The Fortunes of the West: The Future of the Atlantic NationsIndiana University Press, 1972 - 304 Seiten |
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Seite 50
... goals and social values that Atlantic nations . are now striving to realize . The aims of national policies in the current period may be grouped into six categories : 1. maintenance of economic growth and full employment , requiring ...
... goals and social values that Atlantic nations . are now striving to realize . The aims of national policies in the current period may be grouped into six categories : 1. maintenance of economic growth and full employment , requiring ...
Seite 51
... goals , the priorities among them , and the means for achieving them have become the major issues of national politics . These developments have in turn continuously increased the signifi- cance and power of the central institutions of ...
... goals , the priorities among them , and the means for achieving them have become the major issues of national politics . These developments have in turn continuously increased the signifi- cance and power of the central institutions of ...
Seite 55
... goals . Nonetheless , these critics are impelled by their own sense of redemptive mission to reform the evils they condemn , and they press their efforts with the same logical rigor and with equally utopian expectations of early and ...
... goals . Nonetheless , these critics are impelled by their own sense of redemptive mission to reform the evils they condemn , and they press their efforts with the same logical rigor and with equally utopian expectations of early and ...
Inhalt
WHAT THIS BOOK IS ABOUT | 1 |
TRENDS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF | 13 |
The Rationalizing Effects of the Protestant | 21 |
Urheberrecht | |
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20th century achieve ambivalent American Atlantic countries Atlantic economic Atlantic nations Atlantic region attitudes become behavioral norms blocs capabilities changes Chapter characteristics cold war competition conflicts continue decades domestic economic growth economic integration economic system effects elite groups European Community European union Europeanists external factors foreign policy fostered future Germany greater growing Hence humanistic impelled important increasing increasingly influence institutions interests international system Japan leisured nonelites less major manifest Marxism ments monetary nation-state NATO nature nomic nuclear nuclear war opinion leaders organizations patrimonial positivism positivistic postwar period pressures probable problems production projection proto-superpower redemptive activism relationships role Russian sense of mission significant social society and culture sociocultural sooner or later Soviet Union substantial superpowers supranational technocratic technocratic elites technocratic society technological tend tion tional trade transformation trends unification United Kingdom West European Western Europe Western societies world politics World War II