1928 



Fischer, Glen H. Public Diplomacy and the Behavioral Sciences. Evanston, Uni- 

 versity of Indiana Press, 1972. 



Use of behavioral and social research in understanding and formulating 



foreign policy. t^ , 



"Foreign Affairs Research— FY 1974 External Research Program, Dept. of 



State." FAR Horizons, v. 7, no. 3, Summer 1974: 1-3, 14-15. (Newsletter of 



the Undersecretaries committee, Subcommittee on Foreign Affairs Research.) 



Describes content and objectives of the research support program. 



Frye, Alton. A Responsible Congress: The Politics of National Security. New York, 



McGraw-Hill (for the Council on Foreign Relations), 1975. 238 p. 



"A clear and vividly written account, beginning with the 1968 debate over 

 the ABM system, of the revival of congressional participation in setting the 

 goals and shaping the instruments of national security. The author, a Senior 

 Fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations and director of the Carnegie 

 Endowment's Congress project, favors the trend toward an even more 

 significant congressional role. On the basis of case studies and personal 

 experience as a congressional aid, he is optimistic." (1) 

 Gilpin, Robert and Christopher Wright (eds.). Scientists and National Pohcy- 

 mak'ing. New York, Columbia University Press, 1964, VIII. 408 p. 



"The essays constituting this volume were prepared for the Council for 

 Atomic Age Studies of Columbia University. Comprises: Introduction: 

 Natural Scientists in Policymaking by Robert Gilpin, The Scientific Estab- 

 lishment by Don K. Price, Scientists and Politics : The Rise of an Apolitical 

 Elite by Robert Wood, The Scientific Adviser by Harvey Brooks, Scientists 

 and American Science Policy by Wallace S. Sayre, The President's Science 

 Advisers and National Science Policy by Robert N. Kreidler, Scientists, 

 Foreign Policy, and Politics by Warner R. Schilling, Strategy and the Natural 

 Scientists by Albert Wohlstettcr, The Scientific Strategists by Bernard 

 Brodie, and Scientists and the Establishment of Science Affairs by Christopher 



Wright." 



Halperin, Morton, et al. "The 'X' Factor in Foreign Policy. Highlights of Bureau- 

 cratic Politics and Foreign Policy." Brookings Research Report, 140. 1975. 9 p. 

 "If the proponents of rational politics toward other countries expect their 

 recommendations be adopted, they should understand the complex process 

 within the U.S. government, whereby agencies develop, defend, compromise, 

 and implement poHcy proposals. In Bureaucratic Politics and Foreign Policy, 

 Morton A. Halperin (formerly a deputy assistant secretary in the Office of 

 the Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs and a 

 member of the senior staff of the National Security Council) explores with 

 two Brookings colleagues the influence of organizational behavior on the 

 conduct of foreign relations. Although the authors concentrate on national 

 security affairs, they believe that most of their findings would apply equally 

 to any governmental bureaucracy when the type of problem with which irt is 

 dealing requires a high-level decision." 



Raskins Caryl P. "Technology, Science, and American Foreign Policy.' Foreign 

 Affairs, January 1962:224-243. , ' , .u o • . 



Mr. Haskins discusses the international science imphcations of the boviet 

 flight of Vostok II. Among his topics are the following: the international 

 pyschological and prestige implications of application of a spectacular tech- 

 nology, the importance of "democratic"^ pluralism in scientific and techno- 

 logical research and development, and imphcations for improvement of 

 science organization and advisory activities in the American Federal Govern- 

 ment. He also treats the need for soUdarity in Western Europe, improvement 

 of NATO and OECD science activities, the establishment of international 

 universities and improvements in education. Among his other topics are 

 the need for each country to develop a poUcy for scientific research and 

 development which is appropriate to the conditions of that country. 



International Seminar for Diplomats. Modern Science and the Tasks of Diplomacy. 

 Austria, Verlag Styria Graz Wien Koln, 1965. 238 p. t • i 



This volume contains seventeen papers presented at an International 

 Seminar for Diplomats, held in Austria in 1965. The original versions of the 

 papers in French, German, and English are reprinted without translations. 

 Among the papers included are: "Medicine, Population and the New Tasks 

 of Diplomacy," Donald Darnley Reid; "Food and Population," B. R. 

 Sen; "The Impact of the Scientific Technology in the Development of New 

 States," Aharon Katchalsky; "The Supply of Energy in the Future," Sigvard 



