- National Child Labor Committee (American organization)
Florence Kelley: …was a founder of the National Child Labor Committee. Her efforts contributed greatly to the creation of the U.S. Children’s Bureau in 1912.
- National Chinese (Chinese political party)
Nationalist Party, political party that governed all or part of mainland China from 1928 to 1949 and subsequently ruled Taiwan under Chiang Kai-shek and his successors for most of the time since then. Originally a revolutionary league working for the overthrow of the Chinese monarchy, the
- National Christian Defense League (political party, Romania)
Nicolas C. Paulescu: …which in 1923 became the National Christian Defense League (LANC). The LANC was an influential anti-Semitic party that fueled the rise of the Iron Guard.
- National Church of Iceland (church, Iceland)
National Church of Iceland, established, state-supported Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland. Christian missionaries came to the country in the late 10th century, and about 1000 the Althing (the national Parliament and high court) averted a civil war between pagans and Christians by deciding
- National Citizen and Ballot Box (American newspaper)
Matilda Joslyn Gage: …and contributed to the monthly National Citizen and Ballot Box, published by the NWSA. She was a coeditor with Stanton and Anthony of the first three volumes of the History of Woman Suffrage. In 1880 she lobbied the national conventions of the Republican, Democratic, and Greenback-Labor parties in an unsuccessful…
- National Citizens Coalition (Canadian organization)
Stephen Harper: Early life and start of political career: …leaving office, Harper led the National Citizens Coalition, which advocated free enterprise and lower taxes and was critical of the federal response to Quebec separatism.
- National City Bank of New York (American bank)
James Stillman: …York’s National City Bank (now Citibank) made it one of the most powerful financial institutions in the United States.
- National City Company (American company)
Charles E. Mitchell: …in the reorganization of the National City Company, which oversaw investments for the National City Bank, and he soon became its president. The company was capitalized at $55,000,000 and had 50 offices throughout the world. Mitchell also became president of the National City Bank of New York and maintained both…
- National Civil Rights Museum (museum, Memphis, Tennessee, United States)
Benjamin L. Hooks: …board of directors of the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis and helped to found the Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change at the University of Memphis in 1996. Hooks stressed the need for affirmative action and pressed for increased minority voter registration. He deplored underrepresentation of minorities in…
- National Civilian Community Corps (United States federal program)
AmeriCorps: …public-health and job-training programs, (2) AmeriCorps NCCC (National Civilian Community Corps, modeled on the Great Depression-era Civilian Conservation Corps), a full-time residential program in which volunteers living on several regional campuses work with various organizations and agencies on team-based service projects in their region, and (3) AmeriCorps State and National,…
- National Classical Music Institute (institution, Seoul, South Korea)
South Korea: Cultural institutions: The National Classical Music Institute (formerly the Prince Yi Conservatory) plays an important role in the preservation of folk music. It has had its own training center for national music since 1954. The Korean National Symphony Orchestra and the Seoul Symphony Orchestra are two of the…
- National Classification System for Assistive Technology Devices and Services (United States)
assistive technology: Assistive-technology classification and characterization: Assistive-technology classification systems include the National Classification System for Assistive Technology Devices and Services, the International Organization for Standardization’s classification of assistive products for persons with disability (ISO 9999), and an ICF-based classification (ICF/AT2007). The classifications employ various structures for organizing assistive technology. For example, the National Classification System for…
- National Clearinghouse for Mental Health Information (United States agency)
mental health: National agencies: The National Clearinghouse for Mental Health Information (later National Mental Health Consumers’ Self-Help Clearinghouse) emerged as a valuable resource in the second half of the 20th century in the United States.
- National Coal Board (British corporation)
National Coal Board (NCB), former British public corporation, created on January 1, 1947, which operated previously private coal mines, manufactured coke and smokeless fuels, and distributed coal, heating instruments, and other supplies. It was renamed the British Coal Corporation in 1987. The
- National Coalition Against Censorship (American organization)
Judy Blume: …a board member with the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC). For Places I Never Meant to Be (2001), Blume invited other young adult writers whose work had been censored or challenged to contribute original stories to benefit the NCAC.
