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Up For Debate provides eight policy recommendations for US Foreign Policy towards the Greater Horn of Africa in the areas of economic development, human rights protection and public health. What is unique about this volume is that all the authors are college students who debated this topic during the 2007 academic year. Ranging from issues of wildlife trafficking, malaria, food aid and economic subsidies, each chapter presents the reader with the pressing problems facing the Greater Horn of Africa, a realistic policy proposal, and reasons why that proposal has a propensity to solve the issue. This book will give you a rich understanding of the relationship between US policy and the Greater Horn of Africa informing you of the pressing problems and possible solutions the US can adopt to address the dire needs in the Greater Horn of Africa.
This book addresses one main question: whether the United States has a cohesive foreign policy for Africa. In assessing the history of the United States and its interactions with the continent, particularly with the Horn of Africa, the author casts doubt on whether successive US administrations had a cohesive foreign policy for Africa. The volume examines the historical interactions between the US and the continent, evaluates the US involvement in Africa through foreign policy lenses, and compares foreign policy preferences and strategies of other European, EU and BRIC countries towards Africa.
From the historical perspective, the Cold War can be regarded as an extension and continuation of colonialism via different means. The tools and methods that the superpowers, as well as local allies used, were in many ways similar to those desired during the last stage of European colonialism: gigantic economic and social projects, the promises of progress and modernization to the supporters, and almost death to the opponents or those who dare to step on the way of progress. The tragedy of the history of the Cold War in general and of the Cold War in the countries of the Third World, in particular, showed that two historical projects were originally anti-colonial, however, at last, they beca...
Jean Bricquet and his family, Huguenots, immigrated from France to Charleston, South Carolina in the 1680s, and moved to Westmoreland County, Virginia (probably via Annapolis, Maryland) before 1690. Descendants lived in Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Illinois, Colorado, California and elsewhere.
Joseph Childers was born in about 1740. His son, James Childers, was born in about 1785, probably in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. He married Mary Anderson in about 1806. They had eight children. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Ohio, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.
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The Kelly clan had hoped for a better lot in Australia than in Ireland. In the new colony, however, they found themselves once again destined to lives of poverty, rejection and powerlessness. With their dream of dignity, freedom and land denied them, some succumbed, others rebelled. Since his death in the old Melbourne Gaol on 11 November 1880, Ned Kelly has become a part of the land and its memories. In this evocative, imaginative recreation of the Kelly story, John Molony unravels the tangled skein of a life over which legend has cast a spell.