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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Military-industrial complex – United States – Fiction"

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Baack, Ben, e Edward Ray. "The Political Economy of the Origins of the Military-Industrial Complex in the United States". Journal of Economic History 45, n.º 2 (junho de 1985): 369–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700034069.

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Despite the attention given by scholars to the military-industrial complex few studies have attempted to pinpoint and explain its origin. In this paper we argue that the coalescing of business, military, and political interest groups in support of a military build-up in the United States during peacetime occurred in the years between the Civil War and World War I. It was during this period that we observe the roots of institutional arrangements between the military and industry for the purpose of large-scale weapons acquisitions.
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Gladyshevskii, V. L., E. V. Gorgola e D. V. Khudyakov. "The Washington Consensus, liberal ideas and terms of the military-technological policy". National Interests: Priorities and Security 16, n.º 11 (13 de novembro de 2020): 2103–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.24891/ni.16.11.2103.

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Subject. In the twentieth century, the most developed countries formed a permanent military economy represented by military-industrial complexes, which began to perform almost a system-forming role in national economies, acting as the basis for ensuring national security, and being an independent military and political force. The United States is pursuing a pronounced militaristic policy, has almost begun to unleash a new "cold war" against Russia and to unwind the arms race, on the one hand, trying to exhaust the enemy's economy, on the other hand, to reindustrialize its own economy, relying on the military-industrial complex. Objectives. We examine the evolution, main features and operational distinctions of the military-industrial complex of the United States and that of the Russian Federation, revealing sources of their military-technological and military-economic advancement in comparison with other countries. Methods. The study uses military-economic analysis, scientific and methodological apparatus of modern institutionalism. Results. Regulating the national economy and constant monitoring of budget financing contribute to the rise of military production, especially in the context of austerity and crisis phenomena, which, in particular, justifies the irrelevance of institutionalists' conclusions about increasing transaction costs and intensifying centralization in the industrial production management with respect to to the military-industrial complex. Conclusions. Proving to be much more efficient, the domestic military-industrial complex, without having such access to finance as the U.S. military monopolies, should certainly evolve and progress, strengthening the coordination, manageability, planning, maximum cost reduction, increasing labor productivity, and implementing an internal quality system with the active involvement of the State and its resources.
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Shkrobtak, Igor. "The US military-industrial complex in the modern period". Russia and America in the 21st Century, S3 (2023): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.18254/s207054760029223-2.

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This study is devoted to the state of the US defense industry in the modern period. The paper examines the current situation and issues of the development of the defense industry of the United States. The article examines the key areas of activity of the industry: military shipbuilding, aircraft construction and the armored industry. The main problems of the military-industrial complex are highlighted: the lack of specialists, the rupture of economic ties, the loss of key competencies and technologies. Possible methods of solving the current system challenges facing the American defense industry have been identified.
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Hull, J. "Torpedo: Inventing the Military-Industrial Complex in the United States and Great Britain". Journal of American History 101, n.º 3 (1 de dezembro de 2014): 954–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jau589.

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Dunley, Richard. "Torpedo: Inventing the military-industrial complex in the United States and Great Britain". Mariner's Mirror 100, n.º 4 (2 de outubro de 2014): 480–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00253359.2014.954839.

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Seligmann, Matthew S. "Torpedo: inventing the military-industrial complex in the United States and Great Britain". First World War Studies 6, n.º 2 (4 de maio de 2015): 214–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19475020.2015.1111031.

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CHEN, Gang, e Minghui YU. "China’s Joint Military and Civilian Development". East Asian Policy 09, n.º 02 (abril de 2017): 26–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s1793930517000137.

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China’s ambitious military reform deepens with the establishment of a new commission on 22 January 2017 helmed by Chinese President Xi Jinping. The new commission will oversee the integration of military and civilian development. Xi aims to nurture Chinese defence manufacturers that are comparable to Lockheed Martin and Boeing in the United States and develop a military-industrial complex for the military modernisation commensurate with its rising international profile.
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Shkrobtak, Igor O. "US military-industrial complex under the influence of the ukrainian conflict". USA & Canada Economics – Politics – Culture, n.º 11 (15 de dezembro de 2023): 18–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s2686673023110020.

