American foreign policy interests
Abbreviation:
Am. Foreign Policy Interests
Published by:
Informa - Taylor and Francis Group
Publisher Location: Philadelphia, PA, USA
Journal Website:
http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/uafp20
Range of citations in the SafetyLit database:
2005; 27(5) --
2008; 30(4)
Publication Date Range:
1994 -- 2016
Number of articles from this journal included in the SafetyLit database:
3
(Download all articles from this journal in CSV format.)
pISSN = 1080-3920 | eISSN = 1533-2128
Find a library that holds this journal: http://worldcat.org/issn/10803920
Journal Language(s):
English
Title preceded by:
American foreign policy newsletter
Aims and Scope (from publisher):
As the journal of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy ( NCAFP), American Foreign Policy Interests has been publishing provocative articles articulating American foreign policy initiatives from a nonpartisan perspective for more than 20 years. Now published by Taylor & Francis, the journal continues to elucidate and analyze, within the framework of political realism, the rapidly changing world and the serious problems confronting the United States in its foreign relations.
Timely and thought-provoking, American Foreign Policy Interests offers articles written by some of the world’s foremost experts and officials on topics of immediate interest and importance, including:
The global terrorist threat
Muslim fundamentalism and American relations with the Arab world
The Middle East peace process and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
The proliferation of biological and chemical weapons
Cross-straits relations between China and Taiwan
The conflict in Northern Ireland
The changing role of NATO
The journal aims to publish thought-provoking pieces on these and other matters focusing on American interests in a shifting political and economic environment, including preserving and strengthening open-society countries; improving America’s relations with the developing world; advancing human rights; curbing nuclear proliferation and extending arms control agreements; and promoting an open and global world economy.