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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (4): 3–6.
Published: 01 December 2011
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (4): 84–88.
Published: 01 December 2016
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2012) 29 (1): 82–90.
Published: 01 March 2012
..., round tents called gers . Hands hidden from the cold in the long sleeves of their warm deels , they clutch a ladle in one hand and an urn of milk tea in the other. Offering tsainii deej urguh , they throw a ladle-full of milk tea into the sky to honor the heavens. For many Mongolian women, the view...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (4): 110–121.
Published: 01 December 2011
... centuries of surviving bitter Mongolian winters that are still defined by the fearsome dzug . These violent blizzards sweep down from the Altai mountains that form a stretch of Mongolia’s western frontier with Kazakhstan, burying cattle, sheep, and humans alike. In the ger districts of Ulaanbaatar...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (3): 90–91.
Published: 01 September 2002
..., search paper. Although criticized by Rudi­ with perspectives from the South given ger Dornbusch, the late (pro-IMF) MIT econo­ more serious consideration. Many of these mist, among others, there is evidence for issues are further explored on the website of Kaplan and Rodrik’s argument that the Sep­...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2001) 18 (1): 25–30.
Published: 01 March 2001
... a N ation al Book Aw ard, an d Who Owns Death? Illusions of the Second Nuclear Age Robert J a y Lifton By a perverse paradox, even though the dan­ was first the sea of death one encountered at ger of a nuclear calamity— whether by de­ the moment of the bomb blast...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (3): 69–76.
Published: 01 September 2002
... is of obvious concern, given its lo­ the great divide between Europe and Asia, cation, its shared Shia faith with Iran, its and flanked by Russia and Iran, it is no big­ ethno-linguistic ties with Turkey, and its ger than the state of Maine. Its 8 million important role in the global energy econo­ mostly...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2003) 20 (1): 103–106.
Published: 01 March 2003
... also noted his tendency to swag­ ger, his love of uniforms, his intellectual shallowness, and his repeated references to Ger­ many’s providential mission. Tellingly, his first proclamation as emperor was to his soldiers: “So we are bound together— I and the army— so we are born for one another...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 18 (4): 97–101.
Published: 01 December 2002
... words) is “the land of vast horizons, distant dreams, active life, and constant dan­ ger.” As Pares elaborates in his classic History of Russia: “With few natural barriers, the great hosts from the East moved wholesale, bag and baggage, men, women and children, horses and cattle, and even...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (2): 100–105.
Published: 01 June 2002
... damage in Malaysia sector. But their econometric analysis fin­ than in either Thailand or Indonesia. And gers portfolio investment, not f d i , as the unlike the Indonesian economy, which re­ footloose culprit in the Malaysian crisis. In mained mired in crisis, the Malaysian...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2003) 20 (1): 41–47.
Published: 01 March 2003
... the proximate trig­ began in 1861. Over ensuing decades, the ger for the abolition of democracy by the diverse peoples who make up present-day Nigerian military in 1966 and 1983. Nigeria were brought together in one coun­ try not from any desire on their part...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2004) 21 (2): 85–91.
Published: 01 June 2004
...). This was a twenty-first- the destruction of this American symbol— century crime, and it has defined the dan­ the tallest buildings in the richest city in gers and the potential of our time as noth­ the most powerful nation on earth—mark ing else can. such a change? One might argue that the It has also provoked...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (1): 96–103.
Published: 01 March 2016
..., “What would have happened if the people of Germany had pinned the yellow star of David to their own coats and had gone down to the street and cleaned the sidewalks along with the Jews working there?” Of course, if hundreds of thousands of Ger-mans had done that, Hitler’s Final Solution would have...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2000) 17 (1): 105–111.
Published: 01 March 2000
... that he etnam to dictate his policy choices, Kissin­ covered Eastern Europe “when it was un­ ger “did not live up to the realism of his fashionable to do so” is hard to take seri­ literary ideal, Metternich.” ously when one realizes he is talking about Kaplan’s extremely romanticized view the 1980s...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2005) 22 (2): 37–43.
Published: 01 June 2005
.... For the United However, the scope of the n s s p is limited to States, however, this is part of a much lar­ the four specific areas noted above. Looking ger issue about major institutional reform further ahead and more broadly, there is no of the United Nations. Moreover, Washing­ true roadmap...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2000) 17 (3): 33–40.
Published: 01 September 2000
..., Okinawans welcomed their ships and other hallowed Okinawan sites for with a graciousness that startled passen­ bomber runways. The “dumping ground” gers and crews. Although fear may have for American army misfits, to quote Ota prompted it, the callers did not think so. again, served the same...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2006) 22 (4): 7–14.
Published: 01 December 2006
... terrorists in bombing. They have experienced it. I do not Northern Ireland. We are now learning myself claim to have been in any great dan­ something of the way British troops be­ ger, but I did have the experience as a child haved in colonial wars, in Cyprus for exam­ of being hurried...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2006) 22 (4): 55–62.
Published: 01 December 2006
... of party poli­ Sino-Japanese relations soured, even Yasuhi- tics, Koizumi could not have become prime ro Nakasone, the self-proclaimed nationalist minister. Fie was propelled by popular ea­ who as prime minister in the 1980s first gerness for clear and bold direction, and made the Yasukuni visit...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2000) 17 (1): 71–78.
Published: 01 March 2000
... three years, while the in some schools over 80 percent of the stu­ Freedom Party was headed by Norbert Ste- dents did not speak German. This may not ger, a lawyer who tried to give the party a have disturbed wealthy Socialists who send respectable, liberal image. Steger was, in their children...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (1): 1–9.
Published: 01 March 2002
.... To tention of “imposing our culture,” the presi­ combat such a buildup, the president said dent struck a note of American messianism he would not “wait upon events while dan­ by listing “nonnegotiable demands”— gers gather,” nor “stand by as peril draws “the rule of law, limits on the power of closer...