- National Coalition for Reform (political alliance, Jordan)
Jordan: Continued reform and austerity: …political alliance known as the National Coalition for Reform (NCR) that included Christians and non-Islamist Muslims and that avoided campaigning under Islamist slogans. The NCR won only 15 of the 130 parliamentary seats but was the largest organized political group in parliament. The vast majority of seats were won by…
- National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces (coalition, Syria)
Syria: Uprising and civil war: …a new coalition called the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces (sometimes called the Syrian National Coalition). Over the next month the coalition received recognition from dozens of countries as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people.
- National Coalition Party (political party, Finland)
Finland: Domestic affairs: Its former coalition partner, the National Coalition Party (NCP), won the election by capturing 44 seats (a drop of six seats from the 2007 election) but faced the prospect of coalition rule with one of the main opposition parties—either the Social Democrats, who finished second with 42 seats, or the…
- National Collection of Fine Arts (museum, Washington, District of Columbia, United States)
Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM), the first federal art collection of the United States, now the world’s largest collection of American art. The Washington, D.C., museum showcases more than 40,000 works of art, representing 7,000 American artists. Featured permanent collections include
- National Collegiate Athletic Association (American organization)
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), organization in the United States that administers intercollegiate athletics. It was formed in 1906 as the Intercollegiate Athletic Association to draw up competition and eligibility rules for football and other intercollegiate sports. The NCAA
- National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I women’s college basketball champions
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I women’s college basketball champions, winners of the annual National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I women’s college basketball tournament (commonly referred to as March Madness). The tournament’s field is made up of 64
- National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) football champions
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) football champions, winners of the annual four-team College Football Playoff (CFP) competition held after each National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS; formerly Division I-A) college football season. The CFP
- National Collegiate Boxing Association (American organization)
boxing: Intercollegiate boxing: …in national tournaments of the National Collegiate Boxing Association (NCBA). Seeking to teach fundamentals to novices in a safety-oriented and structured environment of balanced competition, the NCBA bars persons who have participated in noncollegiate bouts after age 16. Almost since its inception and the first tournament in 1976, NCBA boxing…
- National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (United States commission)
9-11 Commission, bipartisan study group created by U.S. Pres. George W. Bush and the United States Congress on November 27, 2002, to examine the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States. The commission’s report served as the basis for a major reform of the U.S. intelligence
- National Commission to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol Complex (United States government commission)
United States: Stalled voting rights legislation, the fate of the filibuster, and the appointment of Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court: …prevented the establishment of an independent commission to investigate the United States Capitol attack of 2021. Thirty-five Republicans joined all the Democratic members of the House in voting 252–175 to authorize the creation of a commission modeled on the one that investigated the September 11 attacks. However, the measure to…
- National Committee (Polish political organization)
Poland: The January 1863 uprising and its aftermath: …Reds, who created an underground National Committee, and the Whites, who also set up a clandestine organization. Wielopolski decided to break the Reds by drafting large numbers of them into the Russian army. In January 1863 the National Committee, left with no choice but to take up the challenge, called…
- National Committee for Christian Leadership (international religious movement)
The Family, international religious movement that ministers to political and economic elites. It is based on visions that members believe were granted by God to the movement’s founder, Abraham Vereide, and on subsequent refinements by Douglas Coe, Vereide’s successor, and other Family leaders.
- National Committee for Mental Hygiene (American organization)
mental health: Developments in the 20th century: …Beers led in forming the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, which in turn was instrumental in organizing the National Association for Mental Health in 1950.
- National Communism
National Communism, policies based on the principle that in each country the means of attaining ultimate communist goals must be dictated by national conditions rather than by a pattern set in another country. The term, popular from the late 1940s to the 1980s, was particularly identified with
- National Conciliation Party (political party, El Salvador)
El Salvador: Military dictatorships: …dismantled and replaced by the National Conciliation Party (Partido de Conciliación Nacional; PCN), which would control the national government for the next 18 years. Under the banner of the Alliance for Progress, Rivera advanced programs aimed at economic growth and diversification, which enabled El Salvador to take advantage of the…
- National Concord (Bulgarian political organization)
Aleksandŭr Tsankov: …leader of the conservative group National Concord (Naroden Zgovor), which conspired to overthrow the radical peasant dictatorship of Aleksandŭr Stamboliyski.
