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AMERICANISM (6) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   112115


Democracy, autocrats and U.S. policies in the middle east / Kivimaki, Timo   Journal Article
Kivimaki, Timo Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   121167


Lavender scare and empire: rethinking cold war antigay politics / Shibusawa, Naoko   Journal Article
Shibusawa, Naoko Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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3
ID:   122112


Strange bedfellows: China's Middle Eastern inroads / Hayoun, Massoud   Journal Article
Hayoun, Massoud Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In 2011, when Algeria's Religious Affairs Minister Bouabdallah Ghlamallah awarded the contract to build the Grand Mosque of Algiers, the third-largest such structure in the world, it did not go to a homegrown Algerian bidder nor to one based in a fellow Muslim-majority Arab nation like Lebanon, nor even to one in a nearby non-Muslim nation like Spain, with long connections to the Islamic world. The February 2011 contract-signing ceremony officially granted the $1.3 billion mega-project to a farther away and far less likely competitor-a state-owned Chinese enterprise.
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4
ID:   152208


Trump's savage capitalism: the nightmare is real / Traverso, Enzo   Journal Article
Traverso, Enzo Journal Article
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5
ID:   121162


Uncle Sam, we want back we land: Eric Williams and the Anglo-American controversy over the Chaguaramas base, 1957-1961 / Mawby, Spencer   Journal Article
Mawby, Spencer Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The American acquisition of military and naval facilities at Chaguaramas in Trinidad during World War II led to a significant Anglo-American controversy during the late 1950s. In 1957 the Chief Minister of Trinidad, Eric Williams, began a campaign to eject the Americans from the base. Members of the Eisenhower administration regarded the campaign as evidence of anti-Americanism and the US Navy sought to undermine Williams by cooperating with his opponents. This interference was resented by British policy-makers who were planning to grant independence to Trinidad as part of a West Indian federation. The resulting Anglo-American disagreement continued until a compromise, which allowed the United States to retain the base in return for economic aid, was reached in 1961. The episode is significant in demonstrating that Washington was concerned about incipient anti-Americanism within the Anglophone Caribbean and in signifying British determination to defend their remaining colonial interests after the Suez crisis.
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6
ID:   045371


United States : a companion to American studies / Welland, Dennis (ed.) 1974  Book
Walland Dennis editor Book
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Publication London, Methuen and Co Ltd, 1974.
Description 528p.hbk
Series Methven's Companions to Modern Studies
Standard Number 416281508
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
013078973/WEL 013078MainOn ShelfGeneral