Part I: An Intellectual and Political History. Chapter One: Cold War Consensus Shattered. Chapter Two: Dictatorships and Double Standards. Chapter Three: The Carter Years: Was Kirkpatrick Right? Part II: Kirkpatrick and the Reagan Administration Chapter Four: The Kirkpatrick and Reagan Doctrines Chapter Five: Putting Policy to Practice: Chile and El Salvado
Following the 1986 Reykjavik Summit between Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher d...
A series of eight lectures by Professor Lyman B. Kirkpatrick of the Political Science Department, Br...
A Tangled Hope: America, China, and Human Rights at the End of the Cold War, 1976-2000, discusses th...
Part I: An Intellectual and Political History. Chapter One: Cold War Consensus Shattered. Chapter ...
The end of World War II brought some temporary joy to the United States and many other nations acros...
2021 winner of "The Thomas Kotulak Outstanding Political Science Award"The Cold War, a 45-year confl...
The fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989 was called by many observers of international affair...
Over the course of the 1970s, détente was the principal guiding policy for Soviet-American relations...
Thesis advisor: James E. CroninThesis advisor: Seth JacobsUnder the banner of a New International Ec...
The dissertation argues that Carter, Reagan, and other domestic and international actors deployed th...
A series of eight lectures by Professor Lyman H. Kirkpatrick of the Political Science Department, Br...
This thesis is a work of American intellectual history that attempts to explain how the foreign poli...
Through the 1950s and 1960s, American news correspondents working in Moscow had come to befriend man...
The end of the Cold War created a dilemma for American foreign policymakers as the strategy to conta...
This thesis examines how select newspaper editorial sections covered certain American Cold War forei...
Following the 1986 Reykjavik Summit between Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher d...
A series of eight lectures by Professor Lyman B. Kirkpatrick of the Political Science Department, Br...
A Tangled Hope: America, China, and Human Rights at the End of the Cold War, 1976-2000, discusses th...
Part I: An Intellectual and Political History. Chapter One: Cold War Consensus Shattered. Chapter ...
The end of World War II brought some temporary joy to the United States and many other nations acros...
2021 winner of "The Thomas Kotulak Outstanding Political Science Award"The Cold War, a 45-year confl...
The fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989 was called by many observers of international affair...
Over the course of the 1970s, détente was the principal guiding policy for Soviet-American relations...
Thesis advisor: James E. CroninThesis advisor: Seth JacobsUnder the banner of a New International Ec...
The dissertation argues that Carter, Reagan, and other domestic and international actors deployed th...
A series of eight lectures by Professor Lyman H. Kirkpatrick of the Political Science Department, Br...
This thesis is a work of American intellectual history that attempts to explain how the foreign poli...
Through the 1950s and 1960s, American news correspondents working in Moscow had come to befriend man...
The end of the Cold War created a dilemma for American foreign policymakers as the strategy to conta...
This thesis examines how select newspaper editorial sections covered certain American Cold War forei...
Following the 1986 Reykjavik Summit between Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher d...
A series of eight lectures by Professor Lyman B. Kirkpatrick of the Political Science Department, Br...
A Tangled Hope: America, China, and Human Rights at the End of the Cold War, 1976-2000, discusses th...