Jump to content

Wikipedia:Stanford Archive answers/Politics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
  1. Okuma doctrine -> by Count Okuma; considered the Asian Monroe Doctrine
  2. Mikulski Commission - also known as the Commission on Delegate Selection and Party Structure, it was created following the Democratic loss in the 1972 to re-evaluate the processes by which candidates were nominated. Named for Barbara Mikulski.
  3. Symbolic analysts < concept in The Work of Nations by Robert Reich
  4. Operation Blast Furnace < 1986 military action; Bolivia – United States relations needs standalone
  5. Abolition of Private Property -> Idea from Engels and Marx's Communist Manifesto
  6. Council of Magdeberg, Council of Magdeburg < needs standalone; see Magdeburg rights and German town law
  7. Costigan-Wagner Act Wagner-Costigan Act (Names May Be Reversed < 1935 anti-lynching initiative; should be a standalone at Costigan-Wagner Bill (currently redirect to Costigan bio)
  8. Fence mending - The term originated in 1879 when Ohio senator John Sherman made a trip home. It is what politicians do when they visit their electoral districts to explain an unpopular action. [1]
  9. Emergency Congress -> also known as "Hundred days congress", special session of congress that met March 9 to June 16, 1933 to discuss many issues in FDR's New Deal
  10. Statutes of Vizcaya -> system of laws issued in Spanish Basque Country, revoked in 1839 at the end of the First Carlist War
  11. Crime Victims Rights -> See here
  12. Shomrei Torah Sephardim-Sephardi Torah Guardians -> Israeli political party
  13. William Barloon And David Daliberti < Daliberti v. Iraq, Daliberti v. Republic of Iraq