97 research outputs found
Vietnamese Communists relations with China and the Second Indochina Conflict, 1956-1962.
This thesis attempts to study the relationship between the Vietnamese communists and China between January 1956 and Summer 1962. It is the first book-length study of Sino-Vietnamese relations during those years. Its principle contribution will be to reconstruct the events as they unfolded in IndoChina and to provide a glimpse of the patterns of decision-making on the communist side of the Vietnam War. Every effort is made to keep in perspective the constant interaction of domestic politics, the role of individual leaders and political factions in both Hanoi and Beijing, and the changing international conditions which impinged on both countries. 1956 was the beginning of a new stage of the Vietnamese struggle for the unification of the country. The years from 1956 to 1962 saw the progression of the Vietnamese communists' struggle from one which was essentially political in nature to one which incorporated armed struggle, and finally in 1959 when armed struggle began to take on a more predominant role. By the summer of 1962, the Chinese were committed to assisting the Vietnamese communists' struggle in the South. This study makes use of Vietnamese, Chinese, British and American sources, many of which were then either not available or have not yet been fully exploited by the earlier scholars. These comprise new Vietnamese source materials and in particular, the second volume of the Lich Su Quan Doi Nhan Dan Viet Nam ([Official] History of the Vietnamese People's Army (VPA)); newly available Chinese source materials; first-person accounts and memoirs of those who in one way or another had been involved in the diplomacy of the 50s and 60s; communist sources monitored and translated by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) known as the Summary of world Broadcasts (SUB); the British Foreign Office General Political Correspondence (FO 371); the Confidential United States State Department Central Files; the United States State Department's Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) series; and United States intelligence reports and captured communist documents
COVID-19, Suffering and Palliative Care: A Review
According to the WHO guideline, palliative care is an integral component of COVID-19 management. The relief of physical symptoms and the provision of psychosocial support should be practiced by all healthcare workers caring for COVID-19 patients. In this review, we aim to provide a simple outline on COVID-19, suffering in COVID-19, and the role of palliative care in COVID-19. We also introduce 3 principles of palliative care that can serve as a guide for all healthcare workers caring for COVID-19 patients, which are (1) good symptom control, (2) open and sensitive communication, and (3) caring for the whole team. The pandemic has brought immense suffering, fear and death to people everywhere. The knowledge, skills and experiences from palliative care could be used to relieve the suffering of COVID-19 patients
Ghrelin
This work was supported by grants from the NIH (DP2DK105570-01 and
2P30DK046200 to MLA, DK21397 to HJG, K01DK098319 to KMH, K01MH091222 to
LH, DK093848 to RJS, R01DK082590 to LS, R01DK097550 to JT, RO1 DK 076037 to
MOT, R01DA024680 and R01MH085298 to JMZ, R01AG019230 and R01AG029740
to RGS) The Wellcome Trust (MK), Science Foundation Ireland (12/YI/B2480 to CWL),
the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (MHT), the Deutsches Zentrum fĂĽr Diabetesforschung
(MHT), the Helmholtz Alliance ICEMED e Imaging and Curing
Environmental Metabolic Diseases, through the Initiative and Networking Fund of the
Helmholtz Association (MHT), and the Helmholtz cross-program topic “Metabolic
Dysfunction” (MHT). Allan Geliebter was sponsored by NIH grants R01DK80153;
R01DK074046; R03DK068603; P30DK26687
Book Review: Acharya, Amitav (2017), East of India, South of China: Sino-Indian Encounters in Southeast Asia
Book Review of the monograph Acharya, Amitav (2017), East of India, South of China: Sino-Indian Encounters in Southeast Asia. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, ISBN: 13: 978-0-19-946114-1 & 10: 0-19-946114-7, 235 page
Book Review: Acharya, Amitav (2017), East of India, South of China: Sino-Indian Encounters in Southeast Asia
Book Review of the monograph Acharya, Amitav (2017), East of India, South of China: Sino-Indian Encounters in Southeast Asia. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, ISBN: 13: 978-0-19-946114-1 & 10: 0-19-946114-7, 235 page
VIETNAM IN 1948: AN INTERNATIONAL HISTORY PERSPECTIVE
This paper revisits the year 1948 in an effort to determine whether 1948 can be considered the starting point of the Cold War in Vietnam. Historical periodisation is a tricky affair, and it is often difficult to pinpoint the genesis of events. By reconstructing the political and military developments in 1948 from the indigenous perspective as well as from regional and international perspectives that directly impinged on Vietnam, I hope to ascertain whether Vietnam’s war of liberation was indeed transformed into a “Cold War” from 1948 onwards—in other words, whether it was in 1948 that the Vietnamese struggle assumed an ideological complexion that shifted from nationalist/anti-colonial sentiment to include communist/anti-capitalist sentiment as well. Before we embark on our consideration of the year 1948, it is useful to recount in broad brush-strokes some key developments in Vietnam leading up to 1948. In order to put the year 1948 in context, it is also necessary to consider in some detail two key developments in 1947
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