Examples of New Nationalism in the following topics:
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- While local news is still available, it is becoming increasingly nationalized and local outlets are being purchased larger, national networks.
- Nationalization of the news refers to the modern phenomenon of the decline of local news networks and the increase in power of national news networks.
- News operations have begun to feel the burden of needing to generate news content on a 24-hour news cycle, while keeping material fresh on their regularly scheduled newscasts.
- The larger networks like ABC News , NBC News, and CBS News are able to afford these technologies and are beginning to buy out the smaller, local networks.
- The news block was divided into local, national and international stories.
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- As an economic charter, it established that the entire nation -- stretching then from Maine to Georgia, from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mississippi Valley -- was a unified, or "common," market.
- Alexander Hamilton, one of the nation's Founding Fathers and its first secretary of the treasury, advocated an economic development strategy in which the federal government would nurture infant industries by providing overt subsidies and imposing protective tariffs on imports.
- He also urged the federal government to create a national bank and to assume the public debts that the colonies had incurred during the Revolutionary War.
- The new government dallied over some of Hamilton's proposals, but ultimately it did make tariffs an essential part of American foreign policy -- a position that lasted until almost the middle of the 20th century.
- Although early American farmers feared that a national bank would serve the rich at the expense of the poor, the first National Bank of the United States was chartered in 1791; it lasted until 1811, after which a successor bank was chartered.
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- States are not necessarily the same as nations.
- New state spaces are redefining borders, and they may not be ruled by national governments.
- But states are not necessary the same as nations, and state boundaries will not necessarily always be the same as national boundaries.
- This branch of sociology defines new state spaces as geographical spaces that are not governed simply by national governments.
- State power is not restricted to the national level.
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- A news bulletin or newscast is a television program that provides updates on world, national, or local news events.
- A "news bulletin" or a "newscast" are television programs lasting from seconds to hours that provide updates on world, national, regional, or local news events.
- In most parts of the world, national television networks will have network bulletins featuring national and international news.
- Rolling news channels broadcast news 24 hours a day.
- Local news may be presented by stand-alone local TV stations, local stations affiliated with national networks, or by local studios which "opt-out" of national network programming at specified times.
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- They can be a mix of local, national, and international news, as well as sport, entertainment, weather, and traffic, or they may be incorporated into separate bulletins.
- All-news radio stations exist in some countries, primarily located in major metropolitan areas such as New York City, Toronto, and Chicago, which often broadcast local, national, and international news and feature stories on a set time schedule.
- Some all-news stations may carry sports, public affairs programs, simulcasts of TV news magazine, political affairs shows like 60 Minutes and Face the Nation, or national radio shows revolving around news such as the CBS News Weekend Roundup.
- Also, some National Public Radio stations brand themselves as News and Information stations, which means that in addition to running the NPR news magazines like Morning Edition and All Things Considered, they run other information programs such as Fresh Air, Talk of the Nation, and the BBC World Service .
- The station's success was largely driven by the the fact that the nation's capital was riveted to news of the Vietnam War and the assassinations of President John F.
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- Cooperative federalism is a concept in which national, state and local governments interact cooperatively to solve common problems.
- The New Deal: Cooperative Federalism and the Growth of the National Government
- Cooperative federalism is a concept of federalism where national, state and local governments interact cooperatively and collectively to solve common problems, rather than making policies separately but more or less equally or clashing over a policy in a system dominated by the national government.
- Implementing programs through national employees would increase the size and intrusiveness of the national government and local implementation may assure the programs are implemented taking local conditions into account.
- The Congress Building of the United States is the seat of national or federal government which governs cooperatively with state and local government.
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- The United Nations is the most important and influential international, intergovernmental organization.
- This conference took place in 1944, and its goal was "to create a new international monetary and trade regime that was stable and predictable."
- This new system opened world markets, promoted a liberal economy and was implemented through different institutions, such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
- Since 1991 the United States has been the world's dominant military, economic, social and political power (plus it hosts the UN Headquarters itself in New York City ).
- This picture shows the UN Secretariat's headquarters in New York City.
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- There was no national safety net, no public unemployment insurance, and no Social Security.
- Many historians distinguish between a First New Deal (1933–34) and a Second New Deal (1935–38).
- The Second New Deal was begun in the spring of 1935 .
- It included a national work program, the Works Progress Administration (WPA), that made the federal government the largest single employer in the nation.
- The New Deal produced a political realignment.
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- National security policies are policies related to the survival of the state.
- In order to possess national security, a nation needs to possess economic security, energy security, and environmental security, in addition to a strong military.
- It also subordinated all military branches to the new cabinet level position of the Secretary of Defense, established the National Security Council, and established the Central Intelligence Agency.
- Current national security concerns in the U.S. include the Drug War in Mexico, terrorism, instability in the Middle East, the national debt, and global warming, among others.
- Economic security is also a part of national security.
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- Under international law, citizenship is synonymous to nationality, although the two may have different meanings under national law.
- A person is generally presumed to be a citizen of a nation if one or both of their parents are also a citizen of said nation; this is often called jus sanguinis (Latin legal term), meaning "right of blood. " A jus sanguinis policy means grants citizenship based on ancestry or ethnicity, and is related to the concept of a nation state common in Europe.
- Many people are presumed to be citizens of a nation if they were born within the physical geographic territory of the nation.
- Certain entities, however, cross national boundaries, such as trade organizations, non-governmental organizations, and multi-national corporations, and sometimes the term "citizen of the world" has been applied in to people who have fewer ties to a particular nation and more of a sense of belonging to the world in general.
- New citizens are welcomed during a naturalization ceremony in Salem, MA.