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$21.86
81. Jimmy Carter: America's 39th President
$10.85
82. Starved for Science: How Biotechnology
 
$10.95
83. How Jimmy won: The victory campaign
$6.70
84. An American Idea: The Making of
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85. A Quiet Revolution: The First
 
$110.84
86. The Wit and Wisdom of Jimmy Carter
 
87. Dasher: The Roots and Rising of
 
$9.55
88. Electing Jimmy Carter: The Campaign
$30.50
89. Jimmy Carter: President and Peacemaker
$18.75
90. Jimmy Carter: U.s. President And
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91. Jimmy Carter (History Maker Biographies)
 
$96.60
92. Jimmy Carter and American Fantasy:
$77.99
93. State of the Union Addresses of
94. State of the Union - 1978 to 1981
$17.12
95. Jimmy Carter As Educational Policymaker
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96. Jimmy Carter (Major World Leaders)
 
97. "A new spirit, a new commitment,
 
98. Jimmy Carter
 
99. Jimmy Carter (World leaders past
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100. Jimmy Carter (United States Presidents)

81. Jimmy Carter: America's 39th President (Encyclopedia of Presidents. Second Series)
by Deborah Kent
Library Binding: 110 Pages (2005-06-30)
list price: US$34.00 -- used & new: US$21.86
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Asin: 0516229753
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Presents a biography of Jimmy Carter ... Read more


82. Starved for Science: How Biotechnology Is Being Kept Out of Africa
by Robert Paarlberg
Paperback: 256 Pages (2009-08-05)
list price: US$17.95 -- used & new: US$10.85
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Asin: 0674033477
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Listen to a short interview with Robert Paarlberg
Host: Chris Gondek | Producer: Heron & Crane

Heading upcountry in Africa to visit small farms is absolutely exhilarating given the dramatic beauty of big skies, red soil, and arid vistas, but eventually the two-lane tarmac narrows to rutted dirt, and the journey must continue on foot. The farmers you eventually meet are mostly women, hardworking but visibly poor. They have no improved seeds, no chemical fertilizers, no irrigation, and with their meager crops they earn less than a dollar a day. Many are malnourished.

Nearly two-thirds of Africans are employed in agriculture, yet on a per-capita basis they produce roughly 20 percent less than they did in 1970. Although modern agricultural science was the key to reducing rural poverty in Asia, modern farm science—including biotechnology—has recently been kept out of Africa.

In Starved for Science Robert Paarlberg explains why poor African farmers are denied access to productive technologies, particularly genetically engineered seeds with improved resistance to insects and drought. He traces this obstacle to the current opposition to farm science in prosperous countries. Having embraced agricultural science to become well-fed themselves, those in wealthy countries are now instructing Africans—on the most dubious grounds—not to do the same.

In a book sure to generate intense debate, Paarlberg details how this cultural turn against agricultural science among affluent societies is now being exported, inappropriately, to Africa. Those who are opposed to the use of agricultural technologies are telling African farmers that, in effect, it would be just as well for them to remain poor.

(20080215) ... Read more

Customer Reviews (4)

3-0 out of 5 stars Starved for Science or Hungry for the Truth?
Robert Paarlberg provides his panacea for global poverty and hunger in his latest book Starved for Science: How Biotechnology is Being Kept out of Africa.Through the book, Paarlberg constructs a well supported and polarizing argument describing how genetically modified (GM) agriculture can alleviate Africa's widespread hunger, yet the technology is being denied to those that most need it.He provides extensive support for his points, sometimes at the expense of being redundant in order to fully back his claims, yet the writing in general is captivating and better attention retaining than most scientific writing.

Paarlberg characterizes the global great skepticism and even fear of GM agriculture, in part due to the fact that westerncountries are rich and do not need further agricultural science to ensure sufficient food supplies (which has contributed to a decrease in public sector agricultural research and foreign assistance overall#.Paarlberg goes on to describe how the general aversion has been projected onto African leaders causing them to reject the food their countrymen need so badly.Paarlberg cites unfounded propaganda of the dangers of genetically modified organisms #GMOs), international trade standards, and the threat of rescindment of financial assistance by European governments and NGOs as the leverage used to exert their influence on African leaders, vilifying the governments, lobbyists, and NGOs alike in the process.

