Showing 221 - 240 results of 261 for search '"Cold War"', query time: 0.06s Refine Results
  1. 221

    India’s Policies in Support of the New Space by I. V. Danilin, E. P. Shavlay

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…Just like in the Cold War, space has re-emerged as an arena of international rivalry. …”
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  2. 222

    Geopolitical and Economic Aspects of Nuclear Energy by S. Z. Zhiznin, V. M. Timokhov

    Published 2015-08-01
    “…Nuclear power in its present form was created during the Cold War and is its heritage. The main objective of nuclear energy at that time, along with energy, was the creation and accumulation of nuclear materials. …”
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  3. 223

    Pakistan-Russia Relations within the Framework of the SCO: A Regional Analysis by Hira Yaqoob, Abeeda Qureshi

    Published 2025-01-01
    “… Pakistan and Russia have shared geographical proximity, but historically, this proximity did not translate into extensive cooperation due to Pakistan's alignment with the Western bloc during the Cold War and India’s strong relations with Russia. …”
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  4. 224

    Primordial Cause of Armament, Disarmament, Weaponry and Weapons of Mass Destruction by Effiong Ekpo

    Published 2022-11-01
    “… The entirety of humanity has been confronted with a serious threat to security, especially since after the cold war. To this fact, the concept of conflict and peace situate themselves in the heart of the contemporary man. …”
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  5. 225

    The U.S.-Turkey ‘Model Partnership’: Testing the Limits (2009–2010) by A. I. Aliyeva

    Published 2020-11-01
    “…The United States and Turkey have been bound by strong ties of strategic partnership for decades since the dawn of the Cold War. However, the relationship between two NATO allies have become quite strained over the recent years. …”
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  6. 226

    INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING OF GREAT BRITAIN IN A GEOPOLITICAL CONTEXT by Vitaliy Tereshchuk

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…It was revealed that the BBC World Service in different periods of its existence practised different models of broadcasting, realizing their inherent goals — colonial broadcasting (maintaining the unity of the British Empire), counter-propaganda in the interwar period and the period of the Second World War (countering informational influence alienation of Nazi Germany and the USSR), propaganda during the Second World War (formation of favourable public opinion regarding the activities of the anti-Hitler coalition) and the Cold War (anti-communist propaganda), in the times of the bipolar and post-bipolar world — positioning itself as a "surrogate" media that provides truthful news in countries where access to independent sources of information is limited by political regimes. …”
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  7. 227

    The Evolution of Mediation in International Conflicts from 1940s to 2020s by M. M. Lebedeva

    Published 2024-09-01
    “…During the first stage, shaped by the cold war, conflicts were mostly of interstate nature and were settled by states and international organizations. …”
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  8. 228

    “The Key to it All”: Why Are We Obsessed with Ishmael, and Are Likely to Continue to Be Obsessed with Him? by Giorgio Mariani

    Published 2023-09-01
    “…The emergence of Ishmael-centric readings of Moby-Dick is usually connected to the rise of the Cold War, but I intend to suggest that—important as the search for a cultural consensus engendered by the aftermath of the war undoubtedly was—other factors help explain the critics’ understanding of Moby-Dick as, primarily, “Ishmael’s mighty book.” …”
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  9. 229

    La place de l’alimentation dans la pensée géographique : une analyse à partir de Max Sorre et de Josué de Castro by Ana Letícia Espolador Leitão

    Published 2022-03-01
    “…Based on documentary research, bibliographic readings and interviews, we show the importance of the theme of food, especially in an era that precedes the revolution of information and communication technologies, the Green Revolution and the post-Cold War period, marked by a significant increase in food production and global paradigm changes. …”
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    Article
  10. 230

    Leadership and Nigeria's Regional Hegemonic Quest in Africa: A Critical Discus by GAMBO Nanven Audu, PULDU Samdi Gloria, KUMS Simon Nankap

