| 61 |
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Energy Strategy
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Amory B. Lovins
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Council on Foreign Relations
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1977
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| 62 |
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Energy Strategy: The Road Not Taken?
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Lovins, Amory B.
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Council on Foreign Relations
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1976
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| 63 |
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Engagement in the Middle east
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Nadav Safran
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Council on Foreign Relations
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1975
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| 64 |
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Engagement in the Middle East
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Safran, Nadav
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Council on Foreign Relations
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1974
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| 65 |
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Enviromanticism: The overdeveloped Western world is hearing the call of a resurgent Romanticism blending love of nature, a critique of capitalism, and hard science
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Pinkerton, J. P
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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1980
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| 66 |
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E Pluribus, India
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Tharoor, S
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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1980
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| 67 |
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Equality and American Democracy : Why Politics Trumps Economics
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Allen, Danielle
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2016
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| 68 |
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Erdogan's Journey : Conservatism and Authoritarianism in Turkey
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Karaveli, Halil
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2016
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| 69 |
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Erdogan's Way The Rise and Rule of Turkey's Islamist Shapeshifter
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Genc, Kaya
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2019
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| 70 |
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Essays - A Chilean Model for Russia - Russia does not need a Pinochet, but it does need the Chilean economic model. For Russia to grow at self-sustaining annual rates of seven to ten percent for a decade or two -- The only way it can pull itself out of poverty -- It needs much more economic liberalization. Four reforms inspired by Chile's dramatic turnaround can help Russia out of its doldrums: Pension privatization, tax reform, radical deregulation of coddled industries, and the replacement of the ruble with the euro. The indispensable element is not a strong four-star general but a team of determined economic policymakers who know that freedom works/
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Pi�ra, Jos�
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2000
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| 71 |
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Essays - A Foreign Policy for the Global Age - Despite isolationist sentiments at home and resentment from abroad, President Clinton has preserved America's authority as the world's leader. U.S. foreign policy now follows not a single doctrine but a set of strategic objectives drawn from a clear understanding of globalization. Over the last eight years, Clinton has revitalized U.S. alliances, integrated former adversaries into international organizations, negotiated peace (even in areas of marginal security interest), fought nuclear proliferation and deadly diseases, and advanced economic integration while alleviating economic disparities. More tasks remain -- From supporting new democracies to fighting international terrorism to reinventing the U.N. All this cannot be done, however, if the United States continues to underfund its foreign policy and shirk its obligations to international organizations. America should not apologize for being a "hyperpower"; it must preserve its authorit
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Berger, Samuel R
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2000
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| 72 |
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Essays - Africa's Mess, Mugabe's Mayhem - Venal leaders are the curse of Africa, and Robert Mugabe is a walking reminder of how much damage they can do. No mere thug like Idi Amin, the gifted Mugabe created modern Zimbabwe and then robbed it of its enormous potential. The comparatively well-run, well-off country that he inherited is now a corruption-riddled, autocratic mess sent into economic free fall by its kleptomaniacal president's whims -- Including tampering with elections, sending troops to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and hiring goons to invade white-owned farms. An indulgent world contributed to Mugabe's sense of invincibility. Instead, he and his ilk should be ostracized/
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Rotberg, Robert I
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2000
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| 73 |
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Essays - America's Two-Front Economic Conflict - America now faces the prospect of economic conflicts with both Europe and East Asia. The United States and the European Union have already fired the first shots of retaliatory sanctions over their ever-growing trade disputes. On the other side of the world, meanwhile, Asian countries are creating a bloc of their own that could include preferential trade arrangements and an Asian Monetary Fund. These developments could produce a tripolar world and hamper global economic integration. To avert this outcome, the United States must quell its domestic backlash against globalization and reassert its economic leadership in the world. The new Bush administration should make multilateral trade liberalization a top priority -- Or it will face unpleasant economic and political consequences as the U.S. and foreign economies slow./
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Bergsten, C Fred
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2001
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| 74 |
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Essays - Beyond Border Control - The global economy opens national borders to goods and people, legal and illegal. Narcotics, disease, illegal immigrants, and terrorists and their weapons: All enjoy easier passage than ever before. Fortifying the frontiers is no solution -- It would slow down trade and globalization. International companies and government regulators need to invest in new technologies to help border control keep pace with booming commerce. Then they must learn to cooperate with one another./
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Flynn, Stephen E
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2000
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| 75 |
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Essays - Caspian Energy at the Crossroads - The Caspian basin holds enormous oil and gas deposits that could play a critical role in the world's economic future. But getting them out of the ground and onto the market requires overcoming formidable political and geographic problems. For its own sake as well as the region's, Washington should do whatever is necessary to ensure the emergence of secure and independent routes for Caspian energy to reach the outside world./
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Kalicki, Jan H
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2001
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| 76 |
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Essays - China's Coming Transformation - Over the past decade, China's leaders have pursued rapid economic reform while stifling political change. The result today is a rigid state that is unable to cope with an increasingly organized, complex, and robust society. China's next generation of leaders, set to take office in 2002-3, will likely respond to this dilemma by accelerating political reform -- Unless a new cold war with the United States intervenes./
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Gilboy, George
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2001
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| 77 |
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Essays - Crisis in the Taiwan Strait? - The simmering dispute over the status of Taiwan may soon explode in violence. The Chinese regime sees Taiwan's recent democratization as an implicit challenge to its own authority and legitimacy and thus continues to threaten and intimidate the island. Meanwhile, Taiwan has procured advanced defensive weapons from the United States. Growing tensions across the Taiwan Strait, along with the lack of military and diplomatic communication, make conflict -- Possibly involving the United States -- Increasingly likely. To avoid such an outcome, Washington should actively facilitate cross-strait dialogue and deter provocations by either side. But it must do so soon, for both China and Taiwan are growing impatient./
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Campbell, Kurt M
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2001
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| 78 |
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Essays - Defending America in the Twenty-first Century - Despite a vast budget that dwarfs the military spending power of both friends and foes, the U.S. military today remains stuck in the past. American strategy still relies on a Cold War - Era view of the world, and U.S. technology is ill-suited to current missions. Meanwhile, demoralization is creeping through the ranks. The next president must seize the opportunity to remake the military by forcing it to focus on the missions of the future rather than those of the past. The alternative -- More of the same -- Is too dangerous to consider./
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Cohen, Eliot A
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2000
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| 79 |
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Essays - Follow the Money - Financial abuses -- Money laundering, tax evasion, and rogue banking -- Have been around for as long as there have been finances to abuse. But globalization is creating new challenges as borders dissolve. New technologies enable tiny, remote countries to make quick money through their underregulated banking systems. Recent multilateral initiatives have started to attack the problem. But if the Bush administration fails to follow through on reforms, the entire effort could fall apart./
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Wechsler, William F
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2001
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| 80 |
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Essays - Fool'S Gold in Alaska - Alaskan politicians have used every oil-price rise since 1973 to push for drilling beneath the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. But even putting environmental questions aside, refuge oil is unnecessary, insecure, economically risky, and a distraction from the real energy debate. Market solutions that enhance efficiency can provide secure, safe, and clean energy services at much lower cost./
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Lovins, Amory B
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Council on Foreign Relations]
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2001
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