Yet the debate is not so clear cut.Paarlberg dramatically reproaches an unsubstantiated global opposition towards GMOs, saying that there has yet to be any evidence presented to suggest their potential dangers and thus no scientific justification for their rejection.However, while some have agreed with Paarlberg that GM foods are safe, it is not due to lack of evidence to the contrary.If anything, the reality is that there is far from a clear conclusion on the matter.Paarlberg also neglects any mention of the substantial political support for GM agriculture.He asserts that genetic engineering is the `all or nothing' solution excluding several non-GM approaches and grossly generalizing the African continent.

Paarlberg's book brings a great deal of awareness to a situation many would otherwise know nothing about, and one which may hold the key to Africa's future.Genetic modification is a subject that is in general plagued by stigma and politics and it is important that the debate be brought to light in order to make well informed progress.Thus, this book is an important read for anyone concerned with African development and relations, foreign policy, or agriculture, and furthermore for the population in general hoping to become more informed of the world around them.

It is equally important, however, that dogmatic stance and vilification of the opposition do more than sensationalizing the situation and instead provide a well balanced case.Readers should be aware that Paarlberg's book provides an excellent summary, but only of one side of the argument.Further reading is necessary to gain a full understanding of the situation.

1-0 out of 5 stars Very narrow and pro-corporate view of science
The central premise of this book is that those who oppose the wholesale conversion of the world's vast agricultural biodiversity to a small handful of genetically modified commercial crop varieties are somehow anti-science.

Ecology is a science. It offers us numerous cautionary tales about simplistic interventions in complex systems. It suggests that a stable long term food system will utilize more rather than fewer species and varieties of plants. Greatly increasing the use of synthetic nitrogen fertilizer would likely increase African yields in the short term, but it requires fossil fuel imputs that are clearly not sustainable and likely contributing to climate destabilization (a serious problem facing future Africans).

Ecology demonstrates why simplistic poisons, like Monsanto's RoundUp, don't offer long lasting control because weeds and insect pests evolve quickly in response to the extreme environmental pressures the poisons supply. In the brief history of GMO agriculture there is already considerable evidence of genetic adaptation by several important weed species.

Agriculture is a craft that has been developed in real world conditions over ten thousand years. In the phrase of British biologist Colin Tudge, what we need is 'science assisted craft', not the replacement of that essentially biological craft by a crude industrial technology.

The precautionary principle argues for testing new ideas more thoroughly and on a small scale because of the likelihood of unintended consequences. To think that growing our food with synthetic fertilizers and patented GMOs is more scientific than a broad based organic agriculture is akin to arguing that amphetamines provide more energy than bread.

3-0 out of 5 stars Feels like half of the story
Robert Paarlberg (RP) seems sincere in his desire to help solve the problem of African hunger. Even though he advocates doing so using technologies owned by Monsanto, Synergen or Du Pont/Pioneer, he's candid that these companies aren't likely to win popularity contests. If, as some might suspect, the book is propaganda for those companies, it's unusually sophisticated. Nonetheless, I'm troubled by some of the book's argumentative techniques, and especially by its failure to engage with some pertinent issues. Even if sincerely motivated, it comes across less like a balanced book about policy and more like a legal brief, a style of writing in which you skate over or even ignore the weak points of your argument rather than confront them.

1. RP's argument focuses on the health and environmental aspects of using genetically modified organisms (GMOs) for food. Europeans consumers don't see much benefit for those foods, and, according to surveys, are even more ignorant than Americansabout the science behind them. Moreover, the EU has adopted an unusually rigorous precautionary approach to regulating the foods, contrasted with the American one, which is more welcoming. Europe is much closer in psychological as well as physical distance to Africa than is the US, is more commercially connected to African agriculture, and also supplies 3x as much aid as the US. Consequently, the European approach to impeding the spread of GMOs by regulation has been the role model for African governments -- even though, in RP's view, African countries (i) need GMOs to feed their people and (ii) are pretty lax in regulating everything else. NGOs that are opposed to Green Revolution-style agriculture, which uses a lot of fertilizers, make things worse. So does the World Bank, which has cut back drastically on agricultural aid. Nonetheless, African governments themselves must shoulder much of the blame, for their "curious failure" to invest in science-based agriculture (e.g., @84).

