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Teller's First and Last Visits to Sigmund Freud
During the 1930's, as a young Yiddish poet in New York, YehudaLeyb Teller produced some of the memorab1e pre-war poetry of his generation.Like the introspectivist writers who inspired him, Teller was increasingly aware of politica1 deve10pments in Europe. Thepoetic cyc1e entit1ed "Psychoana1ysis," one of Teller's most outstandingaccomp1ishments, fuses real and imaginary dimensions. Twoof the six "Psychoana1ysis" poems confront Sigmund Freud and thesituation of the European Jews.
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Strukturanpassungsprogramme in Afrika – Einige Bemerkungen aus den aktuellen Erfahrungen der Schweiz; Les balbutiements de l'aide-programme macroéconomique
In: Schweizerisches Jahrbuch für Entwicklungspolitik, Heft 9, S. 231-246
ISSN: 1663-9677
Strukturanpassungsprogramme in Afrika – Einige Bemerkungen aus den aktuellen Erfahrungen der Schweiz; Les balbutiements de l'aide-programme macroéconomique: Quelques considérations tirées de l'expérience récente de la Suisse
In: Annuaire suisse de politique de développement, Heft 9, S. 231-246
ISSN: 1663-9669
Towards a "world budget": thoughts on a world resource tax
In: A new global financial order: new approaches towards establishing a sustainable world monetary order, reducing indebtedness, revising the international credit system, reversing and stabilising the international financial transfers, S. 137-142
Entwicklung und Umwelt: ein Plädoyer für mehr Harmonie
In: Die Umwelt bewahren: die globale Umweltkrise als neue Dimension von Sicherheitspolitik ; ökologische Argumente für eine Wende in der internationalen Politik ; mit den Dokumenten von Quito, Montreal, London, Den Haag und Basel, S. 59-75
Crisis in Central America: Regional Dynamics and U S Policy in the 1980s
In: Bulletin of Latin American research: the journal of the Society for Latin American Studies (SLAS), Band 8, Heft 1, S. 173
ISSN: 1470-9856
The Economics of Intervention: American Overseas Investments and Relations with Underdeveloped Areas, 1890–1950
In: Comparative studies in society and history, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 55-80
ISSN: 1475-2999
This essay has presented a framework for the analysis of economic factors in political relations between developed and developing areas. The most relevant considerations in this regard are the potential costs of imperial intervention in enhancing the return to metropolitan economic interests, and the potential benefits that intervention might bring to these interests. The essay has emphasized the differential political implications of various types of metropolitan economic activity, and especially of different forms of foreign investment.
Classes, Sectors, and Foreign Debt in Latin America
In: Comparative politics, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 1
ISSN: 2151-6227
Capital Politics: Creditors and the International Political Economy
In: Journal of public policy, Band 8, Heft 3-4, S. 265-286
ISSN: 1469-7815
ABSTRACTThis essay analyzes the relationship between international investment interests and foreign economic policy. The first step and level of analysis looks at nation-states as the relevant actors, and claims that a country's international investment position tends to affect its international economic preferences in ways that are easily understood and anticipated. Countries' international asset positions often have a predictable impact on their policies toward international monetary relations, cross-border investment, and trade.The second step and level of analysis looks inside national societies at the international asset positions of various domestic groups. It argues that sectors with varying interests related to their international investment positions contend for influence over national policy. The economic circumstances of each sector lead to sectoral policy preferences with predictable implications for domestic bargaining over foreign economic policy. The general argument is applied briefly to a number of modern creditor countries and sectors, most prominently the United States after World War Two.
Sectoral conflict and foreign economic policy, 1914-1940
In: International organization, Band 42, Heft 1, S. Special Issue, S. 59-90
ISSN: 0020-8183
World Affairs Online
Sectoral conflict and foreign economic policy, 1914–1940
In: International organization, Band 42, Heft 1, S. 59-90
ISSN: 1531-5088
The period from 1914 to 1940 is one of the most crucial and enigmatic in modern world history, and in the history of modern U.S. foreign policy. World War I catapulted the United States into international economic and political leadership, yet in the aftermath of the war, despite grandiose Wilsonian plans, the United States quickly lapsed into relative disregard for events abroad: it did not join the League of Nations, disavowed responsibility for European reconstruction, would not participate openly in many international economic conferences, and restored high levels of tariff protection for the domestic market. Only in the late 1930s and 1940s, after twenty years of bitter battles over foreign policy, did the United States move to center stage of world politics and economics: it built the United Nations and a string of regional alliances, underwrote the rebuilding of Western Europe, almost single-handedly constructed a global monetary and financial system, and led the world in commercial liberalization.