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Zbigniew Brzezinski: The political and academic life of a Cold War visionary.

2003· article· en· 0 citations· W7016282329 sur OpenAlex

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strate : about_only · poids de sondage : 3321.24 (l'échantillon est stratifié ; tout taux calculé sans le poids est faux)
Claude Opus 4.8OUT
genre : empirical
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: medium

Historical biography of Brzezinski's political and academic career; intellectual and policy history rather than a study of research practice.

GPT-5.6 (high)OUT
genre : other
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: high

This is a political and academic biography, not a study of the research system.

Grok 4.5OUT
genre : other
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: high

Political biography of Brzezinski; geopolitics, not metaresearch.

Résumé

This work examines the political and academic career of Zbigniew Brzezinski. Born in Warsaw in 1928 Brzezinski was a personification of the trials of interwar Poland that would culminate in the combined Nazi-Soviet invasion that would trigger World War II. The son of a Polish diplomat the young Brzezinski witnessed the war from a diplomatic outpost in Montreal where he developed an academic interest in the affairs of the Soviet Union. In 1950 Brzezinski moved on to Harvard where he gained an academic reputation examining the phenomenon of "totalitarianism" and the fragmenting nuances of the Soviet empire in Eastern Europe. Brzezinski later became instrumental in advocating a "peaceful engagement" toward Eastern Europe that he believed offered more hope than the largely rhetorical "liberation" policy being advocated by the Eisenhower Administration. Moving into the 1960s Brzezinski became the most prominent advocate of weaning the Soviet bloc nations toward a more "western" social-democratic order. Though temporarily derailed with the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968, Brzezinski continued to advocate "peaceful engagement" toward Eastern Europe as an alternative to what he described as the "benign neglect" and "moral indifference" being formulated by Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger. Brzezinski's key role as President Carter's national security adviser introduced the concept of "human rights" that greatly inspired the nascent opposition groups in the region that would culminate in the more dramatic revolutions that swept the region in 1989. In the 1990s Brzezinski became perhaps the most prominent advocate of expanding NATO in an effort to keep the recently liberated nations of East-Central Europe from falling back into the Russian orbit or becoming politically destabilized as a result of the massive political and structural deficiencies imposed by four decades of Soviet-style communism.

Conservé avec la notice de tri, où il sert de preuve aux étiquettes ci-dessus.

La notice

Revue
The Research Repository @ WVU (West Virginia University)
Thématique
Historical Geopolitical and Social Dynamics
Domaine
Social Sciences
Établissements canadiens
Organismes subventionnaires
Mots-clés
PoliticsOpposition (politics)ReputationWorld War IIRhetorical questionCold warEmpire
Résumé présent dans OpenAlex
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