Query Result Set
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1717Hits:19372039Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

  Hide Options
Sort Order Items / Page
INTERNATIONAL TIES (2) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   132937


Kuwait fund for Arab economic development and its activities in / Turki, Benyan   Journal Article
Turki, Benyan Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article aims to highlight the impact of the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development - KFAED on Kuwait's foreign relations, especially with African countries, for more than five decades (KFAED) has strengthened Kuwait's ties to the developing world and secured political support throughout various crisis, particularly the Iraqi invasion of 1990. The article sheds light specifically on the nature, event and scope of KFAED activities in Africa. Secondly, the article show how to the fund has helped numerous African countries in various economic aspects as well as contributing to social development.
        Export Export
2
ID:   132013


Transnational generations: organizing youth in the Cold War / Honeck, Mischa; Rosenberg, Gabriel   Journal Article
Honeck, Mischa Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The Cold War had just turned hot on the Korean Peninsula in late June 1950 when Deon Smith, a young Boy Scout from Mt. Vernon, Illinois, pitched his tent in Valley Forge. Fears of a global cataclysm loomed over the Revolutionary War battlefield, where nearly 50,000 Boy Scouts from the United States and twenty allied nations had gathered to celebrate Independence Day. Their jamboree marked the biggest encampment of youth on American soil to date, big enough to garner an address by President Harry Truman. "I hope that you young men … will take home from this jamboree a clearer understanding of the meaning of human brotherhood," said Truman. "I hope that you will work for freedom and peace with the same burning faith that inspired the men of George Washington's Army here at Valley Forge."1 Given the geopolitical context, the subtext was clear: "freedom and peace" required the "burning faith" of fighting men. Irony, as well as faith, burned in Truman's comments. Beyond the rhetoric of global brotherhood, Truman's internationalist overtures obscured particular national geopolitical interests on the peninsula and cast communism as an inhuman menace. Meanwhile, even as the grand statesman rallied the crowd, Deon Smith was busy forging international ties of his own-ties that did not grow out of security concerns but were driven by juvenile excitement and curiosity. He took part in various "Scoutcraft events" and "inter-camp visits," traded souvenirs with his distant peers, and formed friendships with Scouts from near and far. "Some of the most interesting groups we have met," Smith wrote, "are the Scouts from foreign lands," including boys from the former enemy nations of Germany and Japan. In this, Smith explored internationalism rather than merely assuming it. Who, then, assembled universal brotherhood more decisively at this jamboree: the president, whose speech recoded the chaos, flux, and pleasures of a sprawling encampment in the overdetermined, ironically nationalist registers of liberal internationalism, or the boy, whose handshakes gave literal flesh to Truman's rhetoric?2
        Export Export