Wikipedia:Stanford Archive answers/Politics

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  1. Okuma doctrine -> by Count Okuma; considered the Asian Monroe Doctrine
  2. Mikulski Commission - also known as the Commission on Delegate Selection and Party Structure, it was created following the Democratic loss in the 1972 to re-evaluate the processes by which candidates were nominated. Named for Barbara Mikulski.
  3. Symbolic analysts < concept in The Work of Nations by Robert Reich
  4. Operation Blast Furnace < 1986 military action; Bolivia – United States relations needs standalone
  5. Abolition of Private Property -> Idea from Engels and Marx's Communist Manifesto
  6. Council of Magdeberg, Council of Magdeburg < needs standalone; see Magdeburg rights and German town law
  7. Costigan-Wagner Act Wagner-Costigan Act (Names May Be Reversed < 1935 anti-lynching initiative; should be a standalone at Costigan-Wagner Bill (currently redirect to Costigan bio)
  8. Fence mending - The term originated in 1879 when Ohio senator John Sherman made a trip home. It is what politicians do when they visit their electoral districts to explain an unpopular action. [1]
  9. Emergency Congress -> also known as "Hundred days congress", special session of congress that met March 9 to June 16, 1933 to discuss many issues in FDR's New Deal
  10. Statutes of Vizcaya -> system of laws issued in Spanish Basque Country, revoked in 1839 at the end of the First Carlist War
  11. Crime Victims Rights -> See here
  12. Shomrei Torah Sephardim-Sephardi Torah Guardians -> Israeli political party
  13. William Barloon And David Daliberti < Daliberti v. Iraq, Daliberti v. Republic of Iraq