Engagement with the world creates jobs and growth while a policy of economic isolationism destroys them. |
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Progress in developing integration across the behavioral sciences can be limited by disinterest, isolationism, and even outright hostility. |
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European leaders therefore worried that the United States might at some point be tempted again by the siren call of isolationism. |
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They rejected isolationism and nationalist parochialism and defended a conception of universal human values. |
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In the 1930s, American politics were characterized by isolationism in foreign policy and a preoccupation with internal affairs. |
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Internationally, nuclear weapons and e-commerce make isolationism impossible. |
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A vast humanitarian operation could threaten their gainful isolationism and turn the population against its tormentors. |
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The public did not turn to isolationism and the Congress and administration curbed their unilateralism. |
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Older traditions of internationalism and isolationism have been revived and adapted to post-cold war conditions. |
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If the US can be persuaded to keep supporting global treaties, ministers argue, it will not retreat into dangerous isolationism. |
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That is because of the always latent and sometimes active strain of isolationism in American political culture. |
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Quite frankly at this point a policy of isolationism would be fine with me. |
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I came back convinced that there were only two American foreign policies, either isolationism or a crusade. |
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The reason for this doctrine was perhaps explained by the curious American policy of isolationism. |
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Evangelicity, in other words, guards against ecclesial formalism by breaching the walls of institutional isolationism. |
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But in a globalized economy, old-fashioned isolationism just isn't tenable. |
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Instead of internationalism, we find among the Left now a sort of affectless, neutralist, smirking isolationism. |
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The traditional pillars of American conservatism were fiscal continence and isolationism. |
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The restrictive Immigration Act of 1924 reflected the isolationism prevalent in America between the World Wars. |
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It is a role we should embrace with real confidence, resisting nostalgia, refusing to retreat into isolationism. |
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The most effective way of finessing this conflict between isolationism and globalism was to be systematically exploited in the 20th century. |
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Their discussion is brief, but it raises useful questions, concerning isolationism vs. globalism. |
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This is evident in a wider context in the isolationism that manifests itself in various ways in their policies. |
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The North might have chosen the path of virtuous isolationism, letting the South secede and becoming an egalitarian social democracy. |
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In Common Sense, he argued for American severance from the British empire, and for isolationism in American policy towards Europe. |
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On the other hand, Spartan isolationism appeared as a direct threat to Athens. |
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The orthodox libertarian foreign policy platform is one of minimalism and non-involvement bordering at times on isolationism. |
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But arguing about theories of isolationism versus interventionism is to me a bit too reminiscent of Leftist devotion to oversimplified theories. |
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People misuse the categories of interventionism and isolationism. |
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Meanwhile, the nation's postwar isolationism proved only temporary. |
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The old policy of economic isolationism is a recipe for economic disaster. |
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It is an earnest belief in a 1980s opulence that translates into an aesthetic of social isolationism. |
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If we go into Afghanistan with the United Nations, under a UN flag, in no way does it signify isolationism. |
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One of the key lessons of the Great Depression was that a lack of cooperation and a retreat to isolationism can make things worse. |
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An era of involuntary isolationism would be the lot of the United States. |
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It can, for example, help combat the risks of isolationism, protectionism and xenophobia which arise in times of economic crisis. |
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Lester Pearson's government did not stare down our enemies through the power of love and isolationism. |
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For centuries, the kingdom followed a policy of isolationism. |
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Finally, there was criticism of undue red tape, remaining obstacles at national level and a tendency to national isolationism. |
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They learned, much to their horror, with Pearl Harbour, that isolationism does not work when we are dealing with evil. |
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I was against Chinese isolationism decades ago, when even the Chinese authorities wanted it and I am also against us attempting such a move. |
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Let us put an end to this isolationism which creates divisions between countries and peoples by pulling together instead. |
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He talked about economic isolationism, defeatists, protectionists, who is talking about protectionism, who is talking about economic isolationism. |
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The Bloc Quebecois's sovereigntist thrust must not mean a kind of isolationism, heedless of our responsibilities to our strategic allies. |
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Its reservation is captured in the following, rather blunt wording: avoid American isolationism and European separatism. |
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Nothing justified isolationism and no culture could cut itself off from the rest of the world. |
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So how does he end up with the leader of American isolationism? |
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As far as isolationism, I challenge the member. |
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Countries have tried isolationism in the past. |
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The trend simply is not towards isolationism one, but towards integration. |
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Ethiopian music stands out from the rest of African music because it's got this very particular groove as a result of the frantic isolationism Ethiopia went through at the time. |
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One interesting thing about Prince Rupert and the people who live there is that there was a certain degree of isolationism not just from the government in Ottawa but from their own provincial government in Victoria. |
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Despite the great difference in age between the two societies, neither state has been allowed the luxury of serious or prolonged isolationism for a variety of historical and geostrategic reasons. |
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It also fueled antisemitism, xenophobia, nativism, and isolationism. |
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If we give way to isolationism, a narrow view of our borders and the primacy of national interests, we will inevitably become powerless and irrelevant. |
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In many ways, Buchanan is a throwback to America First isolationism, but he is more cautious in making anti-semitic appeals. |
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McCurry referred to President Bush's Pearl Harbor Day speech in citing the dangers of isolationism and its economic accomplice, protectionism. |
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Arthur Vandenberg at a pivotal moment to renounce isolationism in favor of collective security, then broke the story. |
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The answer lies in the intersection of isolationism and war. |
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The spirit of isolationism now at large in America crosses the floor between Republican and Democrat. |
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Before contact was initiated by the West, China followed a policy of isolationism. |
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Yet, what can only be described as a cheap shot for votes, the NDP has forsaken its own principles for an easy isolationism that appeals to the worst of our natures, the selfish and easy way out. |
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A review could demonstrate to the allies the perils of introspection and isolationism, and emphasise the need for a broad-minded approach to European and world security. |
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Amid the wreckage of failed development, culture will surely regress into decline and decay, or fall easy prey to isolationism, brute force or despotism. |
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These groups are characterised by economic nativism, anti-immigration and protectionist leanings, religious fanaticism, and geopolitical isolationism. |
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In the East, the native Chinese overthrew the Yuan dynasty in 1368, launching their own Ming dynasty and pursuing a policy of economic isolationism. |
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Forces which deterred the democracies from acting to stop Hitler early on and at a much, much lower cost in human life were pacifism, appeasement, and isolationism. |
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Steeped in isolationism, Vietnam has been reluctant to heed that advice. |
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These long distance journeys were not followed up, as the Chinese Ming dynasty retreated in the haijin, a policy of isolationism, having limited maritime trade. |
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