Hinge Points

Hinge Points

Author: Siegfried S. Hecker

Publisher: Stanford University Press

Published: 2023-01-10

Total Pages: 488

ISBN-13: 1503634477

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North Korea remains a puzzle to Americans. How did this country—one of the most isolated in the world and in the policy cross hairs of every U.S. administration during the past 30 years—progress from zero nuclear weapons in 2001 to a threatening arsenal of perhaps 50 such weapons in 2021? Hinge Points brings readers literally inside the North Korean nuclear program, joining Siegfried Hecker to see what he saw and hear what he heard in his visits to North Korea from 2004 to 2010. Hecker goes beyond the technical details—described in plain English from his on-the-ground experience at the North's nuclear center at Yongbyon—to put the nuclear program exactly where it belongs, in the context of decades of fateful foreign policy decisions in Pyongyang and Washington. Describing these decisions as "hinge points," he traces the consequences of opportunities missed by both sides. The result has been that successive U.S. administrations have been unable to prevent the North, with the weakest of hands, from becoming one of only three countries in the world that might target the United States with nuclear weapons. Hecker's unique ability to marry the technical with the diplomatic is well informed by his interactions with North Korean and U.S. officials over many years, while his years of working with Russian, Chinese, Indian, and Pakistani nuclear officials have given him an unmatched breadth of experience from which to view and interpret the thinking and perspective of the North Koreans.


Hinge Points of History

Hinge Points of History

Author: John Hunsuck

Publisher: Certa Publishing

Published: 2014-06-22

Total Pages: 104

ISBN-13: 193974878X

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Through his over 80 years of observation, John Hunsuck has witnessed how the hinge points of history have occurred without much fanfare. Nevertheless, they are later examined and reported by thoughtful students. Scholars and seekers, of all ages, study these occurrences to determine the cause of sudden or even slow changes in history. Discovery of these effects are generally met with unbelief. This book endeavors to lay out the causes and effects for the last several millennia. It also attempts to postulate cause and effect for the future.


Geological Structures and Maps

Geological Structures and Maps

Author: Richard J. Lisle

Publisher: Butterworth-Heinemann

Published: 1996-02-19

Total Pages: 113

ISBN-13: 0080984002

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Care is taken to define terms rigorously and in a way that is in keeping with current professional usage. Photographs of structures in the field are included to emphasize the similarities between structures at outcrop scale and on the scale of a map. This book is designed to be read without tutorial help alongside fieldwork. Worked examples are given to assist with the solution of the exercises. The maps used in exercises have been chosen to provide all of the realism of a survey map without the huge amount of data often present, so a student can develop skills without becoming overwhelmed or confused. In particular emphasis is placed throughout on developing the skill of three-dimensional visualisation so important to the geologist.


Principles of Development

Principles of Development

Author: Lewis Wolpert

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 721

ISBN-13: 0198709889

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Developmental biology is at the core of all biology. This text emphasises the principles and key developments in order to provide an approach and style that will appeal to students at all levels.


Hinge Moments

Hinge Moments

Author: D. Michael Lindsay

Publisher: InterVarsity Press

Published: 2021-04-27

Total Pages: 175

ISBN-13: 0830841806

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In life we get opportunities to make decisions that will either change our lives for the better or pose problems for years to come. Exploring these "hinge moments," Gordon College president Michael Lindsay shares faith-based stories of success and failure from his ten-year study of other leaders, providing both practical and spiritual insights for making the most of each stage of life.


Barthes

Barthes

Author: Mireille Ribière

Publisher: Humanities-Ebooks

Published: 2008-01-01

Total Pages: 90

ISBN-13: 1847601138

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Key stages in Barthes's intellectual itinerary are discussed in seven core chapters: Mythologies; Semiology; New criticism; Structuralism; Reader writer and text; Pleasure, the body and the self; and Photography. In each chapter concepts are contextualised so that the reader may understand the issues debated during the period under scrutiny, and the strength and originality of Barthes's contribution to those debates surrounding cultural forms. The successive shifts in Barthes's thought are also carefully explained and highlighted to avoid any confusion in the readers mind between concepts or theories developed at different stages. Another three chapters (Barthes in perspective; Barthes's legacy; and Paradox: a way of thinking) offer an overview of Barthes's career and a general assessment of his place in the intellectual landscape of the last fifty years.