- National Confederation of Hungarian Trade Unions (Hungarian organization)
Hungary: Labour and taxation: …reorganized in 1988 as the National Confederation of Hungarian Trade Unions. The largest trade union in Hungary, with some 40 organizations under its umbrella at the start of the 21st century, it became part of an even bigger organization in 2013 when it joined with the Autonomous Trade Union Confederation…
- National Confederation of Labour (Spanish labor union)
anarchism: Anarchism in Spain: …in 1910, which founded the National Confederation of Labour (Confederación Nacional del Trabajo; CNT).
- National Conference for Unification (South Korean government)
South Korea: The Yushin order (Fourth Republic): The National Conference for Unification (NCU) was created “to pursue peaceful unification of the fatherland.” The conference was to be a body of between 2,000 and 5,000 members who were directly elected by the voters for a six-year term. The president was the chairman of the…
- National Conference of Brazilian Bishops (Brazilian religious organization)
Hélder Pessoa Câmara: …Paul VI), Câmara founded the National Conference of Brazilian Bishops in October 1952, shortly after he had been named auxiliary bishop of Rio de Janeiro. He was also one of the organizers of the Latin-American Conference of Bishops. (The birth of liberation theology is usually dated to the second of…
- National Conference of Christians and Jews (American organization)
Judaism: Jewish-Christian relations: In the United States the National Conference of Christians and Jews was founded in 1928 in response to the virulent anti-Semitism propagated in Henry Ford’s newspaper, the Dearborn Independent. Some Christian leaders spoke out during the 1930s against the Nazi persecution of the Jews, but the majority of Christian leaders…
- National Conference of Social Work (American organization)
Jane Addams: …first woman president of the National Conference of Social Work, and in 1912 she played an active part in the Progressive Party’s presidential campaign for Theodore Roosevelt. At The Hague in 1915 she served as chairman of the International Congress of Women, following which was established the Women’s International League…
- National Congress (Brazilian government)
Brazil: The legislature of Brazil: …is exercised by the bicameral National Congress (Congresso Nacional), comprising the Chamber of Deputies (Câmara dos Deputados) and the Federal Senate (Senado Federal). Congress meets every year in two sessions of four and a half months each. The constitution gives Congress the power to rule in matters involving the federal…
- National Congress (Honduran government)
Honduras: Government: The National Congress in theory has great authority to check the administrative activities of the president, but only during the period 1925–31, when several cabinet ministers appointed by the president were forced to resign through censure, was such authority effective.
- National Congress for New Politics (political party, South Korea)
Democratic Party of Korea (DP), centrist-liberal political party in South Korea. The party supports greater human rights, improved relations with North Korea, and an economic policy described as “new progressivism.” The party was founded by Kim Dae-Jung in 1995 as the National Congress for New
- National Congress of British West Africa (African political organization)
western Africa: The emergence of African leaders: Following this, in 1918–20, a National Congress of British West Africa was formed by professionals to press for the development of the legislative councils in all the British colonies into elective assemblies controlling the colonial administrations.
- National Congress of Mothers (American organization)
National Congress of Parents and Teachers, American organization concerned with the educational, social, and economic well-being of children. The PTA was founded on Feb. 17, 1897, as the National Congress of Mothers; membership was later broadened to include teachers, fathers, and other citizens.
- National Congress of Parents and Teachers (American organization)
National Congress of Parents and Teachers, American organization concerned with the educational, social, and economic well-being of children. The PTA was founded on Feb. 17, 1897, as the National Congress of Mothers; membership was later broadened to include teachers, fathers, and other citizens.
- National Congress Party (political party, The Sudan)
Omar al-Bashir: Military retirement, continued rule, and secession: …accept the nomination of the National Congress Party (NCP; successor party of the NIF) and stand in the upcoming (April 2010) presidential election, part of the country’s first multiparty elections in more than 20 years. Bashir was reelected in April with about 68 percent of the vote. However, the poll…
- National Constituent Assembly (historical French parliament)
National Assembly, any of various historical French parliaments or houses of parliament. From June 17 to July 9, 1789, it was the name of the revolutionary assembly formed by representatives of the Third Estate; thereafter (until replaced by the Legislative Assembly on Sept. 30, 1791) its formal
- National Constitution Center (building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States)
Philadelphia: The city layout: Also nearby is the National Constitution Center, which was opened on July 4, 2003, to promote the better understanding of the U.S. Constitution.
