Learning Objectives A thorough study of Chapter Thirty-Three should enable the student to understand: |
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The efforts of President Gerald Ford to overcome the effects of Richard Nixon's resignation. |
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The rapid emergence of Jimmy Carter as a national figure and the reasons for his victory in 1976. |
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Carter's emphasis on human rights and its effects on international relations. |
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Carter's role in bringing about the Camp David agreement and the impact of this agreement on the Middle East. |
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Why the United States had so much difficulty in freeing the hostages held by Iran and the effect of this episode on the Carter presidency. |
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The nature of the "Reagan revolution" and the meaning of "supply-side" economics. |
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The staunchly anticommunist Reagan foreign policy. |
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The changing demography of America from 1970 to 1990. |
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The increasingly conservative mood of the American electorate. |
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The emergence of a new era in foreign policy with the collapse of the Soviet Union. |
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