1929 



Eklund; Geophysics and Its Impact on International Affairs," David A. 

 Davies; "Mass Communication in Society," Tor Gjesdai; "Social Sciences 

 and International Relations," John Goormaghtigh; "The Present State of 

 Economics and the New Tasks of Diplomacy," Gottfried Haberler; and 

 "The Development of Modern Science and the New Tasks of Diplomacy," 

 B. H. M. Vlekke. 

 "International Cooperation and Foreign Aid; The United States in Technological 

 Competition." Chapters XV and XVI, In Organisation for Economic Co- 

 operation and Development. Reviews of National Science Policy: United 

 Stales. Paris, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 1969: 

 546 p. 



General description of organization in the United States (in both the State 

 Department and other Federal agencies) for formulating and implementing 

 foreign policy with scientific and technological aspects; listing of expenditures 

 in such fields; other statistical data, and discussion of U.S. policies with 

 respect to technology transfer and promotion of scientific and technological 

 developments in Western European and other countries. 

 Killian, J. R., Jr., "Science in the State Department: A Practical Imperative." 

 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, May 1965: 12-17. 



" 'The ethos of our foreign policy should not be flawed by intellectual 

 parochialism; our policy and outlook need not fall in the crack between the 

 two cultures.' " "In dealing with [international] trends and needs-regional, 

 global, and superterrestrial, our government and its foreign officers will need 

 sophisticated, tough-minded technical advice on the feasibility of projects, on 

 the alternatives which should be considered, on the contribution we can 

 make to them, on their impact on our own manpower and economic resources, 

 and on their timing and need. With this kind of judgment available, however, 

 such large-scale programs of development and technology can multiply the 

 helpful political choices available to us and afford us new opportunities to 

 contribute to the welfare of the human community." 



"The lecturer, Dr. James R. Killian, was addressing the U.S. Foreign 

 Service Institute's seminar on the interaction between science and tech- 

 nology and foreign affairs. The . . . article is based upon the seminar 

 lecture. . . . Dr. Killian is chairman of the MIT Corporation and was 

 appointed by President Eisenhower as the first official science adviser to an 

 American President." 

 Kissinger, Henry A. "The Global Challenge and International Cooperation." 

 Address by the Secretary of State, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 14, 1975. 5 p. 

 "... A candid assessment of how the U.S. Government views the 

 contemporary United Nations — its capacities and its limitations, its promise 

 and the trends which threaten future progress." Addresses the topics of 

 global interdependence in economics and technology and opportunities and 

 drawbacks of the potential for cooperation in the United Nations. 

 Margolis, Howard. Technical Advice on Political Issues. Arlington, Va., Institute 

 for Defense Analyses, distributed by NTIS, 1972. 66 p. (AD 740-608.) 



Uses three national security issues, Skybolt, SAM upgrade, and the 

 Serpukhov computer to illustrate a general discussion of the poUtics of 

 technical advice. Contrasts the receptivity to technical advice in two agencies, 

 the National Security Council and the Department of State and argues that 

 the State Department's apparatus for using scientific and technical informa- 

 tion should be strengthened. 

 Moynihan, Michael W. "Attitudes of Americans on Coping with Interdependence: 

 Findings of Opinion Research Organizations." A paper prepared for the National 

 Commission on Coping with Interdependence. Interdependence Series No. 

 1/Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies, Program on International Affairs. 

 Princeton, N.J., 1975. non-paginated. 



A National Commission on Coping with Interdependence was created in 

 December 1974 by the Apsen Institute for Humanistic Studies on behalf of 

 the State Department. One of its tasks was to assess the attitudes of the 

 public regarding interdependence. This paper reports on the poU: 



"The polls show a sharp decline in concern with international issues — as 

 these are conventionally measured by polls. In recent years, and particularly 

 in the past two years, people report to the pollsters that they are much more 

 worried about domestic issues, Uke inflation and unemployment than about 

 international matters. They place good relations with other countries low on 

 the fist of national priorities. There is other evidence; some specific, e.g., 



