Foreign Relations of the United States, 1977-1980Government Printing Office, Nov 26, 2013 - 1303 pages |
From inside the book
Page 30
... responses E. Impossibility of uniform , automatic responses to specific viola- tions and consequent need for case - by - case responses F. Need for common and coordinated ... response 1. Range and 30 Foreign Relations , 1977-1980 , Volume II.
... responses E. Impossibility of uniform , automatic responses to specific viola- tions and consequent need for case - by - case responses F. Need for common and coordinated ... response 1. Range and 30 Foreign Relations , 1977-1980 , Volume II.
Page 31
... response 5. Degree of US Congressional , media and public interest in situation 6. Attitudes and roles of other governments 7. Estimate of likely consequences of any US response in terms of human rights conditions and of other US ...
... response 5. Degree of US Congressional , media and public interest in situation 6. Attitudes and roles of other governments 7. Estimate of likely consequences of any US response in terms of human rights conditions and of other US ...
Page 32
... response leading to more severe repression B. Possible negative consequences for human rights efforts generally 1 ... responses 1. Likely pressure for US to be obviously even - handed in treatment of human rights violations in strong and ...
... response leading to more severe repression B. Possible negative consequences for human rights efforts generally 1 ... responses 1. Likely pressure for US to be obviously even - handed in treatment of human rights violations in strong and ...
Page 44
... response should we be prepared to give if the governments accept our suggestions ? d . What are the necessary limits of our possible efforts and why ? e . Are there multilateral channels that might be used to affect the situations ...
... response should we be prepared to give if the governments accept our suggestions ? d . What are the necessary limits of our possible efforts and why ? e . Are there multilateral channels that might be used to affect the situations ...
Page 47
... response ; damage to bilateral relations , etc. This speech would allow the President to enunciate strong U.S. principles on human rights , but in a manner completely di- vorced from any individual case or nation . It would set the ...
... response ; damage to bilateral relations , etc. This speech would allow the President to enunciate strong U.S. principles on human rights , but in a manner completely di- vorced from any individual case or nation . It would set the ...
Contents
xi | |
xix | |
xxxiii | |
1 | |
World Hunger and Food Policy | 643 |
International Health Population Growth and Womens | 927 |
Index | 1169 |
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Common terms and phrases
action Administration Agency amendment Anthony Lake approved Argentina Assistant Secretary attached basic human needs bilateral Carter Library Central Foreign Policy Chile classification marking Commission on World Committee Conference Congress Congressional Coordinator CSCE decisions Department Deputy Secretary Derian developing countries Director Document domestic draft economic efforts food aid food security footnote Foreign Assistance Foreign Policy File Global Issues governments grain Group human rights policy Humanitarian Affairs improve increase initiatives Interagency International January LDCs legislation loans malnutrition meeting memo memorandum ment million multilateral National Archives National Security Affairs National Security Council nutrition Office OPIC organizations political President programs proposed recommendations Records of Warren Relations Rights and Humanitarian security assistance Senate Soviet Soviet Union specific Staff Material strategy Subject File ternational tion tional Tuchman Uganda United Nations Vance vote Warren Christopher Washington White House World Food World Food Council World Hunger