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This study is devoted to the study of the state of the military-industrial complex under the influence of the Ukrainian conflict, problems and prospects of development. The work is relevant due to the escalation of the conflict in Ukraine and the use of American weapons by the Armed Forces of Ukraine against Russian units during a special military operation. The article investigates such issues of the military-industrial complex as the gap between the civilian and military industries of the United States, the dependence of the American defense industry on foreign manufacturers and developers, the lack of complete chains of weapons creation and the unsuitability of American models for high-intensity conflict. The study particularly considers the relationship between civil and military production and the importance of a developed industry for the military-industrial complex. The paper focuses on the ideology of the creation and production of products of the American defense industry and their inconsistency with the conditions of a high-intensity conflict. The work emphasizes the need for serious financial injections and socio-economic reforms in any possible scenario for the development of the US military-industrial complex.
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Alic, John A. "The Origin and Nature of the US “Military-Industrial Complex”". Vulcan 2, n.º 1 (23 de junho de 2014): 63–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134603-00201003.

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This paper makes three primary claims. First, the so-called military-industrial complex (MIC) has its roots in the United States during World War I, when the army and navy turned to private firms for design of aircraft, and not, as some analysts have proposed, in the latter part of the nineteenth century. Second, theMICtook on its current shape during the 1950s. President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s famous warning, in effect, expressed recognition of and perhaps something like dismay at his own creation. Finally, despite the broad shift in responsibility for design, development, and production of military systems from government to industry in the middle of the last century, the armed forces remain the dominant partner in theMICby reason of their control over the technical requirements that shape and constrain weapons system design. This leaves the defense industry a junior partner.
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ПАСЬКО М.Н., ПАСЬКО М. Н., e ХАРЛАНОВ А. С. ХАРЛАНОВ А.С. "PROSPECTS AND MAIN DIRECTIONS OF RUSSIA'S MILITARY-TECHNICAL COOPERATION WITH THE COUNTRIES OF THE ASIA-PACIFIC REGION IN THE CONTEXT OF GROWING GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS". Экономика и предпринимательство, n.º 2(163) (9 de maio de 2024): 526–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.34925/eip.2024.163.2.101.

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Авторы показывают хронологию формирования военно-технического сотрудничества между странами АТР, включая Россию, США и Китай, особенности трансформации и взаимодействия с учетом СВО России на Украине и предлагают свои решения по их более эффективному развитию и применению успешного научно-технологического опыта для российского ВПК и космоса. The authors show the chronology of the formation of military-technical cooperation between the countries of the Asia-Pacific region, including Russia, the United States and China, the peculiarities of transformation and interaction taking into account Russia's military-industrial complex in Ukraine and offer their solutions for their more effective development and application of successful scientific and technological experience for the Russian military-industrial complex and space.
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Teses / dissertações sobre o assunto "Military-industrial complex – United States – Fiction"

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Simmons, Francesca O. "See the U.S.A. On Your New Highway: The Interstate Highway System as a Product of the Military Industrial Complex". Scholarship @ Claremont, 2014. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/372.

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This thesis explores how the campaign for the The Dwight D. Eisenhower System of Interstate and Defense Highways was a product of the 1950s military-industrial complex, which developed from a nationalist project seeking to confirm American exceptionalism during the early Cold War.
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College, Linda. "An analysis of communications between the United States Army Communications-Electronics Command and industry". Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2002. http://library.nps.navy.mil/uhtbin/hyperion-image/02Dec%5FCollege.pdf.

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Thesis (M.S. in Contract Management)--Naval Postgraduate School, December 2002.
Thesis advisor(s): Jeffrey R. Cuskey, Gary D. Notte. Includes bibliographical references (p. 101-102). Also available online.
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Kane, Joshua. "Infrastructure of aggression : military expenditure during the British industrial and the American informational mode of development shifts /". Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/8875.

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Epstein, Katherine Cranston. "Inventing the Military-Industrial Complex: Torpedo Development, Property Rights, and Naval Warfare in the United States and Great Britain before World War I". The Ohio State University, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1311692950.