- National Consultative Assembly (Iranian government)
Council of Guardians: …Council and appointed by the Majles (parliament). The Council of Guardians reviews all legislation passed by the Majles to determine its constitutionality. If a majority of the council does not find a piece of legislation in compliance with the constitution or if a majority of the council’s Islamic canon lawyers…
- National Consumers League (American organization)
National Consumers League (NCL), American organization founded in 1899 to fight for the welfare of consumers and workers who had little voice or power in the marketplace and workplace. Many of the NCL’s goals, such as the establishment of a minimum wage and the limitation of working hours, directly
- National Convention (French history)
National Convention, assembly that governed France from September 20, 1792, until October 26, 1795, during the most critical period of the French Revolution. The National Convention was elected to provide a new constitution for the country after the overthrow of the monarchy (August 10, 1792). The
- National Convention of Nigerian Citizens (political party, Nigeria)
western Africa: The formation of African independence movements: …of the west, and the National Convention of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC), whose prime support came from the Igbo of the east. These parties expected the whole country quickly to follow the Ghanaian pattern of constitutional change. But any elective central assembly was bound to be dominated by the north, which…
- National Council (political organization, Hungary)
Budapest: The modern city: …the autumn of 1918, the National Council, a revolutionary body headed by Count Mihály Károlyi and supported by antiwar radicals and socialists, took power in Budapest. The following March the Károlyi regime collapsed; communists seized power in the capital and held it for four months while also controlling the central…
- National Council (Namibian government)
Namibia: Government: The second house, the National Council, serves in an advisory capacity on legislative matters and comprises three representatives from each of Namibia’s 14 administrative regions. National Council members are elected by Regional Councils and serve six-year terms.
- National Council (Austrian government)
Austria: Constitutional framework: The National Council, wielding the primary legislative power, is elected by all citizens who are at least 16 years of age, and every citizen over age 26 is eligible to run for office. The distribution of seats in the National Council is based on a system…
- National Council for Democracy and Development (political organization, Guinea)
Guinea: Conté’s death, 2008 military coup, and 2010 elections: The National Council for Democracy and Development (Conseil National pour la Démocratie et le Développement; CNDD), with Capt. Moussa Dadis Camara as president, was created to serve as a transitional government. The CNDD promised to hold elections within one year and vowed to fight rampant corruption.…
- National Council for the Defense of Democracy-Forces for the Defense of Democracy (political party, Burundi)
Burundi: The path toward peace: …Nkurunziza, a Hutu, representing the National Council for the Defense of Democracy–Forces for the Defense of Democracy (Conseil National pour la Défense de la Démocratie–Forces pour la Défense de la Démocratie; CNDD-FDD), was elected president. Under the terms of the constitution, as the first post-transition president, he was elected by…
- National Council of Administration (Uruguayan government)
Uruguay: Modernization and reform: …between the president and a National Council of Administration.
- National Council of American Indians (American organization)
Zitkala-Sa: She founded the National Council of American Indians in 1926, and, as the organization’s president, she advocated citizenship rights, better educational opportunities, improved health care, and cultural recognition and preservation. Her investigation of land swindles perpetrated against Native Americans resulted in her appointment as an adviser to the…
- National Council of Churches (American religious organization)
National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. (NCC), an agency of Protestant, Anglican, and Eastern Orthodox denominations that was formed in 1950 in the United States by the merger of 12 national interdenominational agencies. The National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.
