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John Harter here describes highlights of his Foreign Service career, including: meeting the South African reporter who became his wife, revamping a dilapidated shell of a house into an elegant mansion for the American deputy chief of mission in Chile, various links with UN economic and social policies and operations, financial reporting in Thailand, participation in trade-policy negotiations at GATT headquarters in Geneva, interviewing more than one hundred prominent Americans as a correspondent for USIA, and representing the United States at the UN Conference on Trade and Development.
John Harter here describes highlights of his Foreign Service career, including: meeting the South African reporter who became his wife, revamping a dilapidated shell of a house into an elegant mansion for the American deputy chief of mission in Chile, various links with UN economic and social policies and operations, financial reporting in Thailand, participation in trade-policy negotiations at GATT headquarters in Geneva, interviewing more than one hundred prominent Americans as a correspondent for USIA, and representing the United States at the UN Conference on Trade and Development.
Since World War I, nose art has adorned military aircraft around the world. Intended for friendly rather than enemy eyes, these images--with a wide range of artistic expression--are part of the personal and unit histories of pilots and aircrews. As civilian and military attitudes and rationales for war change from one conflict to the next, changes can also be seen in the iconography of nose art. This analysis from a cultural perspective compares nose art in the United States, Great Britain and France from World War I, World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War.
This groundbreaking volume of original essays presents fresh avenues of inquiry at the intersection of philosophy and psychiatry. Contributors draw from a variety of fields, including evolutionary psychiatry, phenomenology, biopsychosocial models, psychoanalysis, neuroscience, neuroethics, behavioral economics, and virtue theory. Philosophy and Psychiatry’s unique structure consists of two parts: in the first, philosophers write five lead essays with replies from psychiatrists. In the second part, this arrangement is reversed. The result is an interdisciplinary exchange that allows for direct discourse, and a volume at the forefront of defining an emerging discipline. Philosophy and Psychiatry will be of interest to professionals in philosophy and psychiatry, as well as mental health researchers and clinicians.
This book addresses the life quality of the average adult in the world, based on international data weighted according to national population size. It rests on the theoretical framework of analytic-functionalism to explain statics and dynamics in the production of life quality. The statics means the influences of personal and national factors on life quality, whereas the dynamics mean the changes in the influences over time. This approach elucidates life quality at the personal level rather than at the national level, which overlooks what happens to the average person living in the world. The approach involves a broad view of the production of life quality, including experiences, practices, and appraisals of life. This production also involves personal background characteristics and the national indicators of modernization, globalization, and environmental issues. Knowledge about the production is helpful for policymakers, researchers, students, and other people to upgrade life quality. Such knowledge is valuable because it is up-to-date, generalizable, and sensible based on the analytic-functionalist theoretical framework and statistical estimation.