2. Here's where some odd omissions begin. (A) RP alludes in passing to the World Bank's shift to structural reform in lieu of direct aid. He also mentions that many African countries export crops grown for European consumers. And he mentions the "curious failure" to invest. But he doesn't connect the dots. For many years, the World Bank and International Monetary Fund forced debtor governments to prioritize debt repayment. Exports were necessary to earn dollars and other foreign currencies to pay off Western lenders. Payments to farmers, and investment in agricultural and transportation infrastructure fell precipitously as a result. (See, e.g., Walden Bello's article in The Nation, 2008/05/15.) The "curious failure" was due at least in part to pressure from Western financial institutions. Nor does RP mention the impact of the WTO and other regional trade treaties on local agriculture in poorer countries, which had to open their economies to imports esp. from the US. To say nothing of the civil wars, government corruption and other problems in Africa that might distract governments from agricultural policy. I don't understand why he omits these subjects, since they don't necessarily detract from his theory of EU influence.

(B) On the other hand, his discussion of issues relating to intellectual property rights (IPR) is less forthright. He dismisses the issue by claiming that most companies are willing to license royalty-free in the poorest countries since the money they could make is so small (@115). But in fact this wasn't Monsanto's plan for a bigger-market product, GMO drought-tolerant maize; their generosity manifested itself instead in their lobbying to get paid from the deep pockets of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (see @174). (Even if markets in Africa are small, the IPR issue is especially sensitive in countries that have huge poor populations, like China and India. RP points out that multinationals have licensed GMO technologies to local joint ventures in those countries; that isn't the same thing as letting farmers off the hook from buying seeds plus Monsanto fertilizer each year. He also doesn't mention the increasing number of suicides by small farmers in India associated with the spread of GMO cotton cultivation, which has been documented by V. Shiva and others.)

RP omits any mention of the WTO's highly controversial TRIPS agreement, which requires member countries to recognize GMO patents. He also omits any mention of the UPOV agreement on plant varieties, and the pressures the US and other OECD countries bring to bear for "TRIPS+" provisions (i.e., provisons that provide even stronger IPR protection than TRIPS -- thereby benefiting the "1st World" country) when negotiating bilateral treaties. See e.g. the outstanding volume edited by G. Tansey and T. Rajotte, "The Future Control of Food" (Earthscan 2008). See also the work of John Barton at Stanford Law School, who has shown that these treaty provisions tend to benefit only multinationals, and not local biotech industries. RP himself supplies the astonishing figures that while US farmers get 20% of the "economic surplus" from GMO soybeans, Monsanto itself gets 45% of this surplus (@34). That's a recommendation?

3. Some of RP's other arguments amount to little more than name-calling. Those who oppose GMO crops because of the involvement of multinationals are labeled "agrarian romantics and populists" (@79). The ranks of the proponents of organic food and opponents of chemical use also include a "former hippie" (@62), an "accountant who grew up on the Lower East Side of Manhattan" (@72), a "thorough mystic" who believed in Atlantis (@id.), a "graduate of a Quaker college in Indiana" (@104), and an "aquatic biologist [and] literary celebrity" who just happened to be Rachel Carson. Credible critics like Carson and Jim Hightower (whom RP does at least call "talented" @69) are inserted into a parade of putative amateurs and loonies, for a kind of guilt by association. The notion that hunger is not caused by a shortage of food is called "the Greenpeace line" (@105); you won't find any mention in this book of the first person to put forward this idea and to provide evidence to support it, 1998 Nobel laureate Amartya Sen (see, e.g., Sen's classic "Poverty and Famines" (Oxford UP 1981)). On the other side of the divide is rational science, as represented by "innovators" Monsanto & al.(@33), and by a "scientific consensus" evidenced by citations to just 2 articles (@29-30).

4. RP's argument that European attitudes have influenced policy in Africa is quite plausible. But it's also only part of the story. RP quotes an African activist as saying "Yes, we are starving, but we are saying no to the food the Americans are forcing on our throats" (@142). RP's response to this seems to be to shout "But that's not rational!," coupled with a kind of Freedom Fries discourse about the bad Europeans. By skating over the political issues related to trade and financial policy, he misses a chance to understand the African view as a rational political response to a history of US heavy-handedness. Nor does he offer any recommendations for how the US can reclaim influence in Africa, beyond a wistful "if only" sort of sentiment: If only those African governments would respect science and buy the great new stuff from our American corporate innovators... An interesting but ultimately frustrating book.

