1. Charles Wolf, Jr., “Extended Containment,” in Beyond Containment, ed. Aaron Wildavsky (Westlake Village, CA: ICS Press, 1983).
2.
2. Marshall D. Shulman, “What the Russians Really Want,”Harpers (Apr. 1984).
3.
3. George F. Kennan, “The Sources of Soviet Conduct,”Foreign Affairs, 25(4) (1947).
4.
4. John Van Oudenaren, “Containment: Obsolete and Enduring Features” (Unpublished manuscript, Rand, Santa Monica, CA, Oct. 1984).
5.
5. Robert Legvold, “The Soviet Threat to Southern Africa,” in South Africa and Its Neighbors: Regional Security and Self-Interest, Robert I. Rotberg et al. (Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 1985).
6.
6. Robert Legvold, “The Study of Soviet Foreign Policy: The State of the Field and the Role of IREX,” in Foreign Area Research in the National Interest: American and Soviet Perspectives, IREX Occasional Papers, vol. 1, no. 5 (New York: International Research and Exchanges Board, 1982).
7.
7. Between 1982 and 1985 the annual budget of the nation's oldest and most distinguished Russian Institute, Columbia University's recently renamed Harriman Institute, jumped from $125,000 to over $1 million. On the West Coast, two new centers have been created specifically for the study of Soviet international behavior, one jointly administered by the University of California at Berkeley and Stanford University and the other jointly administered by the Rand Corporation and the University of California at Los Angeles.
8.
8. John Stremlau, ed., International Relations Research: Emerging Trends outside the United States, 1981-1982, Rockefeller Foundation Special Report (New York: Rockefeller Foundation, 1983).