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Advancing Human Rights and Peace in a Complex World.

by SIRS Publishing, Inc.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: SIRS Enduring Issues 2003Article 50Human Relations. Publisher: Public Domain, 2002ISSN: 1522-3248;.Subject(s): Democracy -- International aspects | Employee rights | Globalization | Human rights -- International aspects | Peace | Priority (Philosophy) | Protection of interests (International relations) | Social responsibility of business | War on Terrorism (2001- ) | United States -- Foreign relationsDDC classification: 050 Summary: "While the landscape has changed since September 11 [2001], the importance of human rights to achieving U.S. foreign policy goals has not....More generally, there is an opportunity in the midst of the tragedy of September 11. It has been a wake-up call: for the international community, for the American people, and for parts of the U.S. government that did not previously pay as much attention to the importance of U.S. engagement in international affairs and to the support of human rights and democracy in particular." (UNITED STATES INSTITUTE OF PEACE SPECIAL REPORT) This article addresses the United States' commitment to human rights in the new, more complex post-September 11th world.
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REF SIRS 2003 Hum50 (Browse shelf) Available

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2003.

Originally Published: Advancing Human Rights and Peace in a Complex World, April 22, 2002; pp. n.p..

"While the landscape has changed since September 11 [2001], the importance of human rights to achieving U.S. foreign policy goals has not....More generally, there is an opportunity in the midst of the tragedy of September 11. It has been a wake-up call: for the international community, for the American people, and for parts of the U.S. government that did not previously pay as much attention to the importance of U.S. engagement in international affairs and to the support of human rights and democracy in particular." (UNITED STATES INSTITUTE OF PEACE SPECIAL REPORT) This article addresses the United States' commitment to human rights in the new, more complex post-September 11th world.

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