4-0 out of 5 stars Truths beyond popular culture
Friday, June 13, 2008 - Feminist Review.org

As a mom who does what I can to buy organic food for my family, I completely understand the general distaste most of us have for genetically modified (GM) foods. The very thought of vegetables altered by scientists in labs seems creepy and somehow inherently wrong, doesn't it? But when I read Starved for Science, I quickly realized that such a romanticized and emotional standpoint in such a critical debate as starvation is not only uninformed, it is just plain irresponsible. I also realized that, whether we like it or not, most of us are already eating GM foods on a daily basis.

In plain language and with plentiful sources to back up his positions, Paarlberg describes how in first world countries, where food is plentiful and obesity more of a problem than starvation, people can afford to pine for the days of small neighborhood farms - and can turn up their noses at the agribusiness and subsequent science that has allowed us to take for granted having not only enough to eat, but a wide choice in what and where we get our food. In Europe, the negative public opinion toward genetically modified organisms (GMO's) has led to labeling and bans on imports suspected to be "contaminated" by genetically altered seeds. Greenpeace and many NGO's are working actively to keep African farmers on small plots of land using techniques that date back thousands of years, but to the detriment and hardship of those very farmers.

Paarlberg describes how rich countries have come to fear and dislike GMO's, stopping funding and support easily where food is in no shortage, and yet when it is convenient, still continue to fund their use in the pharmaceutical industry where a longevity benefit can be gained. And governments in African countries situated in urban areas that are highly influenced by European bias, both in cultural influence and monetary flow, follow suit. Therefore, they are not developing their own programs to find strains of seeds that could resist drought, and it isn't worth enough money to anyone else to do so for them.

The majority of small farms in Africa are currently run by women, as men often leave to find other jobs in mines or more urban areas to supplement family incomes. Children stay out of school to help with the farming, and they do it all with wooden tools and poorly fed animal labor. Green movements in China and India have brought these countries to a position where starvation in no longer such a pressing issue; however, in Africa the problem is worse than ever.

Paarlberg admits to having kept his research a bit under wraps until now, knowing the reaction he would get from his own circle of friends and colleagues. It could be said that being `socially conscious' has taken on certain assumptions (and presumptions) among the wealthier strata of our urban world with a borg-like uniformity, and in the case of poverty in Africa, maintaining a position of being purely organic could easily be likened to saying "let them eat cake."

Review by Jennifer M. Wilson ... Read more


83. How Jimmy won: The victory campaign from Plains to the White House
by Kandy Stroud
 Hardcover: 442 Pages (1977)
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Asin: 0688031536
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84. An American Idea: The Making of the National Parks
by Kim Heacox, Jimmy Carter
Paperback: 192 Pages (2009-09-08)
list price: US$14.95 -- used & new: US$6.70
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Asin: 1426205635
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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The national park system ranks among our most magnificent achievements and the story of its creation reveals how the American landscape shaped our history and character and continues to do so almost 175 years after painter George Catlin first proposed “a nation’s Park.”

In these lavishly illustrated pages, award-winning author Kim Heacox chronicles our changing visions of wildness from the 17th century, when the first settlers built towns around shared commons, to 1916, when the National Park Service initiated a new kind of common–unspoiled parkland held in trust for Americans everywhere.

Here are explorers like Daniel Boone, Kit Carson, and John Wesley Powell, who reported wonders so amazing they were met with disbelief. Here too are farsighted leaders like Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and other sponsors of such parks as Yosemite and Yellowstone.

In spectacular counterpoint, 100 illustrations unveil a pristine new world that awed the artists and photographers from Eadweard Muybridge to Ansel Adams. An epilogue summarizes developments since 1916, and an appendix provides descriptions of every national park. A tale of discovery and an eloquent testament to our unparalleled natural glories, this is more than an account of our national parks: it’s a telling portrait of the essential America. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars Summary of how national parks came to be
First I should note that this is a National Geographic book so that can give you some idea of what this book is like.In short it details the history and philosophy of the National Park System.The book is not a coffee table book.It does have a lot of nice pictures and illustrations - mostly from photographers or painters who were among the first to visit Yellowstone, Yosemite, or the Grand Canyon with expeditions.Don't expect nice color photos from modern photographers.Instead you get lots of early black & white photos along with paintings.

