Working with SDI 2.0


Book Description




SDI Program


Book Description




SDI Program


Book Description




SDI


Book Description

Hughes presents a comprehensive view of European attitudes toward the controversial Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). Discusses major issues raised by Europeans, analyses arguments, and examines the often voiced European objection that SDI might encourage war fighting rather than maintain deterrence. Also illuminates the new threat posed by missiles in the hands of more nations that will possess them by the mid-1990s. Concludes by discussing the possibility that the Soviets in particular may find such defenses to be in their own interest.




Specially Designed Instruction


Book Description

In engaging, accessible chapters, expert teacher and author Anne M. Beninghof lays out a road map for providing specially designed instruction in any classroom. This book equips you with the answers to the most frequently asked questions around incorporating special education services into the general classroom – What is SDI? Who is responsible? How do we make it happen? Focused on creating an effective planning process that you and your team can follow to develop specially designed instruction, this toolkit includes dozens of practical examples, worksheets, and prep tools to ensure readers walk away with a thorough understanding and ready-to-use ideas. Whether you have years of experience working with students with disabilities or are new to the profession, this critical guide provides effective strategies for every classroom.




SDI


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SDI


Book Description










The Technology, Strategy, And Politics Of Sdi


Book Description

The Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) to develop a ballistic missile defense (BMD) system has both short-range and long-range risks as well as potential benefits. For the most part, however, strategic, technological, and political issues relevant to SDI have been analyzed in isolation from one another. This book provides a more inclusive framework for assessing the possible development and deployment of a BMD system by the United States or the Soviet Union. Contributors discuss the risks for arms race stability, probable reactions of the Soviet Union to any U.S. space-based defense system, and implications for the stability of extended deterrence commitments to NATO European allies. They also evaluate Soviet research and development programs in missile defense that must be considered in any extrapolation of the requirements for U.S. deterrence in the next several decades.