| |
Teaching the Journal of American History |
 | | Development inserted into international relations a new problematic and a new concept of time, asserting that all nations followed a common historical path and that those in the lead had a moral duty to those who followed. |
 | | Through its development programs, the monarchy assumed a relationship of trusteeship over the nation, presenting the king as retaining custody of the state during a dangerous transitional period but ready to relinquish power once modernity was achieved. |
 | | Large-scale development projects, visible signs of national energy, would stake a claim to the future for the Pashtuns and to the present for the royal family. |
| www.indiana.edu /~jah/teaching/2002_09/article.shtml (11369 words) |