The text covers the idea of national parks starting with lands reserved for the King of England.It traces American Transcendentalists who helped popularize the idea of nature.It also details some of the early expeditions into the West to explore areas that became U.S. National Parks.The book also summarizes Teddy Roosevelt's importance in setting aside lands.It should be noted that Yellowstone, Yosemite, and the Grand Canyon make up the bulk of the material. There is very little on any of the other parks here.In addition the book ends in the early 20th century so there is little on how the Park Service evolved or conservation fights later.

The book is a very good summary of how National Parks came to be for a general audience.If you are looking for a more meaty treatment of the subject look to "National Parks: The American Experience" by Alfred Runte.If you are looking for a general treatment with a lot of illustrations then this book may be what you are seeking.There are few books that will give you the history of parks in such a nice layout. ... Read more


85. A Quiet Revolution: The First Palestinian Intifada and Nonviolent Resistance
by Mary Elizabeth King
Paperback: 488 Pages (2007-07-12)
list price: US$16.95 -- used & new: US$0.01
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Asin: 1560258020
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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In A Quiet Revolution, renowned civil rights activist Mary Elizabeth King questions the prevailing wisdom that the first Palestinian Intifada was defined by violence. She argues that initially, the uprising was characterized by a massive nonviolent social mobilization, rooted in popular committees often steered by women. These committees adopted strategies that began to lead to political results — among them the beginnings of a negotiated settlement. King traces the tragic movement away from peaceful protest following the killing of four Palestinian laborers in Gaza, and charts the PLOs increasing contempt for nonviolent struggle. She details the complicity of the media in this escalation of violence — TV crews would not cover peaceful protests, but Palestinian boys throwing rocks at Israeli soldiers would attract foreign cameras. King draws upon the history of non-violent movements and argues that only through nonviolent strategies can a negotiated peace be achieved with Israel. King believes that the residual knowledge of the power of nonviolent resistance from the first Intifada will provide the bedrock upon which to build this eventual, lasting peace.
... Read more

Customer Reviews (7)

4-0 out of 5 stars Excellent survey of neglected aspects
- of the Palestinian intafada.Ms. King's in-depth analysis overturns the prevailing stereotype of the primitive, bloody-handed Arab who "understands only force."To the contrary, the Israeli political establishment (and public) stands revealed, in this history, as even more preoccupied with vindictive violence and blind to anything but ruthless force.This book is a needed addition to any account of the endless intafada that has marked this area for a century.

That said, I have some problems with an institutional bias.As an appointee of the Carter administration (with the former president obligingly offering a forward) Ms. King seems too attached to US policy intitiatives, when overwhelmingly the US has backed Israel's "security needs" over any lasting resolution of Palestinian demands.She also glowingly compares the "color revolutions" of the 2000s in Serbia, Georgia, the Ukraine and Lebanon with the US civil rights movement; in reality, these "rose" and "orange" movements were well-funded imports designed to remove unfriendly "regimes" in the interests of NATO expansion and oil politics.What "democracy" they produced is problematic to non-existent.With a straight face Ms. King recounts how Serbian students in the late 90s "had begun studying the academic writings of Gene Sharp in [non-violent] skill-training workshops led by Colonel Robert J. Helvey, a retired U.S. military officer." [p.24.] Obviously the active-duty NATO commanders who subsequently blitzed Serbia with "accidental collateral damage" were not in attendance. . . .

Also problematic is Ms. King's position that non-violent movements are invariably crushed outside the "liberal democracies."A brief glance at the history of organized labor in the US and UK shows that liberal democracy, with its pro-corporation bias, had no trouble inflicting massive violence on labor protest for a century, out of all proportion to the violence offered by the labor movement.

That said, I do recommend this book as an "alternative history" to the standard operating view of Palestinian-Israeli conflict.Especially cogent is the sabotage of the intafada by the PLO as a rival movement, which effectively destroyed it as much as Israeli brutality.But again, the failure of the "democracies" to put their money where the mouth lies is also a prime factor in the intafada's burial.

5-0 out of 5 stars Learned insights into the Israel-Palestine situation
I read this book as a senior UK medical academic with an interest in global health. My personal background is relevant in that I am from Jewish Eastern European heritage, with relatives who died at the hands of the Nazis, but I consider much of what is taking place in in Israel/Palestine as an abuse of the concept of a Jewish homeland.

