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Image classification, object detection, segmentation, face recognition, OCR, image generation, video understanding
16,262 datasets
A book by Daniel Verdier analyzing the relationship between democratic institutions and international trade policy. The work examines the trade policy processes of Britain, France, and the United States over a 130-year period. It includes chapters on electoral regulation, tariff-making, the Cold War trading regime, and industrial policy.
A historical and political analysis of the shared worldview among 19th-century British, Canadian, and American Liberal-Democrats. The work by Robert Kelley is the result of more than ten years of comparative research, exploring ideas about society, economy, equality, and government. It argues that cultural forces like ethnicity and religion played a central role in politics, shaping party alignments and policy agendas across the three nations.
Frances FitzGerald's Pulitzer Prize-winning work analyzes the Reagan presidency and the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) during the late Cold War period. The book, authored by Harold Brown and sourced from paperswithcode, uses the Star Wars program as a lens to examine Reagan's political persona and U.S.-Soviet relations. It draws on interviews and research to provide portraits of key figures and insights into summit meetings.
Susan A. Brewer's 'Why America Fights' analyzes U.S. war propaganda from the Philippines conflict to the Iraq War. The text-based dataset likely contains thematic chapters covering major conflicts including World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq. The source is a closed-license publication from the paperswithcode platform.
A 1986 National Jewish Book Award-winning volume analyzes U.S. Middle East relations from the birth of Israel through the Reagan administration. The work challenges the belief that American policy is primarily a reaction to regional events or domestic pressures. It instead argues that the ideas and skills of the president and advisors are critical to policy determination.
AccessScience provides authoritative educational material covering major scientific disciplines, including microwave organic synthesis. The content is written by Rajender S. Varma and curated by the AccessScience platform. The specific scale and format of the underlying dataset are not detailed in the provided metadata.
700,000 children in America have at least one parent deployed to a war zone. The American Psychological Association's Presidential Task Force produced this report to identify psychological risks and service needs for military members and their families, examining impacts of deployment and barriers to care within DoD and VA systems. It offers recommendations for improving psychological care at provider, practice, program, and policy levels.
145 references underpin this bulletin analyzing the connection between youth gangs, drugs, and violent crime. Authored by James C. Howell, it presents a historical overview, examines gang structures, and reviews long-term studies of adolescent samples. The work concludes with policy and program implications for breaking the cycle of violence.
Nancy La Vigne's guide outlines the concept of release planning for individuals leaving incarceration. It identifies fundamental needs for successful societal reentry and recommends ways for corrections agencies and community organizations to meet those needs. The content is sourced from the paperswithcode platform and is presented as a closed-license document.
Sara Battin-Pearson's dataset examines factors contributing to youth gang growth and the relationship between gang membership and delinquency. The data was likely collected to support the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention's (OJJDP) community-focused initiatives. The specific number of observations, variables, and temporal coverage are not provided in the metadata.
The Dominican Republic and the United States is a textual study by Michael J. Kryzanek examining the political, economic, and sociocultural relationship between the two nations. It traces the evolution from the mid-19th century to the mid-1990s, analyzing perspectives from both countries. The work is the eleventh volume in The United States and the Americas series.
Steven Metz's paper analyzes the strategic salience of insurgency, which he states is higher for the United States than since the Cold War. The work, sourced from paperswithcode, reconceptualizes threat and response, arguing that protractedness and ambiguity mitigate U.S. military effectiveness. It proposes a strategy focused on helping local security forces rather than direct U.S. military action.
Thomas Davies provides a historical account of international non-governmental organizations. The analysis covers three major waves from the era to 1914, through the inter-war years, and the period since the Second World War, concluding in the second decade of the twenty-first century. The book explores a diverse array of organizations, from business associations to humanitarian groups, and references previously unexplored sources.
A text-based analysis by Tony Smith examining the intellectual origins and ideological underpinnings of the Bush Doctrine and its relationship to liberal democratic internationalism. The work, sourced from paperswithcode, explores concepts like democratic peace theory, liberal imperialism, and the militarization of humanitarianism. The dataset's specific format, size, and update date are not provided.
Ekaterina Stepanova's academic work analyzes terrorism through ideological and structural lenses. The text likely contains chapters on ethno-nationalism, religious extremism, and organizational forms of terrorist groups. This is a closed-license publication sourced from the paperswithcode platform.
Fred I. Greenstein's book analyzes the leadership styles of eleven modern U.S. presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Bill Clinton. The work draws on a quarter-century of research into the presidential record and scores of interviews. It evaluates presidents across dimensions like public communication, political skill, vision, cognitive style, and emotional intelligence.
AccessScience provides authoritative educational content covering major scientific disciplines. The invertebrate embryology material likely contains incisively written, high-quality explanations of developmental biology concepts. The content is authored by Gertrude Hinsch and sourced from the AccessScience online resource.
Penny M. Von Eschen's historical analysis examines the U.S. State Department's deployment of jazz musicians as cultural ambassadors during the Cold War, from 1956 through the late 1970s. The work details tours by artists like Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, and Duke Ellington to regions including Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and the Soviet Union. It explores the interplay between government objectives and the artists' own agendas in redefining American identity abroad.
Tim Weiner's book provides a narrative history of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from its creation in 1947. The text covers the agency's role in major global political events during the Cold War and the 'war on terror'. It is based on the author's research and presents a critical analysis of the organization's actions and perceived failures over six decades.
Laura Kalman's work examines U.S. foreign policy under President Carter, focusing on human rights demands made to allied dictatorships. The text discusses historical timelines of democratic development and specific cases in Iran and Nicaragua. It is sourced from the paperswithcode platform, which aggregates academic and research materials.