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The author of this work argues that if Harold Wilson's government
in the late Sixties has pursued a different policy the province
might have been spared The Troubles. Wilson had promised the
Catholics that they would be granted their civil rights. However,
new evidence suggests that Westminster was deliberately gagged to
prevent MPs demanding that the Stormont administration ended
discrimination in the province. Had the government acted on
intelligence of growing Catholic unrest, it could have prevented
the rise of the Provisional IRA without provoking an unmanageable
Protestant backlash. The book draws upon recently released official
documents and interviews with many key politicians and civil
servants of the period to examine the failure of British policy to
prevent the troubles.
In this new book about Northern Ireland, historian Peter Rose
argues that if Harold Wilson's government in the late sixties had
pursued a different policy, the province might have been spared the
troubles. Wilson had promised the Catholics that they would be
granted their civil rights. However, new evidence suggests that
Westminster was deliberately gagged to prevent MPs demanding that
the Stormont administration end discrimination in the province. Had
the government acted on intelligence of growing Catholic unrest, it
could have prevented the rise of the Provisional IRA without
provoking an unmanageable Protestant backlash. This book draws upon
recently released official documents and interviews with many key
politicians and civil servants of the period to examine the failure
of British policy to prevent the troubles.
The development of U.S. Army nuclear doctrine-policies, plans,
procedures, tactics, and techniques-since World War II, its impact
on Army forces, and its role in future wars is the subject of this
policy-oriented analysis. The definition of Army nuclear doctrine
advanced by the author clearly implies a distinction between policy
for the employment of nuclear weapons as determined by the
president and the role adduced by the Army. Dr. Rose suggests that
developments-both nuclear and conventional-in U.S. Army tactical
doctrine have been more responsive to political preferences held by
national authorities than to the real nature of the potential
threat and rigors of the nuclear battlefield. Further, he argues
that the type of war preparations favored by U.S. political
authorities over the last fifteen years and the type of war for
which the Soviet Union is preparing differ markedly, making the
U.S. Army poorly prepared for a major war.
Learn the changing role of sexuality in American life This helpful
book offers a solid background in the sociology of family life and
personal sexuality. Marital and Sexual Lifestyles in the United
States: Attitudes, Behaviors, and Relationships in Social Context
is designed to give readers a broad view of the diversity of
contemporary U. S. attitudes, behaviors, and relationships. It also
covers basic sociological concepts and research methods. Most human
sexuality texts focus on the individual, whereas texts designed for
sociology courses on the family downplay individual sexual
expression. Marital and Sexual Lifestyles in the United
Statesintegrates the two approaches. The choices of the individual
take on additional meaning when seen within a unified historical,
statistical, and conceptual framework.Marital and Sexual Lifestyles
in the United States gives readers the tools to consider such
pressing issues as: Does the divorce rate mean that the institution
of marriage is in trouble? Are children's futures impaired if they
come from single-parent households? Should same-sex couples be
allowed to marry? How does marriage differ from cohabitation? What
are the real sexual differences between the genders? What is sexual
morality? How much confidence can we place in studies of human
sexuality by such social scientists as Alfred Kinsey and Masters
and Johnson?These questions and others like them are placed in the
context of U. S. social trends, beginning with the 1950s and moving
toward today. Plentifully illustrated with tables, charts, and
figures that show where we are going as well as where we have been,
Marital and Sexual Lifestyles in the United States gives a clear
perspective on relationships in social context.
The development of U.S. Army nuclear doctrine-policies, plans,
procedures, tactics, and techniques-since World War II, its impact
on Army forces, and its role in future wars is the subject of this
policy-oriented analysis. The definition of Army nuclear doctrine
advanced by the author clearly implies a distinction between policy
for the employment of nuclear weapons as determined by the
president and the role adduced by the Army. Dr. Rose suggests that
developments-both nuclear and conventional-in U.S. Army tactical
doctrine have been more responsive to political preferences held by
national authorities than to the real nature of the potential
threat and rigors of the nuclear battlefield. Further, he argues
that the type of war preparations favored by U.S. political
authorities over the last fifteen years and the type of war for
which the Soviet Union is preparing differ markedly, making the
U.S. Army poorly prepared for a major war.
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