نتایج جستجو برای: iraq war first

تعداد نتایج: 1492352  

2009
Benny Geys Alan Auerbach Linda Bilmes David Isenberg Áron Kiss Zuzana Murdoch

Extensive research demonstrates that war casualties depress incumbent popularity. The present study argues that analyses of the political costs of warfare should also account for the financial toll of wars since a) financial costs of wars are substantial, b) these costs are publicly observed and understood and c) fiscal policy affects incumbents' approval ratings. Empirical evidence based on US...

Journal: :International review of psychiatry 2011
Timothy S Wells Shannon C Miller Amy B Adler Charles C Engel Tyler C Smith John A Fairbank

Although documentation that war inflicts psychological casualties dates back to the American Civil War and earlier, most research began after the Vietnam conflict, when studies focused on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). With ongoing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, there has been significant research to illuminate the epidemiology of war-related psychological casualties. Significant fi...

2010
M. Morykwas Z. Zheng A. Bryant L. Argenta

Each major war tends to have a „signature injury‟, with traumatic brain injury (TBI) associated with the Iraq war (Operation Iraqi Freedom II and Operation Enduring Freedom) due to the high incidence of personnel injured by IED (improvised explosive devices). Based upon successful outcomes in a rat model, this study in swine examined the efficacy of application of either 50 or 100 mm Hg vacuum ...

Aliasghar Torahi Emad Marzavi Rostam Saberifar

Khuzestan province and other western provinces of the country have been mostly affected by the impacts of the imposed war of Iraq against Iran and due to this impact have experienced special changes. As one of these changes, we could mention the phenomenon of the migration. These areas have experienced different forms of migrations such as exterior, interior, return migration and even the accep...

Journal: :Personality & social psychology bulletin 2005
Glenn D Reeder John B Pryor Michael J A Wohl Michael L Griswell

The research explores the tendency for people to attribute negative motives to others who hold an attitude position that is discrepant from their own. In Studies 1 and 2, American and Canadian respondents indicated their perceptions of U.S. President Bush's motives for initiating war in Iraq. Consistent with the proposed bias, respondents who disagreed with the war attributed more selfish motiv...

2013
Douglas Kriner Francis Shen

Recent scholarship argues that how members of Congress respond to an ongoing war significantly influences the president’s strategic calculations. However, the literature is comparably silent on the factors influencing the public positions members take during the course of a military venture. Accounting for both national and local electoral incentives, we develop a theory positing that partisans...

Journal: :Journal of Humanity Sciences 2022

The position of the British government on Iraqi-Iranian war 1980-1988, especially at its beginning, was particular importance in drawing lines various relations with Iraqi government, which beginning a race against time to provide weapons, ammunition and military equipment from major industrial countries their companies this area. In view Britain adopting neutral stance towards war, is difficul...

Journal: :Lancet 2006
Matthew Hotopf Lisa Hull Nicola T Fear Tess Browne Oded Horn Amy Iversen Margaret Jones Dominic Murphy Duncan Bland Mark Earnshaw Neil Greenberg Jamie Hacker Hughes A Rosemary Tate Christopher Dandeker Roberto Rona Simon Wessely

BACKGROUND Concerns have been raised about the mental and physical health of UK military personnel who deployed to the 2003 war in Iraq and subsequent tours of duty in the country. METHODS We compared health outcomes in a random sample of UK armed forces personnel who were deployed to the 2003 Iraq war with those in personnel who were not deployed. Participants completed a questionnaire cover...

Journal: :Contemporary Security Policy 2008

2006
Paul Heaton

T he Oil-For-Food program was established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 986 in 1995 as a means of providing humanitarian relief to Iraq, which had been under U.N. economic sanctions since the Persian Gulf War in 1991. The Oil-For-Food program was divided into six-month phases and required renewal by the Security Council at each phase. The first phase lasted from December 1996 to...

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