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Howard, David Brian. "Bordering on the new frontier : modernism and the military industrial complex in the United States and Canada, 1957-1965". Thesis, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2859.

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In 1964 Clement Greenberg suffered his greatest setback as the critical arbiter of modern painting. The "Post Painterly Abstraction" exhibition he had helped to organize at the Los Angeles Museum of Art was critically demolished, definitively shattering the myth of invincibility surrounding Greenberg's modernism, an aesthetic which had been a powerful influence in the United States and Canada in the post-war period. For many contemporary critics, the early to mid-1960's is the period in which a stultified and institutionalized modernism was finally usurped by an approach to culture that was less elitist and more socially engaged. The new cultural model that was taking shape within the Kennedy Administration's vision of the New Frontier sought to remotivate a sense of "national purpose" within the United States to counter the nation's preoccupation with consumerism and affluence. The pragmatic liberal concept of culture sought to rework the relationship between work and play in order to promote a new relationship between individualism and civic virtue. The impetus to re-shape the boundaries between art and society under the New Frontier was a direct response to the political and military challenge posed by the Soviet Union in the late-1950s, especially after the launch of Sputnik in 1957, and the inability of the Eisenhower Administration to respond to the anxieties generated by the intense superpower rivalry. This international environment also exacerbated the ongoing tensions between Canada and the United States, culminating in the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis . Canadian Prime Minister Diefenbaker delayed in responding to the U.S. alarm over the presence of Soviet medium range nuclear weapons in Cuba, and the political firestorm that followed this delay highlighted the frictions that had developed in the unequal bilateral relationship between the United States and Canada after World War Two. While the Cold War was approaching its ultimate showdown, Greenberg was proceeding to a geographical margin of North America — Saskatchewan — to participate in the Emma Lake Artists' Workshops. Ironically, while Greenberg was extolling the virtues of Canadian abstract painters such as Art McKay and Kenneth Lochhead, going so far as to argue that the Saskatchewan abstract painters were New York's only competition, Los Angeles was asserting itself as New York's cultural rival . As a consequence of the phenomenal post-war growth of the military - industrial complex in the American Southwest, a fierce rivalry was developing with the traditional bases of power in the Northeast. The Southwest, and Los Angeles in particular, was the major beneficiary of the accelerated defense spending resulting from the heightened tensions of the Cold War in the 1950s. Partially in response to a regional dispute over military appropriations, the economic and cultural elites of Southern California sought to counter the pragmatic liberal agenda of the Kennedy Administration by promoting Los Angeles as the Second City of American Art. Greenberg's "Post Painterly Abstraction" exhibition was intended to draw attention to the Los Angeles cultural renaissance and the maturing of the city's independent cultural identity. Thus, Greenberg's sojourn to Saskatchewan at the height of the Cold War and during a crucial period of his formulation of his theory of modernist painting after abstract expressionism provides the focus for an examination of the status of modernism in the early 1960s, especially in the context of U.S.-Canadian relations and interregional rivalry between the Northeast and the Southwest. This thesis seeks to explain the complex cultural and political dynamic of modernist painting in the United States in the Cold War years of 1957 to 1965 and the effect of this dynamic on the development of Canadian modernist painting.
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Livros sobre o assunto "Military-industrial complex – United States – Fiction"

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L, Carey Omer, ed. The Military-industrial complex and United States foreign policy. [Pullman]: Washington State University Press, 1991.

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Borden, Penn. Civilian indoctrination of the military: World War I and future implications for the military-industrial complex. New York: Greenwood Press, 1989.

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Office, General Accounting. Acquisition requirements: Impact on company structures and operations : report to the Chairman, Subcommittee on Defense Technology, Acquisition and Industrial Base, Committee on Armed Services, U.S. Senate. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1994.

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Giroux, Henry A. The university in chains: Confronting the military-industrial-academic complex. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers, 2007.

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Giroux, Henry A. The university in chains: Confronting the military-industrial-academic complex. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers, 2007.

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I, Schwartz Stephen, ed. Atomic audit: The costs and consequences of U.S. nuclear weapons since 1940. Washington, D.C: Brookings Institution Press, 1998.

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Singer, P. W. Corporate warriors: The rise of the privatized military industry. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press, 2008.

