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	<controlfield tag="001">ICPSR02614</controlfield> 
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		<subfield code="a">(MiAaI)ICPSR02614</subfield> 
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		<subfield code="a">MiAaI</subfield>
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		<subfield code="a">
			
				
				Foreign Policy Leadership Project, 1976-1996
			
		</subfield>
		<subfield code="h">[electronic resource]</subfield>
			
		<subfield code="c">
			
				
					
					Ole R. Holsti
				, 				
			
				
					
					James N. Rosenau
								
			
		</subfield>
	</datafield>				
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		<subfield code="a">1999-02-03</subfield>
	</datafield>
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		<subfield code="a">Ann Arbor, Mich.</subfield>
		<subfield code="b">Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]</subfield>
		<subfield code="c">1999</subfield>
	</datafield>
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		<subfield code="a">ICPSR</subfield>
		<subfield code="v">2614</subfield> 
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		<subfield code="a">Numeric</subfield>
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		<subfield code="a">Title from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2013-05-20.</subfield>
	</datafield>
		
	
	
	
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			<subfield code="a">AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.</subfield>
		</datafield>
	
	
	
	
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		<subfield code="a">Also available as downloadable files.</subfield>
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			The Foreign Policy Leadership Project (FPLP) has conducted
extensive quadrennial mail surveys of elite civilian and military
opinion since 1976. The cohort varies from year to year, and is drawn
from organizations such as Who's Who, labor leadership, the Department
of Defense, foreign service officers, the National War College, the
press corps, politicians, and clergy leaders. Survey topics focus on
United States foreign policy and foreign affairs. Specific issues vary
from year to year, although a series of topics are repeated throughout
the years. These topics include the importance of foreign policy goals
such as containing communism, improving the global standard of living,
defending United States allies, protecting United States interests
abroad, strengthening the United Nations, combating world hunger,
protecting the environment, controlling world population, and ending
the illegal drug trade. Respondents are also asked to rate United
States effectiveness in those areas. Additional recurring topics
include the causes of war, approaches to world peace, threats to
national security, and contemporary domestic issues. The theme of
Part 1, 1976 Data, was the effect that the Vietnam War has had on
United States foreign policy. Those queried were asked to assess
America's role in world policy, such as providing economic aid to
poorer nations and preventing the destruction of Israel. Given a list
of foreign policy questions, respondents were asked to indicate their
position and how it was shaped by the Vietnam experience. Questions
covered the "domino theory", the Angolan civil war, and the use of
United States military power. Those queried were asked to assess
possible consequences of the Vietnam War, including policies toward
the Third World, and damage to the United States economy. Respondents
were also asked to rate the significance of factors that may have
prevented the United States from achieving its goal in Vietnam, such
as Watergate, the media, and the role of the Soviets and the
Chinese. Those queried were asked to assess the role political events
and policies such as the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, the Berlin
Airlift, and the 1962 blockade of Cuba played as steps leading to
United States involvement in Vietnam. Part 2, 1980 Data, introduced
the 1979 Iran hostage crisis and the situation in
Afghanistan. Respondents' views were sought on implications of the
Afghanistan situation for United States farmers, the 1980 Moscow
Olympic Games, foreign military bases, and Soviet foreign
policy. Respondents' opinions were sought on current issues in United
States foreign relations, such as the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
(SALT), human rights, the United States defense budget, the policy of
detente, and policy in the Middle East. Those queried were asked to
examine the lessons learned from the Iran hostage crisis, including
the role of patience in foreign policy, the overthrow of the shah's
regime, and dependence on oil from the Middle East. Part 3, 1984
Data, addressed political undertakings in Lebanon, El Salvador,
Grenada, and Nicaragua. Respondents were asked about the implications
of events related to the Middle East, including the 1983 truck bombing
of United States Marines in Beruit, oil embargoes, and Soviet
intentions in the region. Those queried were also asked for their
opinions on current issues in American foreign relations, including
Soviet-United States arms control negotiations and the defense of
Western Europe, including the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) and the Warsaw Treaty. Views were also sought on recent United
States foreign policies, such as opposition to a "nuclear freeze",
failure to impose economic sanctions on South Africa for its policy of
apartheid, and support of Great Britain after the Argentinian invasion
of the Falkland Islands. Part 4, 1988 Data, covered the topics of
escorting Kuwait's oil tankers into the Persian Gulf, United States
support of the Aquino government in the Philippines, aiding "contra"
