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Web
Links>The History of the Vietnam War>Aftermath
of the War
The
Aftermath of the War
Ecological
and Health Effects of the Vietnam War Symposium
The Yale University School of Nursing sponsored a symposium on the Ecological
and Health Effects of the Vietnam War, September, September 13-15, 2002.
The symposium focused on assessing the chemical, biological and physical
agents utilized in military operations during the US-Vietnam conflict
from an environmental health perspective; identified the human health
effects of chemical, biological and anti-plant agents, stressors of living
in a war zone and other exposures encountered in Vietnam; discussed carcinogenic
and non-cancerous conditions such as maternal health and reproductive
outcomes, growth and development of offspring, diseases of the immune,
hepatic, neurological, and metabolic systems and post-traumatic stress
disorder; and facilitated a dialogue about the need for further research
to study the ecological and human health issues associated with military
operations in Vietnam.
Give
War a Chance
Part of the PBS website, Give War a Chance is based on a Frontline
program aired in early 1999 that explores how U.S. diplomats and the mililtary
differ on the use of forceful intervetions in the Post-Vietnam era. Discussion
participants are U.S. United Nations Ambassdor Richard Holbrooke and Admiral
Leighton Smith who fought in Vietnam and commanded NATO forces in Bosnia.
The site features biographies of and interviews with Holbrook and Smith,
a report on American use of military force, an analysis of U.S. foreign
policy, an interview with Major H.R. McMaster about the lessons
learned from Vietnam, and a chronology of U.S. military interventions
in the past 30 years.
The
Lessons of the Vietnam War
An interview with Noam Chomsky, reprinted from Indochina Newsletter,
November - December, 1982. See also, Conversations
with Noam Chomsky.
Recalling
the Vietnam War
A
University of California, Berkeley research gallery highlights the complex
environment in which decisions were made that resulted in American involvement
in Vietnam. Interviews with 16 influential decision-makers and thinkers
are included.
Remembering
Vietnam: Reflections on the War
Online News Hour presents a collection of essays on the effects of the
Vietnam War. Authors include Pete Peterson, former POW and Ambassador
to Vietnam, U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky.
The
Vietnam Conflict
This
webpage is an academic information portal for research on the Vietnam
War. Included are articles that assess the impact of the V ietnam War
and compare it to other conflicts.
Vietnam:
Learning from Tragedy
Thomas Martin's essay, published in San Francisco State University's History
Students' Association journal Ex Post Facto, discusses Vietnam
war revisionism, what the historians have said, and what political lessons
can be learned from our long involvement in Vietnam.
Vietnam Passage: Journeys
From War to Peace
Beginning with the end of the Vietnam War, this PBS program and website
tells the stories of six Vietnamese people whose lives took divergent
directions during and after the devastating war. The documentary is narrated
by David Lamb, reporter and author of Vietnam Now: A Reporter Returns
(New York: PublicAffairs, 2002). A teacher's guide is included.
Vietnamerica: The War Comes Home
Web site for a book by Thomas Bass which discusses the United States and
Vietnam from the end of the war to the present as symbolized by and seen
through the eyes of Amerasian children. The site also includes book reviews,
ordering information, a photo gallery, and information about the author.
See also:
Lessons
from the Anti-Vietnam War Movement
Lessons
of the Vietnam War (teaching curriculum)
The
Lives of Orphans: Effects of the Vietnam War
Modern
Effects of the Vietnam War
Overcoming
the Legacy of the Vietnam War
Vietnam:
Conflict or War?
Vietnam:
Effects of War
Vietnam
War: The Effects at Home
Vietnam's
Ghosts
Vietnam's
Legacy |
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