So Many Humans, Too Few Rights
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ナレーター:
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Simon J. Tilbury
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著者:
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William Manosh
このコンテンツについて
This audiobook examines a very important period of recent American foreign international relations history. The post-Cold War period, 1989-2004, is scrutinized very closely with several key questions in mind. What has been gained by the US by “winning” the Cold War? First and foremost, many people - besides Americans - and quite possibly the academic world, the young, and the elderly, may be wondering what the answer to this question really is or if there even is an answer.
Secondly, I asked myself what better way to judge the security of a nation than by its record regarding human rights? Thirdly, can the US Congress be influenced to make a policy for the president to enter conflicts around the world in the name of human rights? How much does a country’s human rights record matter to foreign policy makers before the US takes a firm hand with that country? Why do some countries get away with blatant human rights abuses while others remain unscathed? How do human rights abuses become congressional resolutions and possibly implicate international relations positively or negatively around the world?
If you are interested in any of these questions, you have the right audiobook. By utilizing research methods utilized by political scientists all around the world, I was able to compile 15 years’ worth of detailed history into an easy-to-listen-to audiobook that will offer some insights into how nongovernmental organizations can influence the US that something has to be done, or to never do anything at all, to put off the resolution against the offending country until the next or a subsequent congressional session.
It is all here for you to listen to. I hope you get as much out of this audiobook as I have put into it. I plan to do a similar title that will explore the congress, NGOs, and international foreign policy implications further as the turn of the century has watched the Middle East practically implode, as a result of the end of the Cold War.
©2018 William Manosh (P)2019 William Manosh