rebels in Nicaragua, and supporting rebels fighting the government in
Afghanistan. Respondents were also asked about the Strategic Defense
Initiative (SDI) and the 1987 Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF)
Treaty. Their views were sought on cooperative efforts among nations
to end terrorism, famine, the drug trade, and Third World debts. Those
queried were asked what influenced their orientations toward foreign
affairs, and the reliability of such information. Their views were
sought on recent United States foreign policies, including the sale of
arms to Iran and Saudi Arabia, the 1986 bombing of Libya, and refusal
to invoke the War Powers Act. Other topics included the negative trade
balance and Soviet foreign policy goals. Part 5, 1992 Data, focused
on the effects of the Persian Gulf War and the collapse of the Soviet
Union on United States foreign policy. Respondents were asked for
their opinions on the political, economic, and social implications of
the end of the Cold War for the United States and its foreign
policies. Those queried were asked to evaluate possible reasons for
the changes in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, including the
influence of western media, the failure of communism to provide a
satisfactory standard of living, the United States military build-up,
and the election of a Polish Pope in 1978. Their views were sought on
recent United States foreign policies, including the removal of
President Manuel Noriega from power in Panama, the withholding of
diplomatic recognition from Croatia and Slovenia, the preservation of
NATO, promoting a peace conference to bring Israel and its Arab
neighbors to the negotiating table, and creating a trade-free zone
with Canada. Part 6, 1996 Data, covered the November 1995 decision by
President Bill Clinton to send American troops to Bosnia, and whether
vital American interests were at stake. Respondents were asked for
their opinions on the possible use of American military forces abroad
under a variety of situations. Such scenarios included a Russian
invasion of Western Europe, an Iraqi invasion of Saudi Arabia, a Cuban
attempt to overthrow Fidel Castro, a North Korean invasion of South
Korea, and a civil war in Mexico. Those queried were asked for their
opinions on the United States role in the leadership of UN and NATO
troops, the values that the United States government should promote,
which world problems the United States should contribute to
monetarily, and the role of the government in promoting the interests
of the disadvantaged. Respondents' views were also sought on recent
United States foreign policies, including providing humanitarian aid to
Somalia, granting "most favored nation" trade status to China,
sending peacekeeping forces to Haiti, supporting NATO expansion, and
establishing diplomatic relations with Vietnam. For all parts,
background information on respondents includes sex, education,
occupation, frequency of world travel, military service record,
political party, political orientation, and political involvement. 
			Cf.: http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR02614.v1
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			<subfield code="a">domestic policy</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">drug traffic</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">elites</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">environmental policy</subfield>
			<subfield code="2">icpsr</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">foreign policy</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">international relations</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">leadership</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">living conditions</subfield>
			<subfield code="2">icpsr</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">national interests</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">national security</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">political issues</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">public interest</subfield>
			<subfield code="2">icpsr</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">public opinion</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">United Nations</subfield>
			<subfield code="2">icpsr</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">war</subfield>
			<subfield code="2">icpsr</subfield>
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			<subfield code="a">TPDRC II. Terrorism and Preparedness Survey Archive (TaPSA)</subfield>
		
			<subfield code="a">IDRC II. Economic Data</subfield>
		
			<subfield code="a">IDRC VII. Public Opinion Data</subfield>
		
			<subfield code="a">IDRC IV. Environmental Data</subfield>
		
			<subfield code="a">IDRC I. Conflict Data</subfield>
		
			<subfield code="a">ICPSR VI.A. Elites and Leadership, United States</subfield>
		
	</datafield>
	
		
			
				<datafield tag="700" ind1="2" ind2=" ">
					<subfield code="a">Holsti, Ole R.</subfield>
				</datafield>
			
			
			
		
	
		
			
				<datafield tag="700" ind1="2" ind2=" ">
					<subfield code="a">Rosenau, James N.</subfield>
				</datafield>
			
			
			
		
	
	<datafield tag="710" ind1="2" ind2=" ">
		<subfield code="a">Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.</subfield>
	</datafield>
	<datafield tag="830" ind1=" " ind2="0">
		<subfield code="a">ICPSR (Series)</subfield>
		<subfield code="v"></subfield>
	</datafield>
	<datafield tag="856" ind1="4" ind2="0">
		<subfield code="z">Access restricted ; authentication may be required:</subfield>
		<subfield code="u">http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR02614.v1</subfield>
	</datafield>
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