Research Paper
Undergraduate
Jimmy Carter the 39th President
The 39th President of the United States, James Earl ("Jimmy") Carter, Jr., (known as Jimmy Carter) was elected to the White House in 1976, having defeated the incumbent Republican President, Gerald Ford.
American foreign policy since its inception
When discussing American foreign policy since the inception of the nation, one must take into account that the United States of America has been an ever-expanding nation; territorially, politically, and economically. As a result of the continually change in American power and influence in relation to other nations, there has been a continual evolving foreign policy. When the United States began, it was a small and weak nation, but as America grew its foreign policy grew with it. While the nation may have begun its existence as a weak nation, with a weak foreign policy to accompany it, as the nation became more powerful, its foreign policy expanded to a point where the United States is the most powerful and influential nation on the planet.
Research Paper
Undergraduate
Moche Paleoindians the First Human
The first human settlers crossed from the Old to New World approximately 15,000 to 20,000 years ago. In the hundreds of generations following, they proceeded over the Isthmus of Panama and down to the continent of what…
Illicit Arms Trade in South
In this short essay, the author will look at the illicit arms trade In South and Central America and how that affects US Foreign Policy regionally and globally. In Central and South America, the drug trade and the arms trade are completely linked. The problems of drug trafficking and the illicit arms trade are phenomena
that are essentially related. It is practically impossible to deal
with each issue separately.
As illicit trades, they account for the largest sectors of the black market.
They generally use the same routes, although arms production and the demand
for illicit drugs are found in the industrialized countries like the U.S., whereas illicit drugs
production and the demand for weapons are found in the so-called developing
world such as in Central and South America. The war in Columbia between Marxist rebels and the Columbian government is at the epicenter of this trade and draws the U.S. almost inevitably deeper into conflict there. Without a coordinated response from all of the countries in the region, there will be little likelihood of resolving the problem any time soon and bringing the conflict to a peaceful end.