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Bibliographic entry in Chapter 24: The United States, China, and Southeast Asia since the Vietnam War | Bibliographies and Other Reference Works authorGovernment Information Office, Republic of ChinaimprintTaipei: Government Information Office, 1989-.annotationAn official reference work with
The SHAFR Guide Online’s thirty chapters cover all eras in U.S. history from colonial days through the Barack Obama presidency as well as all geographical areas of the world. A specialist of the topic has expertly organized and annotated each chapter’s entries. The latest edition also includes four new thematic chapters—on economic issues; non-governmental actors; domestic issues, the Congress, and public opinion; and race, gender, and culture. Entries include every type of historical source, from collections of government documents to biographies, monographs, book chapters, journal articles, web sites, and much more.
The SHAFR Guide itself has a long, illustrious history. Since 1983, SHAFR has published several previous editions, under different names, edited by Richard Dean Burns, Robert Beisner, and Thomas Zeiler. Henceforth, The SHAFR Guide will be primarily an online tool. The addition of keywords for each entry is meant to make searches as effortless as possible. It is destined to become the preeminent bibliography in the field and an indispensable research tool for historians of U.S. foreign relations—amateurs and professionals alike.
Section in Chapter 24: The United States, China, and Southeast Asia since the Vietnam War Lardy, Nicholas R. China's Unfinished Economic Revolution. Washington: Brookings Institution, 1998. Lardy focuses on the weaknesses of China's public finances and banking system, analyzing in depth the current
People's Republic of China.keywordsHenry Kissinger; memoir; People's Republic of China; triangular diplomacy; East Asia...
Bibliographic entry in Chapter 14: The United States and the Early Cold War, 1945-1961 | Biographical Studies authorRankin, Karl LottimprintSeattle: University of Washington Press, 1964.annotationRankin served briefly in China in 1949, before being transferred to Taiwan, where he represented the
Bibliographic entry in Chapter 24: The United States, China, and Southeast Asia since the Vietnam War | United States and China authorMosher, Steven W.imprintNew York: Basic Books, 1990.annotationOnly Mosher's last two chapters (of ten) deal with the post-1972 period. A dedicated detractor of the
Bibliographic entry in Chapter 24: The United States, China, and Southeast Asia since the Vietnam War | United States and China authorOksenberg, MichelimprintForeign Affairs 70 (Summer 1991): 1-16.annotationOksenberg argues that Sino-American relations are in serious disarray. China's leaders
Bibliographic entry in Chapter 24: The United States, China, and Southeast Asia since the Vietnam War | China authorLardy, Nicholas R.imprintWashington: Brookings Institution, 1998.annotationLardy focuses on the weaknesses of China's public finances and banking system, analyzing in depth the
Bibliographic entry in Chapter 24: The United States, China, and Southeast Asia since the Vietnam War | China authorHan, NianlongimprintHong Kong: New Horizon Press, 1990.annotationA translation of Dangdai Zhongguo Waijiao [Contemporary Chinese Diplomacy], published in Beijing in 1987, this is an
Section in Chapter 24: The United States, China, and Southeast Asia since the Vietnam War Barnett, A. Doak, ed. U.S. China Policy: Building a New Consensus. Washington: CSIS, 1994. A publication of the CSIS Working Group on Hong Kong and China, this report includes a forty-six-page article by