study covers not only the cause of Korea’s entry into the world affairs with the United States in 1882, but also it is a study of modern power politics in the Far East, in which Korea played a significant role.
The importance of the Korea position in international affairs has been dimly treated by the Western World - yet, she is a nation populated by approximately thirty millions; the thirteenth largest nation in the world, and Koreans are the most homogenous people in the world; the nation, which is thrust down off the coast of Asia between the thirty-fifth and forty-fifth parallels and separating the Sea of Japan form the Yellow Sea, greatly contributed her civilization to mankind at a time when the great Roman Empire was busy conquering the world at an excessive speed
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A theory of group decision-making applied to the Bay of Pigs and Cuban Missile Crisis decisionsSlade, Lester Stephen 01 January 1973 (has links)
This study of political decision-making stressing the process of decision-making in a group setting is, in part, a reaction against traditional approaches of political analysis.
The study of international relations is overburdened with historical studies of the interaction between states. The classic approach to the study of a given decision by one government affecting another might be called the “rational actor model”. This model treats the state as the entity reaching the decision. The decision itself is seen as behavior that reflects a rational purpose or intent. The central concepts of the model center around the calculated weighing of goals, alternatives, consequences, and choices. The “rational actor model” is the dominant method of current political analysis.
I will implicitly contend in this paper that the concept of foreign policy as a rational process of gathering information, setting alternatives, and making decisions is not an adequate tool of understanding. In fact, the “rational actor model” does not make sense out of much political phenomenon. I will directly contend in this paper that a process model of political decision-making provides an adequate and helpful tool for the understanding of political decisions.
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The Dominican crisis : a study in decision-makingThévenaz, Franklin N. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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The frustrated idealists: Cordell Hull, Anthony Eden and the search for Anglo-American cooperation, 1933-1938 /Woolner, David B. January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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This kindred people : Canadian-American relations and North American Anglo-Saxonism during the Anglo-American rapprochement, 1895-1903Kohn, Edward P (Edward Parliament), 1968- January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Prelude to a new world order : the Atlantic triangle and Japan 1914-1921Cassidy, James Thomas January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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Internal determinants of foreign policy domestic politics and foreign policy in the Soviet Union and the United States, 1945-1948.Dura, Kornel B. 01 January 1995 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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United States Lend-Lease Policy in Latin AmericaYeilding, Thomas D. (Thomas David) 12 1900 (has links)
President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles began trying to make military matériel available to Latin America during the latter 1930s. Little progress was made until passage of the Lend-Lease Act in 1941 enabled Washington to furnish eighteen Latin American nations with about $493,000,000 worth of military assistance during World War II. This study, based primarily on State Department lend-lease decimal files in the National Archives and documents published in Foreign Relations volumes, views the policy's background, development, and implementation in each recipient nation. The conclusion is that the policy produced mixed results for the United States and Latin America.
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American Prisoners in the Barbary Nations, 1784-1816Wilson, Gary Edward 05 1900 (has links)
Between 1784 and I8l6, all four Barbary nations had captured and enslaved Americans. Generally the pirates treated the imprisoned Americans harshly, but the aid the United States forwarded to them alleviated much of their suffering. During this period the prisoner issue played an important role in formulating American foreign policy in the Mediterranean because of America's keen commercial interest in that region and its benevolent attitude toward its own citizens. In return, those captive Americans in North Africa supplied their government with valuable intelligence, and, after liberation, some continued to serve their country in the Mediterranean area.
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Groupthink Analysis of the Mayaguez IncidentTellefsen, Lloyd D. 01 January 1985 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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