This is a scholarly work, and so relevant to the current disaster. It
provides a superb overview of the historical context for the first Intifada, but in so doing, contextualises the Palestine-Israel divide by describing the events which led up to the state of Israel, and the global events which were played out on this local stage. The fact that during most of the last 30 years, the PLO was based in Tunis was completely new to me, as was the fact that Hamas was initially encouraged to undermine the PLO.

But what the book does so skilfully is to make the links between the
discourse in Palestine with that in other parts of the world - the
Southern States in the US, India, South Africa. Visiting Palestine
seems like entering a very different and strange world, and for novices
like me, that makes it seem at first that there is little connection
between political debate here and that in the rest of the world. Mary King's book makes those links in a most learned, yet accessible, way.

5-0 out of 5 stars The only durable solution to achieve a peaceful Middle East
I write this after reading the morning paper about retaliatory attacks between Hamas inspired militants and the Israeli government that resulted in the deaths of innocent civilians on both sides.It is a too familiar and painful story over the past months and years.Decision makers on both sides of this divide would do well the take a few moments from their mutual distrust and animosity to read Mary Elizabeth King's new book, A Quiet Revolution.Painstakingly researched and gloriously written, it tells a story of hope for nonviolent change and documents the arduous journey of peace-seeking activists involved in the first Palestinian Intifada.

After an uplifting review of decisive moments across the span of human history in which nonviolent resistance yielded positive and even revolutionary change (and there are more examples than commonly meets the untutored eye),Mary King plunges into the little know story of repeated attempts by Palestinians to defend their rights using non-violent methods.Occurring during the decades following the Balfour Declaration, these courageous efforts occur against the backdrop of accelerating Palestinian armed resistance that echoed similar efforts on the other side.Her own profiles in courage and imagination include Mubarak Awad, Jonathan Kuttab and Gene Sharp who were among "the accoucheurs for the Palestinians' catalytic alterations in thinking on nonviolent struggle" during the decade of the 1980s and beyond.Completely unattached to the PLO, their peaceful insurgency sparked mobilization that eventually led to the first Intifada.She also points to the East Jerusalem and Ramallah activist intellectuals who struggled vainly against the predations of the PLO to keep the first Intifada from turning violent.As the story of this resistance unfolds, regrettably both sides contribute to the sad narrative of escalating violence.The author gives full expression to the hope for an alternative narrative reminding us again and again that it could have been different.

By documenting the advances achieved during the "non-violent" phase of the Intifada, and corollary movements around the world,Mary King's book forcefully reminds us of the potential durability of solutions that emerge from non-violent resistance.We have only to look around to conclude that resorting to violence doesn't work.

5-0 out of 5 stars A must read in today's slanted Israeli news coverage.
I think the press is slanted toward Israel and Mary Elizabeth King gives a very unbiased picture of the Israeli-Palestinian situation.

5-0 out of 5 stars Why is non-violent action received as violence?
Mary Elizabeth King's book, A Quiet Revolution, presents a thorough, documented description of the first intifada (uprising) of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza during the years of December 1987 through the late 1990's.It is a textbook on non-violence, really, and should be used in college courses on peace, non-violence, conflict resolution, etc.

I have been a close student of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict since the early 1960's, but I missed the significance of the Intifada.As King says, coordinated, non-violent resistance is hard to spot.It consists of a demonstration here, a sit-in there, a store closing in another location.Only a trained eye can see that there is a coordinated effort underway.

The book is full of stories of how the Palestinians coordinated their efforts.Such simple things as not observing the onset of daylight saving time (by setting watches ahead two weeks early) infuriated the soldiers who smashed watches that were not set at the correct time. Why? Because they are showing that they cannot be controlled.Leaflets announcing sit-ins were passed arm to arm during prayers when men are standing and kneeling arm-to-arm.The humanity and dignity of those who tried to bring their situation to the attention of the world is vividly described in this "must-read" book for anyone trying to understand the conflict in Israel and Palestine. ... Read more


