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Topic: Stanley Hoffmann


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In the News (Wed 15 Feb 12)

  
  Hoffmann   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Stanley Hoffmann is the Paul and Catherine Buttenwieser University Professor at Harvard, where he has taught since 1955.
Professor Hoffmann was born in Vienna in 1928.
He lived and studied in France from 1929 to 1955; he has taught at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques of Paris, from which he graduated, and at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales.
www.gov.harvard.edu /Faculty/Bios/Hoffmann.htm   (174 words)

  
 Alibris: Stanley Hoffmann
Stanley Hoffmann has remarked that "it wasn't I who chose to study world politics.
Renowned for his compassionate and balanced thinking on international affairs, Stanley Hoffmann reflects here on the proper place of the United States in a world it has defined almost exclusively by 9/11, the war on terrorism, and the invasion of Iraq.
A true global citizen, Hoffmann's analysis is uniquely informed by his place as a public...
www.alibris.com /search/books/author/Stanley_Hoffmann   (769 words)

  
 TAP: Vol 13, Iss. 24. The High and the Mighty. Stanley Hoffmann.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
In the words of Pierre Hassner, "The choice is between an attempt at authoritarian, global U.S. rule tempered by anarchic resistance, on the one hand, and, on the other, hegemony tempered by law, concert and consent."
Copyright © 2003 by The American Prospect, Inc. Preferred Citation: Stanley Hoffmann, "The High and the Mighty," The American Prospect vol.
This article may not be resold, reprinted, or redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior written permission from the author.
www.prospect.org /print/V13/24/hoffmann-s.html   (2773 words)

  
 Media's Take on the News: 3-12-03 to 4-24-03
The democratizers' model for transforming Iraq is America's post-World War II occupation of Japan.
However, historian Stanley Karnow says the Vietnam experience raises a tough question for Iraq's guerrilla fighters: How many are willing to die for their cause?
In his interviews with North Vietnamese and Viet Cong commanders after the war, he says, they told him they would have been willing to sustain unlimited numbers of casualties, and fight for five or 10 years more -- anything so as not to be defeated by the Americans.
hnn.us /articles/1046.html   (18092 words)

  
 The New York Review of Books: Stanley Hoffmann
Stanley Hoffmann is Paul and Catherine Buttenwieser University Professor at Harvard.
"Wrong assumptions, immoderate and confused ends, served by a mixture of counterproductive, inadequate, mismanaged, and, at times, scandalous means": Stanley Hoffmann's verdict on the US invasion of Iraq carries an uneasy echo of his view of the US failure in Vietnam.
Reflections on the Morality of the Persian Gulf War by Jean Bethke Elshtain, by Stanley Hauerwas, by Sari Nusseibeh, by Michael Walzer, by George Weigel
www.nybooks.com /authors/320   (1169 words)

  
 Background Research : International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty
Explores political and legal aspects of humanitarian interventions and reviews four legal-political strategies, ranging from the status quo to the codification of a doctrine of humanitarian intervention.
Hehir, Bryan J. "The Just-War Ethic Revisited." In Ideas and Ideals: Essays on Politics in Honor of Stanley Hoffmann, edited by Linda B. Miller and Michael Joseph Smith, 144-161.
Henkin, Louis, Stanley Hoffmann, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, Allan Gerson, William D. Rogers and David J. Scheffer, eds.
www.iciss.ca /04_Biblio-en.asp   (11605 words)

  
 PEACE AND SOCIAL JUSTICE--REFERENCES
An approach to world peace," in Stanley Hoffmann (Ed.), Conditions of World Order.
"The anarchical order of power," in Stanley Hoffmann (Ed.), Conditions of World Order.
Benn, Stanley I. "Justice," in Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.
www.hawaii.edu /powerkills/TJP.REF.HTM   (1916 words)

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