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A Year and a Day is the whimsical and at times heart-wrenching tale
of Adam, a fairy child abandoned in the human world, and of the
family who adopts him for a year and a day. First published in
1976, this classic story by William Mayne, one of the most esteemed
writers of the twentieth century, appears here in a new Candlewick
Treasures edition with delightful art by John Lawrence, the
acclaimed illustrator of Watership Down and The Mysteries of
Zigomar.
The editors of the nation's two leading journals on foreign policy
were asked to examine the nature of the post-cold war world and
America's transitional role. These essays represent the views of
Charles William Maynes, editor of Foreign Policy, and William G.
Hyland, former editor of Foreign Affairs. Charles Maynes reviews
the major transitions that marked 45 years of Soviet-American
strategic confrontation. Predictably, the U.S. global role and
defense resources are declining as old threats decrease and
domestic problems move higher up on the policy agenda. Less
predictably, the relative defense spending of small powers is
likely to increase, adding to the potential for regional
instability. These trends and the proliferation of weapons
technology, including weapons of mass destruction, will drive the
major powers toward their third attempt in this century to deal
with global instability through collective security. Power will
become more evenly distributed as America's military dominance
recedes and others' economic power increases. Such trends, Mr.
Maynes believes, should not be disturbing so long as prudent
retrenchment does not become a foolish retreat from an American
global role. William Hyland believes that no president since Calvin
Coolidge has inherited an easier foreign policy agenda. Presidents
from Truman through Bush did the cold war "heavy lifting," and the
Clinton transitional era should mark the ascendancy of domestic
over foreign policy issues. Economic power is essential to
America's future and the country faces the difficult task of
economic recovery while avoiding the political expedience of
protectionism or other forms of belligerence toward our trading
partners. This would accelerate international fragmentation,
undermining the political trends toward a collective security
regime that is vital to the new world order and is the best
alternative to the extremes of U.S. isolationism or global
policeman.
This is a new release of the original 1938 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
In the years since Cold-War hostilities have waned and the UN was
revived as a central arena for international security, U.S.
administrations have increasingly referred conflict situations to
the Security Council and have looked to the UN to establish global
policy on critical social and economic problems. More recently,
however, the UN has become the subject of heated polemic within the
United States. At a moment of intense political maneuvering in
Washington, it is imperative for the U.S. to solidify its policy
towards the United Nations. In this timely collaboration between
The American Assembly and The United Nations Association, experts
in government, economics, law, science, military, and labor explore
the issues that must be resolved.
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