NEW ZEALAND * LITERACY CHINA AMERICAN NOTES SILKE BOOKS Periowcats $4.50 -- --.-
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Tyrrell's musings, full course book, movie and saloon reviews, idiotic cpiotations One bowl of '/'hi'A///rr/(-f/~i S/wti~tor lias as culled from around the world, and more much inorganic nutrition as eighteen bowls unre~~llatedadditives. of '/'/'I/)(,, thirty-six bowls ofthe \S'i/s/l/'~/,q/i>n Post, and nine-hiindrei.1 tini-i fifty-six bowls Your mind is starving forstimi~liis.Order of the ~Vc/t/iniiilL~~II//IOOII. an eight month supply of The American S/wtator today! ?0.I3ox 10448 a Call 1-800-3-11-15228 Arlington, \?I 22210 ansfer: Costs and Benefits of Technology t Discusses various protection measures used; the impact on trade flows, prices, By Mom's Bornstein employment, competitiveness, and Examines Soviet interest in Western efficiency; and examines specifically technology, the modes of transfer of protectionism in the steel, textile and Western technology to the USSR, and the clothing, automobile, and consumer impact of this transfer on the Soviet electronics industries. 254 pages, $24.00 economy and on Soviet foreign trade. 190 pages, $28.00 Structural Adjustment and Multinational Enterprises Two Crises: Latin America and Examines the ways in which multinational Asia 1929-38 and 1973-83 enterprises have responded to structural By Angus Maddison change and compares these with the World economic problems of the past reactions of domestic firms. decade are often compared with those of 68 pages, $I 1 .OO the 1930s. But an in-depth comparison demonstrates substantial differences Biotechnology and between the international economicorder's Patent Protection: disintegration then and its resilience in An International Review responding to the most recent crisis. 105 pages, $14.00 By F. K. Beier, R. S. Crespi, and]. Strous There is no other field of technology where national patent laws vary on so Sub-Saharan Africa many points as they do in biotechnology. This report analyzes these national Edited by Tore Rose divergencies and suggests changes which This volume traces Sub-Saharan Africa's could lead to better legal protection of struggle for development in the 1970s to the inventor in biotechnology and to its current fight for survival in the 1980s, better harmonization of patent law. both practical and analytical issues are 133 pages, $16.00 addressed. 335 pages, $18.00 Please send me She books checked J East West Technology Transfer d Two Crises Latin America and Asia d Crisis and Recover L I Costs and Benefits LJ Structural Adjustment LJ Biotechnology My Checkor Money Orderlor$ isenclosed Charge my American Express Card Number lÑlIl[ÑÑÑÑÑ[Ñ[ Send order to: OECD Publicationsand InformationCenter 1750-QPennsylvaniaAvenue, N.W. Washington, D.C.20006-4582 Tel (202) 724-1857 Signdrure S 7 Editor's Comment The Wilson Quarterly's editors make a strong effort to present the latest work by specialists on significant developments overseas. We do this in our short reviews of articles (see "Other Countries," pp. 39-42) and books, and, at greater length, in essays on individual countries. At its best, this approach yields some notion of what the world looks like to politicians, writers, and ordinary folk in places far removed from Washington, New York, or Tulsa, Oklahoma. This emphasis reflects the everyday life of the Woodrow Wilson Center, where both American and foreign scholars come to write books and trade ideas. It also stems from our belief that Americans have something to learn from the perceptions, mistakes, and successes of others. Lastly, the WQ partly fills a gap left by the mass media; a TV news producer's current view of the world overseas would probably show the Soviet Union, South Africa, and the Mideast looming large, with El Salvador, the Philippines, Libya, China, and Nicaragua popping up now and then, and the rest of the globe in relative obscurity. In this issue, our contributors draw a sharp portrait of New Zealand and its new role in the South Pacific (p. 47) and examine the latest post-Mao wave of books on China (p. 163).And Mexico's noted poet- essayist Octavio Paz tells us (p. 80) how the United States looks from south of the border. Editor: Peter Braestrup Published in January, March, May, September, and Deputy Editor: Timothy M. James November by the Woodrow Wilson International Center Senior Editor: Steven Lagerfeld for Scholars, Smithso?~ia?iInstitution 811iIdit1g Washington, D.C 20560. Indexed biennially. Literary Editor: Jay Tolson Subscriptions. one year, $19, two years, $32, threeyears, Managing Editor: James S. Gibney $43. Foreign subscriptions' one year, $25.50; two years, Associate Editors: Richard Lipkin, Andrea $45, three years, $62 50. Foreign subscnptiorzs air mail: Meditch, Neil Spitzer; Contributing Editors: one year $34, two years, $62; lfmyears, $88. 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THE WILSON QUARTERLY is a Distributors, Inc., 1130 Clevelandfid, Sa71d1is@%Ohio rqritervd trademark. 44870. That's the back of our New Zealand Adver- tismg Manager Harry Bright in the photo.And this was supposed to be the New Zealand advertise- ment hi was sending us up fromWelhgton. As you can see from the snap his wife sent ~arr~'soff enjoying the country rather than on the job doing our r Send me all those New Zealand goodies" Hany hasn't gotten around to sending you yet: I The New Zealand Book plus our catalogue of New Zealand vacations in colour! New Zealand 18 minute New Zealand video cassette (VHS) advertisement. I free from our lending library I I I Addiess Somuchto Qty/Statc/Zip I New Zealand To~~iist?>: Publicity Office MZT~ advertise. So manv I 10960 Wilshirc Blvd Suite 1530 ' I Los Angclcs, CA 90024 perfectly splendid ,1 I reasons not to. 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