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Hardball diplomacy and ping-pong politics: Cuban baseball, Chinese table tennis, and the diplomatic use of sport during the Cold WarNoyes, Matthew J. 01 January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Winston Churchill and the Teheran ConferencePickard, Virgil Lawrence 08 1900 (has links)
The Teheran Conference, November 27- December 1, 1943, set the stage for the present-day Cold War. In that conference Sir Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of Great Britain, played a forceful, but unsuccessful, role.
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Epidemics Without Borders: Divided Germany, the Fight Against Poliomyelitis, and Cold War International Relations, 1945-1965Clarke, Samantha January 2022 (has links)
On the first day of August in 1961, the Health Ministry of the German Democratic
Republic (GDR) announced the closure of the German-German border permanently,
accusing the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) of neglecting its citizens and failing to
properly administer vaccinations against poliomyelitis.1 This accusation sparked the ire of
the West German and United States media, and the Federal Republic denied that there
were outbreaks. The episode raises questions about common perceptions of healthcare in
East Germany. The thought that East Germany might have an epidemic disease under
control, which still caused problems in West Germany, contradicts the perception that
East Germany lagged behind its western neighbor in every realm.
While recent histories of international relations and healthcare emphasize
collaboration between the US and the USSR, and their Cold War allies in this period, this
dissertation presents a less constructive relationship. Despite the shared goal of polio
control and eradication, East and West Germany used epidemic control as evidence of the
successes of one system of healthcare governance, or the faults of the opponent’s system.
The Berlin Wall announcement was the culmination of almost 15 years of government
competition, speckled with individual collaboration, in the field of healthcare.
This dissertation contributes to literature on healthcare in divided Germany,
narratives which present the history of polio as an “American story,” and scholarship on
healthcare and international relations. It shows how two separate healthcare systems were
1 “East Germany Curbs Travel: Blames Polio,” Chicago Tribune, 1 August 1961, 11.
v
constructed by Soviet and American occupiers with German collaborators between 1945
and 1947. These separate systems, established before the official division of Germany,
laid the foundation for two separate states. During the first postwar polio epidemic in
1947, the United States showed its affluence and experience with polio through a robust
response centered on technological solutions. The USSR, conversely, could not match the
United States’ response due to inexperience with polio and lack of economic resources,
garnering criticism from German citizens and US occupiers. In 1955, the introduction of
Jonas Salk’s injected polio vaccine gave doctors and civilians in the US hope that polio
would soon be a memory, but European responses were much more ambiguous. Albert
Sabin’s forthcoming oral polio vaccine appeared to be a much more promising option to
many physicians due to its ease of administration and cost-effectiveness. When Sabin
chose to field test his vaccine in the USSR, his decision to collaborate with the US’s Cold
War opponent demonstrated significant potential for collaboration. Nonetheless, the
Soviet connections of Sabin OPV led to a crisis in divided Berlin.
The history of polio is not an American story and recognizing the ways in which
the fight against this disease went beyond the national, complicated by political
boundaries but involving recognizable collaboration across those boundaries, helps
expand the historical narrative of poliomyelitis. While vaccine diplomacy was indeed a
form of soft power used in the context of the Cold War, promises of vaccines were not
always received without question, and incorporating a deeper examination of recipient
countries’ discourses helps complicate our understandings of diplomacy and hesitancy. / Thesis / Candidate in Philosophy / This thesis outlines the ways in which an infectious disease, poliomyelitis, was
treated and prevented in divided Germany between 1945 and 1965, contextualizing
medical history with the political context of the Cold War. The first two chapters examine
the period from 1945 to 1953, when no vaccines against polio were available and
Germany was occupied by the Allied powers. The German healthcare system was
reconstructed differently in the Soviet and American zones. The political beliefs of each
occupying power shaped the resulting systems: socialized and centralized medicine was a
hallmark of the Soviet zone’s healthcare, while the American zone pursued a free market
approach. Chapters three and four explain the introduction of two different vaccines, both
developed in the United States: an injected vaccine created by Jonas Salk, and an oral
vaccine developed by Albert Sabin. The United States championed the Salk vaccine,
while the USSR was an early adopter of the Sabin vaccine. These chapters explain how a
vaccine created in the US became known as a Soviet vaccine, and how this reputation
affected western countries’ adoption of the medical innovation. The thesis concludes that
doctors are not separate from the political contexts in which they live and shows how
political ideology and cross-border rivalry affect healthcare provision.
