American CivilizationInstitute for the Study of the Americas, 2007 - 105 páginas This thought-provoking book demonstrates that, far from being a unique entity, the United States is the most American of nations. It shares with its neighbors to the south an aspiration for equal opportunities and freedoms in a society both defined and divided by race. As Charles A. Jones points out, the United States is distinguished from its neighbors chiefly by the greater material capabilities it has been able to apply to this historic task. Although it is sometimes regarded as Western, Jones points out the extremes to which the United States differs from Western Europe: from distinctive levels and styles of religiosity to public violence to respect for law to concern with material accumulation. These traits, far from constituting a claim to exceptionality, bind the U.S. firmly to the rest of the American hemisphere. In fact, Jones argues, it was separated only by the strange accident of historiography that created a Latin America little more than a century ago. He projects that these perceived differences between the United States and its southern neighbors will fade in the near future, and looks forward to a truly inclusive America. |
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... Peace Conference in 1907 , it lost its absolute character , explicitly allowing the use of force in cases where the debtor state had refused arbitration or rejected the outcome of arbitra- tion . The outcome of the whole episode , in ...
... peace , consistent with the vanguard role of many of its republics in international law and organisation , the ... Peace , p . 68 . 171 Mares , Violent Peace , p . 28 . as - redoubt , the ' Free World ' and AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY 81.
... peace generalisation is vast . For some sense of it see Bruce Russett , Grasping the Democratic Peace : Principles for a Post - Cold War World ( Princeton , NJ , 1993 ) , Nicholas G. Onuf and Thomas J. Johnson , ' Peace in the Liberal ...