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Singer, P. W. Corporate warriors: The rise of the privatized military industry. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press, 2008.

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Singer, P. W. Corporate warriors: The rise of the privatized military industry. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press, 2008.

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Hooks, Gregory Michael. Forging the military-industrial complex: World War II's battle of the Potomac. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1991.

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Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Military-industrial complex – United States – Fiction"

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Lagji, Amanda. "Conclusion". In Postcolonial Fiction and Colonial Time, 199–214. Edinburgh University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474490207.003.0007.

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The book’s conclusion extends the study of waiting and postcolonial fiction to the twenty-first century and the challenges that confront a still-decolonizing world. The conclusion reflects on the significance of waiting in the post-9/11 rhetoric of preemptive military strikes, which frame national security in terms of refusing to wait. The conclusion weaves into the discussion a synthesis of the texts throughout the body of the manuscript to expand the implications of the project to spaces elsewhere. Waiting, the book argues, has a particular resonance with colonial discourse and anticolonial nationalist movements, taking on additional textures in conjunction with post-independence disillusionment, truth and reconciliation commissions, and other temporalities in complex timescapes—including the acceleration that appears to characterize globalization as well as the discourses of preemption and preparedness that undergird the United States’ foreign policy under the sign of the war on terror.
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Walker, Nathaniel Robert. "The Republic of the Future". In Victorian Visions of Suburban Utopia, 223–94. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198861447.003.0006.

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The United States produced a number of early utopian visions of suburban dispersal, demonstrating that Americans had inherited some of the anti-urban tendencies of their British forebears. An early feminist science-fiction novel by Mary Griffith insisted that cities could be great, but she was decidedly in the minority. After consuming British science fiction in the 1870s, American authors dominated utopian literature in the 1880s, many providing it with new urgency by engaging head-on with the rise of the industrial corporation. These writers were a heterogeneous bunch—ranging from math teachers to Spiritualist bohemians—but while they were often politically opposed to one another, they were consistent in their concept of utopia: life in large, complex cities such as New York or Boston was maddening, and a new world of glass, metal, synthetic stone, whirring machines, and, most importantly, endless greenery, needed to rise in place of the terrible city.
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Lovejoy, Alice. "“A Treacherous Tightrope”". In Cinema's Military Industrial Complex. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520291508.003.0017.

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This chapter, by Alice Lovejoy, chronicles the United States Office of War Information’s plans to distribute forty Hollywood feature films in liberated Europe under the auspices of the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force’s Psychological Warfare Division (PWD-SHAEF). From the comparative perspectives of OWI and the Allied countries for which the films were destined (Belgium, the Netherlands, Norway, and Czechoslovakia, its central case study), it examines the economic, ideological, and pragmatic questions that intersected in these films’ selection and distribution, focusing on the tensions caused by OWI’s close relationship with the American film industry. The chapter argues that the case study of these forty films highlights Europe’s fraught political, cultural, and diplomatic relationship with American cinema on the cusp of the Cold War, as well as the complex logics underpinning film distribution in this period.
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Courtney, Susan. "Framing the Bomb in the West". In Cinema's Military Industrial Complex. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520291508.003.0012.

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Focused on the period of atmospheric (above-ground) nuclear weapons testing in the continental United States, from 1945 to 1963, this chapter, written by Susan Courtney, does two things. First, it describes some of the basic conditions and infrastructure that shaped the proliferation of films of nuclear weapons tests, including the U.S. government’s secret military film studio dedicated to this work in the hills above Los Angeles, known as Lookout Mountain Air Force Station or Lookout Mountain Laboratory. Second, it turns to the representational legacy that resulted, which was by no means limited to films made by or for the military. More specifically, it considers how footage of atomic tests in New Mexico and at the Nevada Test Site helped to shape the filmic record of nuclear weapons—and popular cultural memory—by framing the bomb in the desert West, arguably the screen space of American exceptionalism.
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Cox, Ronald W. "Class Power and the Military-Industrial Complex in the United States". In Capitalism and Class Power, 11–42. BRILL, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004686694_003.