    Published 2022-11-01
    “… The aftermath of the Cold War and the fall of the Berlin wall re-mirrored and reconfigured the nature and patterns of game and/or relations in the international ambiance. …”
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  11. 231

    EUROPEAN UNION AFTER THE CRISIS: DECLIN OR RENAISSANCE? by O. V. Butorina

    Published 2013-08-01
    “…Modernization process will be hampered by the lack of funding for basic science, which occurred due to the end of the "cold war", as well as social factors whose role in the economic progress had been previously underestimated. …”
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  12. 232

    The Present and the Future of the Special Relationship: The Debate in the United States and the United Kingdom by A. O. Mamedova

    Published 2020-11-01
    “…The official and academic discourse adopted the phrase ‘the special relationship’ to describe this phenomenon. In the post-Cold War period, Tony Blair’s foreign policy apparently gave it a new impetus. …”
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  13. 233

    Deconstructing the Politics of Linguistic Mutation in Tom Stoppard’s Dogg’s Hamlet, Cahoot’s Macbeth by Sarra Jouini

    Published 2024-09-01
    “…These plays represent a transformative shift that depicts the workings of hegemony in Czechoslovakia during the Cold War era. Stoppard, a Czechoslovakian native, crafted these satirical works in response to the brutal persecution of critical intellectuals and censorship of their dissident works. …”
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  14. 234

    Political and Institutional Approaches to Advancing International Religious Freedom in the U.S. Foreign Policy in 1998–2020 by V. A. Shchipkov

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…The concept became popular after the end of the Cold War when the defense of religion against socialistatheist ideas had lost its relevance due to political (the collapse of the Eastern bloc) and cultural (the growing importance of religion in many non-Western countries of the world) reasons. …”
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  15. 235

    Peace through Institutions: Woodrow Wilson and the Paris Peace Conference by Burak Küntay

    Published 2014-12-01
    “…Since Woodrow Wilson originally promoted American neutrality, and U.S. public opinion had mostly favored isolationism until World War I, Wilson’s presidency represents a historic shift in American foreign policy to interventionism and eventually, its post-Cold War “global policeman” status. Assessing the main actors of WWI and America’s role in it serves to frame Woodrow Wilson’s asymmetrical reception within his own country. …”
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  16. 236

    Legitimacy as a limiting factor of political utility of military power by Milenković Miloš R., Vračar Milinko S.

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…In the post-Cold War era, determined by the strong influences of globalization and the information revolution, it can be seen that military power fails to produce the expected political effects or at least those effects that could be produced in the past. …”
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  17. 237

    Russia and NATO’s ‘Open Door’ Policy in the Post-Bipolar Period by P. Ye. Smirnov

    Published 2024-07-01
    “…A major problem for Russia in formulating and defending its national interests after the Cold War was to fit in the European political order, dominated by the collective West and its institutions. …”
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  18. 238

    AID PROHIBITION AS A TOOL OF THE U.S. FOREIGN POLICY: DE JURE AND DE FACTO by V. I. Bartenev

    Published 2019-01-01
    “…Most of the active restrictions and prohibitions were imposed during the Cold War but not as byproducts of the bipolarity, which is another illustration of continuity in the U.S. global policies in the 20th and 21st centuries. …”
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  19. 239

    The Concept of Sovereignty in the US International Studies at the Turn of the 21st Century by A. D. Katkov

    Published 2020-11-01
    “…At the turn of the millennium, as the Cold War ended and the United States were striving to build a unipolar world order, academic debates about the concept of sovereignty gained new momentum in the USA. …”
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  20. 240

    THE ROLE OF US IN CHINA – TAIWAN CRISIS by EDGAR AGUBAMAH

    Published 2023-06-01
    “…China is fond of calling this crisis a remnant of China’s civil war and a relic of the cold war. Indeed it is. However, the crisis has evolved substantially from this historical context over the years, making the Taiwan crisis in some ways even more relevant and immediate today than ever. …”
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