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The United States military occupation of the republic of HaitiStevens, Thomas John 01 January 1931 (has links) (PDF)
The treaty to establish a protectorate over Haiti is another step by the United States in the Americanization of the Caribbean area. These extensions have become a fixed policy of the Department of States. The Republicans and Democrats heartily support the United States government in her program of expansion. Protests will continue, but once the United States gets in, she will stay in. Already she has gone far from the position that she occupied when she first went in. The United States has always had a policy of expansion from early colonial period. She has extended control west, south, and north to secure fields for our population and commercial interests. In the brief period since the Spanish-American War, the United States has made rapid strides in the Caribbean area. Most of these republics have a large proportion of white blood, but Haiti is the black republic. White men have been able to hold land or become citizens only since 1899.1 In Haiti, a white man is looked upon with prejudice, just as the Americans look upon the Negro. This fact raises a great problem in the control of the United States over Haiti.
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The Future’s Back : Superpower Rivalvry in International Crises, 1948-1985Harvey, Frank P. January 1992 (has links)
Note:
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French and American foreign policies : concordances and discordances in the light of ideological differences 1981-1984Vargo, Trina Y. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Roots of estrangement : the United States and Brazil, 1950-1961 /Weis, Warren Michael January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Format adaptation and the Québec téléromanBellafiore, Barbara. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of American foreign policy: a case study of the pipeline sanctions against the Soviet UnionWasser, Iring 01 August 2012 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the following questions: What accounts for U.S. foreign policy? Where is causation located in the foreign process? What changes have taken place in this process over the past 20 years and what are its present characteristics? In providing answers to these questions I refer to James Rosenau's pretheory, a widely employed theoretical framework for the analysis of foreign policy. Rosenau identified five interrelated variable categories which together determine the foreign policy behavior of the United States. He assigned relative potencies to the variable categories thereby ranking them according to their explanatory power. In this thesis, an adapted version of Rosenau's pretheory was used for the analysis of the first major foreign policy crisis of the Reagan administration, the Soviet pipeline sanctions. This foreign policy episode proved to be an excellent illustration of how changes in the domestic and external environment have caused a transformation of U.S. foreign policy in the past two decades. It was found that the domestic foundation of U.S. foreign policy - congressional bipartisanship, executive branch unity, a supportive public and the backing of interest groups - has been replaced by a divided public, antagonist interest groups, a fragmented Executive, and an assertive Congress. These domestic changes were accompanied by external changes, especially the declining ability of the United States to control its external environment. These factors placed constraints on an independent U.S. foreign policy and most of them proved to promote continuity rather than change in the foreign policy behavior of the United States. / Master of Arts
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Inconsistencies in American foreign policy: an examinationSeaton, Steven Andrew January 1986 (has links)
Recent American external activities directed towards Libya and Iran have brought to light the inconsistent nature of American foreign policy. This paper is essentially an investigation of these inconsistencies, attempting to illuminate through a multivariate time series analysis whether there are any overriding influences which can be used to explain such policy reversal and vacillation. The example of Israel was taken as a case study in foreign policy inconsistency, to underline the truly inconsistent nature of U.S. foreign policy while underlining the conventional explanations for such inconsistencies.
The theoretical perspective considered that the policy influences fall into three essential categories, domestic (economic, political and public), external and idiosyncratic. The analysis followed the same format accounting for and operationalising each categorisation within the the model. To accurately facilitate the analysis an autoregressive model was used, taking a U.S. - World interaction data variable as the dependent variable throughout. A variety of economic, public, political and external variables were used as the input data.
This analysis is a preliminary analysis offering suggestions and direction for future research. / M.A.
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Relations Between the United States and Argentina, 1810-1940Gray, Phyllis 08 1900 (has links)
This thesis is a survey of Argentine-United States relations from 1810 to 1940.
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Canadian-American Relations Since 1867Brewton, Muriel 08 1900 (has links)
This study of Canadian-American relations since 1867 covers Canada's rise to world power, annexation movement, boundary and fishery disputes, economic relations, and recent relations.
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Theodore Roosevelt and His Foreign PoliciesLowrance, Mary Lois 08 1900 (has links)
A study of the foreign policies of Theodore Roosevelt.
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