Serial/Series Title

Language

Agricultural Research, Education, and Extension : Questionnaire Responses from Partners and Stakeholders (open access)

Agricultural Research, Education, and Extension : Questionnaire Responses from Partners and Stakeholders

This report describes the public agricultural, research, education, and extension system. Furthermore, the report summarizes the budgetary issues with the program in terms of under funding from both federal and state government. The report suggests that the need for this funding will be assessed by debating if the program is meeting its research challenges.
Date: March 6, 1996
Creator: Rawson, Jean M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Executive Branch Reorganization (open access)

Executive Branch Reorganization

This issue brief views reorganization as involving the alteration and relocation of both programs and the administrative structure of the executive branch for reasons of efficiency, economy, and direction. The underlying issue is who reorganizes--Congress or the President--and by what authority and, also, for what purpose? Some other related administrative and management reforms are tracked as well.
Date: December 6, 1996
Creator: Relyea, Harold C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The World Food Summit (open access)

The World Food Summit

Governments participating in the 1996 World Food Summit will examine how to deal with world hunger and malnutrition and achieve the goal of food security for all. There is broad agreement on the desirability of the Summit's goal, but controversy has developed over such issues as the relationship of trade liberalization and food security, the advisability of declaring a legal right to food, the link between population stabilization and reproductive health and food security, and responsibility within the UN system for Summit follow-up.
Date: November 6, 1996
Creator: Hanrahan, Charles E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
China's Rising Power: Alternative U.S. National Security Strategies - Findings of a Seminar (open access)

China's Rising Power: Alternative U.S. National Security Strategies - Findings of a Seminar

Although recent development of China's wealth and power poses opportunities as well as challenges for U.S. policy, participants at a CRS seminar on dealing with China's rise focused on the challenges. China is seen as a very large, strategically located country undergoing rapid economic growth and social change, and ruled by authoritarian political leaders. Since the Maoist era, China has made great strides in conforming to many international norms, but a combination of rising Chinese power and nationalistic assertiveness poses serious problems for: U.S. security interests in Asia; U.S. efforts to curb trafficking in technology for weapons of mass destruction and conventional weapons; U.S. support for a smooth running market basedinternational economic systems; and U.S. backing of other international norms regarding human rights, environmental protection and other issues.
Date: June 6, 1996
Creator: Sutter, Robert G. & Mitchener, Peter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pakistan Aid Cutoff: U.S. Nonproliferation and Foreign Policy Considerations (open access)

Pakistan Aid Cutoff: U.S. Nonproliferation and Foreign Policy Considerations

U.S. aid and arms sales to Pakistan generally had been prohibited since October 1990 because the President could not make a required annual certification to Congress under Section 620E(e) of the Foreign Assistance Act, the so-called "Pressler Amendment," that Pakistan did not possess a nuclear explosive device. However, on February 12, 1996, the President signed into law the Foreign Operations Appropriations Act for FY1996, which includes provisions that significantly relax previous restrictions on U.S. aid to Pakistan.
Date: December 6, 1996
Creator: Cronin, Richard P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Auburn Dam on the American River: Fact Sheet (open access)

Auburn Dam on the American River: Fact Sheet

For more than 30 years, Congress has debated constructing a dam on the American River near Auburn, California. The Army Corps of Engineers recently identified three alternatives for flood control, with the Division office's preferred plan calling for construction of a 508-foot-high detention dam. Currently, two bills address the issue: H.R. 3270 supports construction of the dam, while H.R. 2951 opposes construction of any structure on the North Fork of the American River.
Date: June 6, 1996
Creator: Cody, Betsy A.; Hughes, H. Steven & Price, Shelley
System: The UNT Digital Library