86. The Wit and Wisdom of Jimmy Carter
by Jimmy Carter, Bill Adler
 Hardcover: 141 Pages (1977-06)
list price: US$1.00 -- used & new: US$110.84
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Asin: 080650563X
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87. Dasher: The Roots and Rising of Jimmy Carter
by James Wooten
 Paperback: Pages (1979-02)
list price: US$2.50
Isbn: 0446910406
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88. Electing Jimmy Carter: The Campaign of 1976
by Patrick Anderson
 Hardcover: 192 Pages (1994-10)
list price: US$34.95 -- used & new: US$9.55
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Asin: 0807119164
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89. Jimmy Carter: President and Peacemaker (Great Life Stories)
by David Seidman
Library Binding: 127 Pages (2004-09)
list price: US$30.50 -- used & new: US$30.50
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Asin: 053112374X
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90. Jimmy Carter: U.s. President And Humanitarian (Ferguson Career Biographies)
by Bernard, Jr. Ryan
Hardcover: 138 Pages (2006-04-30)
list price: US$25.00 -- used & new: US$18.75
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Asin: 0816059039
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91. Jimmy Carter (History Maker Biographies)
by Laura Hamilton Waxman
Paperback: 48 Pages (2006-01)
list price: US$8.95 -- used & new: US$5.92
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Asin: 0822566834
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92. Jimmy Carter and American Fantasy: Psychohistorical Explorations
 Hardcover: 136 Pages (1977)
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Asin: 0846703637
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93. State of the Union Addresses of Jimmy Carter
by Jimmy Carter
Hardcover: 136 Pages (2007-08-09)
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Asin: 1435338510
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Dates of addresses - January 19, 1978; January 25, 1979; January 21, 1980; January 16, 1981 ... Read more


94. State of the Union - 1978 to 1981
by Jimmy Carter
Kindle Edition: Pages (2007-12-28)
list price: US$0.99
Asin: B0026RHYJU
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"He shall from time to time give to the Congress information of the state of the Union..." The Constitution of the United States, under the above words in Article II Section 3, require the President to give a State of the Union message to the Congress from time to time on no set schedule. Tradition has made this a yearly message from the President to Congress.

The message now is made in a speech by the President before Congress, George Washington and John Adams delivered the message in person. Then for more than 100 years after this the message was delivered and read in the Congress. Since Franklin D. Roosevelt, Presidents have delivered the message in a speech before Congress.

The State of the Union usually has an important influence on public opinion. It has been used to bring forth important policy positions such as the Monroe Doctrine.

The State of the Union messages in this compilation are from Jimmy Carter.

... Read more


95. Jimmy Carter As Educational Policymaker
by Deanna L. Michael
Paperback: 202 Pages (2009-07-01)
list price: US$21.95 -- used & new: US$17.12
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Asin: 0791475301
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Analyzes educational reform in the second half of the twentieth century through the political career of Jimmy Carter and his influence on educational policy. ... Read more


96. Jimmy Carter (Major World Leaders)
by Kerry Acker
Paperback: 112 Pages (2003-01)
list price: US$13.25 -- used & new: US$10.84
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Asin: 0791075230
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Profiles former peanut farmer, Georgia Governor, and United States president Jimmy Carter, including his ongoing promotion of social justice and human rights around the world. ... Read more


97. "A new spirit, a new commitment, a new America": The inauguration of President Jimmy Carter and Vice President Walter F. Mondale : the official 1977 inaugural book
by 1977 Inaugural Committee (U.S.)
 Paperback: 128 Pages (1977)

Isbn: 055301000X
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Editorial Review

Product Description
11x9 approx paperbound historic limited edition ... Read more


98. Jimmy Carter
by Bruce mazlish + e.diamond
 Hardcover: 288 Pages (1980-01-21)
list price: US$11.95
Isbn: 0671227637
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99. Jimmy Carter (World leaders past & present)
by Ed Slavin
 Paperback: 111 Pages (1989)

Isbn: 0791005607
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Presents the life and political career of the thirty-ninth president of the United States. ... Read more


100. Jimmy Carter (United States Presidents)
by Anne E. Schraff
Library Binding: 112 Pages (1998-04)
list price: US$26.60 -- used & new: US$26.59
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Asin: 0894909355
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Traces the life of the thirty-ninth president from his childhood in Plains, Georgia, through his career in the Navy, to his term in the White House, as well as his later humanitarian and diplomatic efforts. ... Read more


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