940 resultados para United States Food and Drug Administration
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Shipping list no.: 2004-0242-P (v. 1), 2004-0234 (v. 2-3), 2004-0244-P (v. 4).
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Pt. 1. has special subtitle: Testimony and recommendations by the Social Security Administration.
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Item 1038-A, 1038-B (microfiche)
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"June 22, 1987"--Pt. 2.
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Item 1038-A, 1038-B (microfiche).
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John H. Bankhead, subcommittee chairman.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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No. 1, revision 1 issued Jan. 1929.
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"The material in this booklet is a reprint of a portion of that which was prepared by NASA's Office of Space Science and Applications for presentation to the Congress."
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Chiefly tables.
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Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche.
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Reporters: 1966-67 - 1978-1979, Helen G. Nassif; 1979-1980, Ruth A. Hill; 1980-1981- Ruth A. Butler.
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During the past twenty years, Washington has oscillated between tentative engagement with Pyongyang under the Clinton administration and isolation and multilateralism under the Bush administration. With the Obama administration almost nearing its four-year tenure, the Six-Party Talks have stalled and North Korea's multiple attacks on the South in 2010 have created new instabilities. Why so little results despite promises of a radical departure away from the Axis of Evil rhetoric and hard-line politics? This paper suggests that the Obama administration has utilized approaches that no longer fit current circumstances and hence failed to create an original, coherent and effective foreign policy. © 2012 McFarland & Company, Inc.
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This paper examines the history of U.S. interventions in Latin America and attempts to explain their frequency by highlighting two factors – besides security and economic interests – that have made American interventions in Latin America so common. First, immense differences in size and influence between the United States and the States of Latin America have made interventions appear to be a low risk solution to crises that threaten American interests in the region. Second, when U.S government concerns and aspirations for Latin America converge with the general fears and aspirations of American foreign policy, interventions become much more likely. Such a convergence pushes Latin American issues high up the U.S. foreign policy agenda because of the region’s proximity to the United States and the perception that costs of intervening are low. The leads proponents of intervention to begin asking questions like “if we cannot stop communism/revolutions/drug-trafficking in Latin America, where can we stop it?” This article traces how these factors influenced the decision to intervene in Latin America during the era of Dollar Diplomacy and during the Cold War. It concludes with three possible scenarios that could lead to a reemergence of an American interventionist policy in Latin America. It makes the argument that even though the United Sates has not intervened in Latin America during the twenty-two years, it is far from clear that American interventions in Latin America will be consigned to the past.