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The evolution of Japan's constitution and implications for U.S. forces on OkinawaStavale, Giuseppe A. 12 1900 (has links)
Approved for public release, distribution is unlimited / Okinawa serves as a strategic base for U.S. forces in maintaining regional security and protecting Japanese and American interests based on the 1960 Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between Japan and the United States and its 1951 predecessor. This thesis assesses the developing factors in Japan's constitutional debate after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. It examines the myriad issues influencing the reinterpretation or potential revision of Article 9 of Japan's constitution and what implications revision would have on Japan-based U.S. forces stationed primarily in Okinawa. This thesis argues that Tokyo's reinterpretation or revision of Article 9 of Japan's constitution would not require a major withdrawal of U.S. forces from Okinawa. Regional threats still validate the half-century old U.S.-Japan Security Alliance and most of its current structure. The major questions the thesis addresses are how and why Japan is reinterpreting or may revise its constitution, what dangers threaten Japanese and American security and interests, and how Okinawa's bases contribute to the security and stability of the region and at what price. Furthermore, this thesis evaluates the validity of perceptions regarding U.S. troops on Okinawa, and it seeks to clarify the situation on Okinawa. This thesis' arguments set the stage for a policy-prescriptive conclusion which is predicated on six individual premises. A major point is the validation of a viable and proven U.S. expeditionary force to remain stationed within Japan. Also, it offers practical recommendations for what is next for U.S. forces on Okinawa, including maintaining the status quo with certain adjustments, overhauling public relations and media interactions, and examining the merits of Kadena Air Base and Ie Island for the relocation of Marine Corps Air Station Futenma. / Captain, United States Marine Corps
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En La Frontera Entre La Vida Y La Muerte: a Study of Women Reporters on the Us–mexico BorderGuzman, Samantha 05 1900 (has links)
In 2008 Ciudad Juarez erupted in a violent drug war. The Sinaloa Cartel and Juarez Cartel were in a battle for the lucrative drug route used to smuggle drugs into the United States, while President Felipe Calderon was waging his own war against all the drug cartels. During the height of the violence women journalists emerged on the front lines to tell the stories of Juarez. They risked their lives and dared to tell a story that others refused to. This mixed-method study examines frames used most often in the coverage of the drug war in Ciudad Juarez from 2008-2010. It examines The New York Times, the El Paso Times, and El Norte and also examines articles by the sex of the reporter. It also used in-depth interviews of both Mexican and American woman journalists who covered the drug war in Juarez to examine which themes developed about the reporter’s experiences in covering the drug war.
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Urban Growth with Limited Prosperity: A History of Public Housing in Laredo, Texas -- 1938 to 2006Valle, Carlos, Jr. 15 December 2007 (has links)
Public housing in the United States has been a controversial sociopolitical topic since the years of the Great Depression. The issue of appropriate and secure habitation for the country's "deserving poor" continues to be of great importance as government subsidies become scarce in the early 21st century. This dearth of support for public housing is even more evident and prominent along the United States-Mexico border of South Texas, a territory described as having a third world environment. The dissertation is a narrative history of public housing in Laredo, Texas, a border community. Compiled from news media records and the archives of the Laredo Housing Authority, the study gives insight into methods used by this authority to achieve decent habitation for the underprivileged residents of one of the poorest cities in the United States. After a historical background of Laredo, the study follows a chronological development of federally funded housing through the six decades that began in 1938. The study accentuates the continuing need for such housing as its sponsoring federal agency; the Department of Housing and Urban Development fails to properly fund its subsidiary programs and projects. Principal governmental and nongovernmental sources substantiate the dearth of appropriate housing, with the author providing further insight to his native city's plight. The conclusion outlines how funding, together with higher upkeep and energy costs, will continue in a downward spiral and will lead to an increase in the underserved poor population.
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The Occlusion of Empire in the Reification of Race: A Postcolonial Critique of the American Sociology of RaceBates, Julia C. January 2018 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Zine Magubane / Thesis advisor: Stephen Pfohl / In a series of case studies, I problematize the reification of race in the American Sociology of race from a postcolonial perspective. I argue prominent theories within the American sociology of race tend to essentialize race as a cause of racial inequality in the United States. These theories assume the existence of racial categories and then discuss how other entities become racialized into racialized social systems (Bonilla-Silva 1997), or racial projects (Omi & Winant 1994). These theories emphasize national structures, but occlude empire. I argue the occlusion of empire in the American sociology of race, particularly in theorization of racial categorization, is problematic. Empire is the structure that links race to class inequality, and produces race as a social category of exclusion. Therefore, a sociological theory of American racial inequality, which does not analyze imperialism as a structure that produces race, and rather focuses solely on national-structures, or a definition of capitalism severed from imperialism, cannot provide a thoroughly structural explanation for the persistence of racial inequality in the United States. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Sociology.
