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NEMCHENOK, VICTOR V (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   087745


That so fair a thing should Be So frail: the ford foundation and the failure of rural development in Iran, 1953-1964 / Nemchenok, Victor V   Journal Article
Nemchenok, Victor V Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract From 1954 to 1964, the Ford Foundation attempted to implement an ambitious program of rural development in Iran. Through education, grassroots initiatives, and better credit, the Foundation hoped to transform Iran's peasant population into a base around which Iran would become a democracy. Its efforts, however, ultimately proved unsuccessful. This article argues that Ford's initiatives failed in part because its vision for the region was at odds with the goals of American foreign policy, which sought stability instead of democracy.
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2
ID:   093622


These people have an irrevocable right to self-government: United States policy and the Palestinian question, 1977-1979 / Nemchenok, Victor V   Journal Article
Nemchenok, Victor V Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Upon entering office, Carter Administration officials placed a heavy emphasis on integrating human rights into United States foreign policy. They also sought to contain festering Arab-Israeli tensions in the Middle East. The intersection of these two issues was the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. This article examines the Administration's attempts to solve that conflict and to bring peace to the region. It argues that policymakers developed a sincere dedication to safeguarding Palestinian rights, but that their understanding of those rights was limited in scope and defined through the lens of United States security and strategic interests. In spite of a good-faith effort to satisfy Palestinian desires while maintaining a constructive relationship with Israel, the Administration ultimately failed to alter the status quo because of regional developments. As Washington's strategic thinking changed, so did the urgency of Palestinian rights.
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