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Kurantin, Napoleon, e Bertha Z. Osei-Hwedie. "The Impact of the Trade War on the Military Industrial Complex of United States and China". In Global Tariff War: Economic, Political and Social Implications, 243–57. Emerald Publishing Limited, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80071-314-720211019.

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McKee, Kimberly D. "Introduction". In Disrupting Kinship, 1–18. University of Illinois Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252042287.003.0001.

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This chapter situates the origins of international adoption in the American military industrial complex and the localized effects of American imperialism abroad. The long-standing relationship between the United States and Korea elucidates how a single program laid the groundwork for international adoption programs across the globe. This chapter provides an overview for considering how the transnational adoption industrial complex facilitated the growth of a sustained phenomenon of globalized, social reproduction. As part of this analysis, this chapter discusses two new adoptee tropes—the adoptee killjoy and every adoptee—that were borne from the happy, grateful adoptee and angry, bitter adoptee stereotypes. The adoptee killjoy and every adoptee exist on a continuum of minor affects that arise in adoptees’ critiques of adoption practices.
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Higgs, Robert. "Private Profit, Public Risk: Institutional Antecedents of the Modern Military Procurement System in the Rearmament Program of 1940-41". In Depression, War, and Cold War, 30–60. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195182927.003.0002.

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Abstract After World War II, the United States did not fully demobilize its armed forces. It continued to maintain a military establishment that, by historical standards, can only be called immense. Keeping large numbers of men heavily armed with ever more sophisticated weapons has created a tremendous demand for munitions. Most of the munitions have been produced by privately owned corporations, many of which rely on the Pentagon for the bulk of their sales. The dealings between the armed forces and the major defense contractors form the heart of what is known as the military- industrial complex. This chapter deals primarily with one aspect of the military procurement program, namely, the arrangements by which economic risks are shifted from the private contractors to the government—that is, to the taxpayers— thereby allowing the companies to “function in a world of socialized risks and private profit” (Adams and Adams, 1972, p. 284). Also examined are two related matters: the high degree to which prime defense contracting is confined to a small fraternity of large companies, whose managers, along with their counterparts in the Department of Defense and the armed services, form a sort of “old boy network”; and how such concentration and the privileges associated with it make possible the realization of rates of return that are, given the low risk actually borne, exceptionally high. At issue here are the origins of these aspects of the modem military supply business.
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Trabalhos de conferências sobre o assunto "Military-industrial complex – United States – Fiction"

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Yarovova, Tatiana, e Mark Cherkasov. "CHINA'S MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX: DYNAMICS AND DATA COMPARISON WITH THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION AND THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA". In Россия и Китай: история и перспективы сотрудничества. Благовещенск: Благовещенский государственный педагогический университет, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.48344/bspu.2021.45.94.033.

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Neagu, Simona nicoleta, e Aniellamihaela Vieriu. "THE IMPACT OF TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS ON YOUNG PEOPLE". In eLSE 2019. Carol I National Defence University Publishing House, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.12753/2066-026x-19-119.

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As stated in the specialized studies, the greatest technological discoveries in the history of mankind will be recorded in the next three decades. Progress in Artificial Intelligence (AI), combined with radical discoveries in hard and software, will inaugurate a new era, which today seems to be science fiction. The existence of artificial intelligence, robots, autonomous vehicles, nanotechnology, biotechnology, and materials science are no longer considered "miracles." A recent study by Dell Technologies says that 85% of jobs in 2030 have not yet been invented, and over the next decade, over 10% of current jobs will be automated. In the world's largest industrial air-conditioning plant in China, 800 robots replaced 24,000 workers at Midea. Intelligent military robots are already present on battlefields - the United States, China and Israel, being world leaders in their field use. There are jobs that will disappear and others will be invented, our skills and competences are constantly changing, the labor market is constantly changing, employers will have other specifications in the job description. In this new world, our relationship with technology will change forever. How will we keep up with these changes? How will we deal with them? In this context, we aim to investigate within focus groups what is the impact of accelerated technological progress on youth at the psychological, social and employability level and which would be the solutions that they propose. The target group will be represented by students of the faculty of Electronics, Telecommunications and Information Technology at the Polytechnic University of Bucharest.
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