Stockpile and Accessibility of Strategic and Critical Materials to the United States in Time of War: pt.11. Synthesis, substitutions, and replacements of scarce strategic materials. September 21, 22, October 25, Nove 17, 18, 1954. 1955. 494 p.; pt.12. Titanium - supplement to part 3. October 22, 23, November 19, December 6, 1954. 1955. 169 p


Book Description




Stockpile and Accessibility of Strategic and Critical Materials to the United States in Time of War: pt. 10. Industrial representatives of producers and users of strategic and critical materials. September 21-23, October 22, 24, December 10, 11, 17, 18, 1953, January 5, 6, 25, February 16, 24, March 30, April 6, 7, and May 24, 28, 1954. 852 p.; Appendix. 1954. pp. 853-1641. pt. 11. Synthesis, substitutions, and replacements of scarce strategic materials. September 21, 22, October 25, November 17, 18, 1954. 1955. 494 p


Book Description







Stockpile and Accessibility of Strategic and Critical Materials to the United States in Time of War: pt. 6. Petroleum, gas, and coal. Industrial and labor representatives; state administrative and production experts on petroleum, gas, coal and synthetic fuels. November 30, December 1-4, 10, 16, 18, 1953, January 6, and February 19, 1954. 1340 p


Book Description







Sterile Insect Technique


Book Description

The sterile insect technique (SIT) is an environment-friendly method of pest control that integrates well into area-wide integrated pest management (AW-IPM) programmes. This book takes a generic, thematic, comprehensive, and global approach in describing the principles and practice of the SIT. The strengths and weaknesses, and successes and failures, of the SIT are evaluated openly and fairly from a scientific perspective. The SIT is applicable to some major pests of plant-, animal-, and human-health importance, and criteria are provided to guide in the selection of pests appropriate for the SIT. In the second edition, all aspects of the SIT have been updated and the content considerably expanded. A great variety of subjects is covered, from the history of the SIT to improved prospects for its future application. The major chapters discuss the principles and technical components of applying sterile insects. The four main strategic options in using the SIT — suppression, containment, prevention, and eradication — with examples of each option are described in detail. Other chapters deal with supportive technologies, economic, environmental, and management considerations, and the socio-economic impact of AW-IPM programmes that integrate the SIT. In addition, this second edition includes six new chapters covering the latest developments in the technology: managing pathogens in insect mass-rearing, using symbionts and modern molecular technologies in support of the SIT, applying post-factory nutritional, hormonal, and semiochemical treatments, applying the SIT to eradicate outbreaks of invasive pests, and using the SIT against mosquito vectors of disease. This book will be useful reading for students in animal-, human-, and plant-health courses. The in-depth reviews of all aspects of the SIT and its integration into AW-IPM programmes, complete with extensive lists of scientific references, will be of great value to researchers, teachers, animal-, human-, and plant-health practitioners, and policy makers.










The Right to Self-determination


Book Description




Asia-Pacific Rebalance 2025


Book Description

In 2015, Congress tasked the Department of Defense to commission an independent assessment of U.S. military strategy and force posture in the Asia-Pacific, as well as that of U.S. allies and partners, over the next decade. This CSIS study fulfills that congressional requirement. The authors assess U.S. progress to date and recommend initiatives necessary to protect U.S. interests in the Pacific Command area of responsibility through 2025. Four lines of effort are highlighted: (1) Washington needs to continue aligning Asia strategy within the U.S. government and with allies and partners; (2) U.S. leaders should accelerate efforts to strengthen ally and partner capability, capacity, resilience, and interoperability; (3) the United States should sustain and expand U.S. military presence in the Asia-Pacific region; and (4) the United States should accelerate development of innovative capabilities and concepts for U.S. forces.