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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page research paper that explores the topic of how the US should form foreign policy to address this issue. The writer discusses the activist movement that has pressured the government to make opposition to religious persecution a central part of foreign policy. The argument in this paper is presented but not developed due to its short length. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khreper.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
motivation behind an activist movement, which --since the mid-1990s -- has concentrated on pressuring US officials to develop foreign policy initiatives designed to halt religious persecution and, specifically, persecution
against Christians. While this may appear at first glance to be a clear cut issue, a closer examination shows that there are many layers and ramifications as to precisely how
the US should go about promoting religious toleration. On one side of this debate are voices that urge that the US take direct action in confronting tyranny and religious
rights abuse. Michael Horowitz, for example, states that typical statecraft does not work (48). He argues that traditional diplomacy "fails to understand the fragile and vulnerable character of such regimes"
and suggests that such regimes will crumble when confronted (Horowitz 48). On the other hand, there are those who argue that Horowitz stands for a faction that eschews "looking for
difficult solutions to challenging problems," preferring to "lash out reactively at enemies, both real and imagined" (Gunn 51). These voices fault Horowitz and his colleagues for not restricting their attacks
for persecutors abroad, but also for attacking people in the West who have devoted their lies to promoting religious freedom (Gunn 51). It is an interesting fact that issues
pertaining to religious persecution have never received as much attention in the US as other forms of discrimination (Wales 579). Hopefully, this is because the right to religious freedom has
been engrained within American society as an issue that was settled early in Americas colonial history. However, in recent years, there is no doubt that the world has seen
an increase in the amount and degree of religious discrimination and persecution that is demonstrated in other countries (Wales 579). By 1998, the international situation had become so severe that
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