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ZOELLICK, ROBERT B (6) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   186792


Before the next shock: how America can build a more adaptive global economy / Zoellick, Robert B   Journal Article
Zoellick, Robert B Journal Article
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2
ID:   171102


China challenge / Zoellick, Robert B   Journal Article
Zoellick, Robert B Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract One of the founding principles of constant confrontation is an assumption that cooperation with China failed. This is the premise that underpins the Trump administration's 2017 National Security Strategy. It's time to test that assumption.
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3
ID:   065622


Congress and the making of US foreign Policy / Zoellick, Robert B   Article
Zoellick, Robert B Article
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Publication 1999.
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4
ID:   013143


Economics and security in the changing Asia-Pacific / Zoellick, Robert B 1997  Article
Zoellick, Robert B Article
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Publication 1997.
Description 29-51
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5
ID:   121571


U.S., China and thucydides / Zoellick, Robert B   Journal Article
Zoellick, Robert B Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract LAST YEAR, during his visit to the United States, Chinese president Xi Jinping introduced the idea of a "new type of great-power relationship." In March of this year, in apparent response, President Obama's national-security adviser, Tom Donilon, suggested an interest in building "a new model of relations between an existing power and an emerging one." This June, the two presidents met in California to explore whether their strategic outlooks can be reconciled.
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6
ID:   110925


Why we still need the World Bank: looking beyond aid / Zoellick, Robert B   Journal Article
Zoellick, Robert B Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract In 2007, the World Bank was in crisis. Some saw conflicts over its leadership. Others blamed the institution itself. When the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the cornerstone of what became the World Bank Group, was founded in 1944, poor and war-torn countries had little access to private capital. Sixty years later, however, private-sector financial flows dwarfed public development assistance. "The time when middle-income countries depended on official assistance is thus past," Jessica Einhorn, a former managing director of the World Bank wrote in these pages in 2006, "and the IBRD seems to be a dying institution." In roundtable discussions and op-ed pages, the question was the same: Do we still need the World Bank?
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