Your Status: Logged out Log in

The Foreign Policy of an Islamic Presidential Democracy.  

Member rating: No Rating | Words: | Submitted: Mon Jan 26 2004

Page Preview
Preview
Previous 1 of 10 Next

On the left is an image preview of every page of this document, and below are the first 150 words with formatting removed:

In the Name of God the Merciful and the Compassionate The Foreign Policy of an Islamic Presidential Democracy Lixandru Laura-Madalina SPE II PREAMBLE When one sets to examine the foreign policy-making process in Algeria, attention is often lead astray by this country's tumultuous history, abundant of political and social strife. As stated in the Preamble of the 1996 Constitutional Law, title that the present section borrows, Algerians are a free people, "decided to remain so". Algeria is seen, through their eyes, and not only, as a land of "freedom and dignity". It is for this reason that a case study of the Algerian approach of foreign policy is bound to generate surprising, and often paradoxical results. The permanent features of Algeria's foreign policy have included alignment with neither East nor West, identification with the Third World, advocacy of the political and economic independence of the developing countries, and support for Arab unity and the...

To see the full version of this document, and 145,328 others

Register Now