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The Politics of Peacekeeping: United Kingdom.Woodhouse, Thomas, Ramsbotham, Alexander January 2004 (has links)
No / Much of the scholarly literature on peacekeeping focuses on particular peacekeeping operations, or on the political bargaining between peacekeeping participants at both the institutional and national levels. However, there is very little published research on why nations commit forces to peacekeeping operations. As Sandra Whitworth noted in a book review of six books on peacekeeping in the "International Journal," "t"he important political questions thus far have not been asked: who benefits, who pays, and who is excluded?." "This book addresses that need.
The authors focus specifically on the political and economic motivations that influence the decision to participate in peacekeeping. They consider how definitions of national interest frame the political debate, and what the reasons are for the military support or opposition for peacekeeping operations. They also explore the role of inter-agency politics, the role of public opinion in peacekeeping decisions, and the influence of pressure from other nations and non-nation actors to commit peacekeeping forces. Each chapter includes several recent cases of national peacekeeping to illustrate how national political debates framed their country's political decisions on the commitment of peacekeeping forces. The countries chosen for analysis are Australia, Argentina, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, the United States, Nigeria, Canada, India, and Austria.
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The Balkans Since The Cold War: From Tyranny to Tragedy.Gallagher, Tom G.P. January 2007 (has links)
No / At the end of the Cold War, the Balkan states of South East Europe were in crisis. They had emerged from two decades of hardline communism with their economies in disarray and authoritarian leaders poised to whip up nationalist feelings so as to cling on to power. The break up of Yugoslavia followed in 1991 along with prolonged instability in Romania, Bulgaria and Albania. The Balkans After The Cold War analyses these turbulent events, which led to violence on a scale not seen in Europe for nearly 50 years and offers a detailed critique of Western policy towards the region. This volume follows on from the recently published Outcast Europe: The Balkans, 1789 - 1989 - from the Ottomans to Milosevic, also by Tom Gallagher.
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"Det gäller dig och din familj!" : Svenskt civilförsvar och vardagslivets militarisering under kalla kriget 1945-1975Vesterlund, Mattias January 2018 (has links)
The Swedish civil defense during the Cold War Era was a well-developed and well-planned organization in comparison to many other countries. This caused civil defense ideas to come closer to individual citizens’ everyday lives and influence how they should adapt to the threat of nuclear war, thus creating a culture of civil defense. The purpose of this thesis is to elucidate what this militarization of everyday life looked like in Sweden during the Cold War and how it affected people’s everyday life. This is done through studying a civil defense journal between 1945-1975. The articles in the journal are analyzed by how they are portraying the day-to-day life in the context of civil defense. Partly through articles about propaganda and various civil defense courses and exercises, and partly through articles portraying the physical militarization of society, primarily fallout shelters and bunkers. Of particular interest is the contrast between the dark Cold War narrative and the narrative concerning the security and comfort provided by the welfare state. Finally, the thesis argues that the journal and its work can be seen in the context of militarization of everyday life. It tried to spread its militarizing vision in society, and did – incomparison to other countries – succeed in that pursuit. Militarization played a vital role in reaching out to the public, and in disseminating the idea of a welfare state that takes good care of its citizens, even during the hardest of times.
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The Bundeswehr after unificationDalvi, Sameera January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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The role of identity in the making of modern Turkish foreign policyCalis, Saban January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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The transformation of South Korea's foreign policy 1988-1993 : Nordpolitik, Moscow and the road to PyongyangLho, Cholsoo January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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French nuclear strategy in an age of terrorismRehm, Braxton D. 12 1900 (has links)
This study treats the character of French nuclear policy since September 11, 2001; as such this work adds the most recent episode to a theme that, since the late-1950s, has concerned alliance statecraft faced with French â exceptionalismâ in trans-Atlantic relations. In the post-Cold War era, the changes in the strategic environment have led to a further evolution in French nuclear deterrent policy which forms the heart of this study. In 2001 and 2006, French President Chirac made policy speeches which specifically discussed nuclear strategy and clarified the shift in French thought and the justification for deterrence. In 2001, the most important element addressed dissuasion of regional powers and â rogueâ states with WMD that may attack France. The 2006 speech incorporated the threat of statesponsored terrorism into the nuclear dissuasion strategy. The thesis investigates past and present developments in French nuclear strategy, with chief emphasis on the period from the end of the Cold War to the beginning of the twenty-first century; it highlights the forces that have shaped French doctrine and analyzes the viability of the nuclear strategy as seen by a U.S. observer. A review of French Cold War doctrine provides the necessary backdrop for an evaluation of new elements in French nuclear strategy and should act as a guide to students of same in U.S. and NATO policy circles.
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