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Legislative text, court decisions, regulatory filings, patents, government contracts, election data
9,635 datasets
Markus G. Schmidt authored an analysis of the United States position on developing a deep sea-bed mining regime under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). The work outlines the historical context, including Arvid Pardo's common heritage proposal, and details U.S. domestic politics and negotiation stances from the Reagan administration era. The dataset appears to be a textual document or collection of documents related to this specific legal and political history.
A legal analysis by W.-E. Beckett, sourced from paperswithcode, distinguishes domains of substantive law within the case law of the Permanent Court of International Justice. The work focuses on issues of general interest from a legal point of view. The dataset's specific temporal coverage and size are not provided.
Tim Matthewson's book 'A Proslavery Foreign Policy: Haitian-American Relations during the Early Republic' analyzes diplomatic history. The work examines the presidencies of Washington, Adams, and Jefferson, focusing on themes of racism and intervention. The dataset likely contains the book's structured text, including chapters, notes, and index.
Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Rising Influence After the Cold War Chapter 3 The MFN Debate during the Bush Administration Chapter 4 The MFN Debate during the Clinton Administration Chapter 5 The Taiwan Crisis of 1995-1996 Chapter 6 Convergence and Conflict in U.S.-China Policy, 1996-1997 Chapter 7 Appendix Chapter 8 Chronology. The text was authored by Robert G. Sutter and is sourced from the paperswithcode platform.
A book by Robert O. Freedman analyzing Soviet foreign policy in the Middle East. The work covers the period from World War II through the invasion of Afghanistan and the leadership of Brezhnev, Andropov, Chernenko, and Gorbachev. It is structured as a historical and political analysis with chapters, notes, a bibliography, and an index.
The dataset likely contains a textual analysis of U.S. foreign policy initiatives toward Communist China between 1961 and 1963. It is sourced from the paperswithcode platform and includes chapters covering topics like the Kennedy administration's perspective, the Sino-Indian War, and the Sino-Soviet split. The license is closed, and the author and organization are unknown.
A policy evaluation report advising the Thai government on the costs and benefits of expanding public antiretroviral therapy (ART) through the National Access to Antiretroviral Program for People Living with HIV/AIDS (NAPHA). The study, authored by Ana Revenga, models several policy options, finding the NAPHA program with a first-line regimen to be the most cost-effective. It also evaluates the impact of enhanced policies like early patient recruitment and improved adherence.
Martin Indyk, Kenneth Lieberthal, and Michael O'Hanlon authored a book assessing Barack Obama's foreign policy as the 44th U.S. president. The work measures Obama's record against his predecessors, his own rhetoric, and goals like bending history toward justice and peace. It covers topics from counterterrorism and relations with China and Russia to softer security issues like energy and climate policy.
A collection of scholarly essays analyzes Cuba's foreign policy realignment from 1989 onward, following the collapse of the Soviet Union. The work focuses on case histories of Havana's relationships with the European Union, Latin America, Canada, Spain, Russia, Mexico, and the Caribbean. It was authored by H. Michael Erisman and sourced from the paperswithcode platform.
Richard N. Haass's book argues that U.S. national security depends more on domestic issues like deficit, infrastructure, and education than on external threats. The text presents a doctrine of 'Restoration' for American foreign policy, emphasizing economic foundations and strategic restraint abroad. It is published by the Council on Foreign Relations President.
Raymond W. Copson authored a structured analysis of U.S. foreign policy in Africa during the Bush administration. The work examines topics including foreign aid, trade, AIDS policy, democracy, human rights, and security. It likely contains qualitative assessments and policy critiques.
The immediate postwar period is the focus of this analysis of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). The book, authored by Michael Wala, delineates the organization's activities, including its study groups, discussion groups, and publications, and their relationship to international political, military, and economic situations. It is based on extensive analysis of primary sources and was originally published in German.
Jeffrey A. Butts authored a bulletin examining several teen court evaluations. The bulletin discusses the increasing popularity of teen courts as a response to serious, violent, and chronic juvenile offenders. It cautions that empirical data is lacking to fully evaluate the effectiveness of this peer-centered intervention.
An academic article from the paperswithcode platform argues that formal institutions and law are significant instruments in African political contests. It suggests that broad discretionary power in legal-rational domains facilitates informal governance and calls for empirical studies on formal-informal institutional interplay. The article proposes administrative-law reforms to democratize legal processes and empower citizen participation.
A text-based analysis of U.S. policy toward Cuba from 1959 to the early 2000s, covering more than four decades of political history. The work by Patrick J. Haney examines the domestic political dynamics, including the influence of interest groups, Congress, and electoral campaigns, that have shaped the long-standing embargo. It tracks the emergence of the Cuban American National Foundation and the tightening of policy through acts like Helms-Burton.
The Afro-Asian world and the law of nations examines the historical circumstances under which countries in Asia and Africa entered the sphere of public international law. The course material, authored by C.H. Alexandrowicz, studies the legal institutions that facilitated or accompanied this process. The dataset appears to be a collection of academic course content or papers.
Herman J. Cohen's 'Intervening in Africa' presents a collection of case studies on superpower diplomatic interventions. The work likely contains historical analyses of peacemaking efforts in countries including Ethiopia, Sudan, Angola, Liberia, Rwanda, Mozambique, and Somalia. The dataset is sourced from the ADST-DACOR Diplomats and Diplomacy Series and is hosted on Papers with Code.
Mutiny on the Amistad is a historical text by Howard Jones detailing the 1839 slave revolt on the Spanish ship Amistad and its subsequent legal and diplomatic repercussions. The work covers the capture of the Africans, their trial in U.S. courts culminating at the Supreme Court, and the international controversy involving Spain and American abolitionists. It is sourced from the paperswithcode platform.
Jennifer Macomber compiled a collection of papers and policy briefs examining the intended and unintended consequences of the 1997 Adoption and Safe Families Act. The dataset likely contains qualitative and quantitative analyses of the law's impact on children, families, and the child welfare system. The source platform is paperswithcode, and the license is closed.
A book by Allen S. Whiting applying the micro-macro linkage approach to Chinese foreign policy. The work examines processes, situations, and structures of policy, analyzing international environment and domestic constraints. It explores key trends of modernization, nationalism, and regionalism and reviews related literature and approaches.