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IFRS in the United States: An In-depth look at the Differences with U.S. GAAP and Potential AdoptionGordy, Julian 01 January 2019 (has links)
In the last 15 years it has been widely debated whether or not the United States should adopt IFRS. Convergence efforts in the 21st century have limited the distinctions between U.S. GAAP and IFRS, but significant differences still exist. This paper takes an in-depth look at the most important remaining differences between U.S. GAAP and IFRS, and examines both sides of the argument on adoption. Finally, I conclude that the U.S. should continue to use and refine its own standards.
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Diversity of bacterioplankton and plastid SSU rRNA genes from the eastern and western continental shelves of the United StatesRapp��, Michael Stephen 21 May 1997 (has links)
The phylogenetic diversity of two continental shelf picoplankton
communities was examined by analyzing SSU (16S) ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
genes amplified from environmental DNA with bacterial-specific primers and
the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Picoplankton populations collected from
the pycnocline (10 m) over the eastern continental shelf of the United States
near Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and surface seawater (10 m) from the
western continental shelf of the United States 8 km west of Yaquina Head,
Oregon, served as sources of bulk nucleic acids used in this study. A total of
285 SSU rRNA gene clones were analyzed in the two libraries, more than
doubling the number previously available from seawater samples. In contrast
to previous studies of bacterioplankton diversity from the open-ocean, a large
proportion of the rDNA clones recovered in this study (38%) were related to
plastid SSU rRNA genes, including plastids from bacillariophyte,
prymnesiophyte, cryptophyte, chrysophyte, and prasinophyte algae, as well as
a number of unique plastid rRNA gene clones for which no close phylogenetic
relatives were discovered. A majority of the bacterial gene clones recovered (72% of bacterial clones) were closely related to rRNA gene lineages
discovered previously in clone libraries from open-ocean marine habitats,
including the SAR86 cluster (�� Proteobacteria), SAR83, SAR11, and SAR116
clusters (all �� Proteobacteria), the marine Gram-positive cluster
(Actinomycetes), the marine group A/SAR406 cluster, and a cluster of
environmental clones within the flexibacter-cytophaga-bacteroides phylum. A
majority of the remaining bacterial clones were phylogenetically related to the
�� and �� subclasses of the Proteobacteria, including an rDNA lineage within the
Type I methylotroph Glade of the �� subclass. The abundance of plastid rDNAs
and the lack of cyanobacterial-related clones, as well as the presence of ��
Proteobacteria, are features of these coastal picoplankton gene clone libraries
which distinguish them from similar studies of oligotrophic open-ocean sites.
Overall, however, these data indicate that a limited number of as yet
uncultured bacterioplankton lineages, related to those previously observed in
the open-ocean, can account for the majority of cells in these coastal marine
bacterioplankton assemblages. / Graduation date: 1998
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Sunk Costs and Antitrust Barriers to EntrySchmalensee, Richard 02 April 2004 (has links)
US antitrust policy takes as its objective consumer welfare, not total economic welfare. With that objective, Joe Bain's definition of entry barriers is more useful than George Stigler's or definitions based on economic welfare. It follows that economies of scale that involve sunk costs may create antitrust barriers to entry. A simple model shows that sunk costs without scale economies may discourage entry without creating an antitrust entry barrier.
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The Jewish Junior League : the rise and demise of the Fort Worth Council of Jewish women, 1901-2002 /Weiner, Hollace Ava, January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) -- University of Texas at Arlington, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 204-224). Also available on the Internet.
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Reconstruction in North Carolina ...Hamilton, J. G. de Roulhac January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PH. D.)--Columbia University. / Vita. Also available in digital form on the Internet Archive Web site.
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Germination and seedling establishment of spiny hopsage (Grayia spinosa [Hook.] Moq.)Shaw, Nancy L. (Nancy Lynn), 1947- 19 March 1992 (has links)
Graduation date: 1992
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