- National Council of Farmer Cooperatives (American organization)
Ezra Taft Benson: …as executive secretary of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives, a lobbying group located in Washington, D.C. Benson was an active member of the Mormon church, and in 1943 he was ordained a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the highest governing body of the church after the…
- National Council of Hispanic Women (American organization)
National Council of Hispanic Women (NCHW), organization of both individuals and organizations, such as universities and corporations, founded in 1985 with the mission of empowering Hispanic women and giving them a greater role in American society. The main goal of the organization is to have a more
- National Council of International Health (international organization)
Global Health Council, global nonprofit alliance devoted to improving health around the world. It comprises corporations, foundations, government agencies, nongovernmental organizations, and universities. The National Council of International Health was created in 1972 and was renamed the Global
- National Council of Jewish Women (American organization)
National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW), oldest volunteer Jewish women’s organization in the United States, founded in 1893. Prompted by Jewish values, the organization works with both the Jewish community and the general public to safeguard rights and freedoms for people worldwide. This objective
- National Council of Negro Women (American organization)
National Council of Negro Women (NCNW), American umbrella organization, founded by Mary McLeod Bethune in New York City on December 5, 1935, whose mission is “to advance opportunities and the quality of life for African American women, their families and communities.” Disappointed with the lack of
- National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (African political organization)
Nnamdi Azikiwe: …as a founder of the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC), which became increasingly identified with the Igbo people of southern Nigeria after 1951. In 1948, with the backing of the NCNC, Azikiwe was elected to the Nigerian Legislative Council, and he later served as premier of the…
- National Council of Provinces (government, South Africa)
South Africa: The 1996 constitution: The National Council of Provinces, which replaced the Senate as the upper house, is made up of 10-member delegations (each with six permanent and four special members, including the provincial premier) chosen by each of the provincial assemblies. For most votes each delegation casts a single…
- National Council of Slovenes, Croats, and Serbs (European history)
Croatia: From World War I to the establishment of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes: …power to the newly created National Council of Slovenes, Croats, and Serbs in Zagreb. One dissenting voice was that of Stjepan Radić, leader of the Croatian Peasant Party, who opposed unconditional unification with no reference to the will of the people of Croatia and with no guarantees of national equality…
- National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. (American religious organization)
National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. (NCC), an agency of Protestant, Anglican, and Eastern Orthodox denominations that was formed in 1950 in the United States by the merger of 12 national interdenominational agencies. The National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.
- National Council of the Evangelical Free Churches (American organization)
free church: …in 1896 to form the National Council of the Evangelical Free Churches. In 1940 this group merged with the Federal Council of the Evangelical Churches to form the Free Church Federal Council (commonly known as the Free Churches Group).
- National Council of the Resistance (French history)
resistance: In 1943 the clandestine National Council of the Resistance (Conseil National de la Résistance) was established as the central organ of coordination among all French groups. Early the following year, various belligerent forces known as maquis (named from the underbrush, or maquis, that served as their cover) were formally…
- National Council of Trade Unions (South African organization)
South Africa: Labor and taxation: …federations include the Black consciousness-rooted National Council of Trade Unions and the mainly white Federation of South African Labour.
- National Council of Women (New Zealand organization)
Kate Sheppard: …1896 Sheppard helped establish the National Council of Women (NCW) and became its first president. Among the issues she supported were greater equality in marriage and the right of women to run for Parliament. Although poor health forced her to step down as president of the NCW in 1903, she…
- National Counterterrorism Center (United States government agency)
John Brennan: …the organization that became the National Counterterrorism Center, which he led as interim director before retiring from the CIA in 2005.
- National Country Party of Australia (political party, Australia)
the Nationals, Australian political party that for most of its history has held office as a result of its customary alliance with the Liberal Party of Australia. It often acted as a margin in the balance of power, but its own power declined over the years. In 1934 it could command 16 percent of the
- National Covenant (Scottish history)
National Covenant, solemn agreement inaugurated by Scottish churchmen on Feb. 28, 1638, in the Greyfriars’ churchyard, Edinburgh. It rejected the attempt by King Charles I and William Laud, archbishop of Canterbury, to force the Scottish church to conform to English liturgical practice and church
- National Covenant (Protestantism)
Scots Confession: The Second Scots Confession, also called the King’s Confession and the National Covenant (1581), was a supplement to the First Scots Confession. It was a strongly antipapal statement adopted by the king, council, and court and by all the Scottish people in 1581. It was also…
- National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum (museum, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States)
Oklahoma: The arts: The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, at Oklahoma City, is noted for its Western art and its exhibits of cowboy paraphernalia. The Will Rogers Memorial Museum, in Claremore, features exhibits depicting early Oklahoma and Rogers’s career as a cowboy, humorist, and actor.
- National Cricket Association (British sports organization)
cricket: The Cricket Council and the ECB: …County Cricket Board (TCCB), the National Cricket Association (NCA), and the MCC, was the result of these efforts. The TCCB, which amalgamated the Advisory County Cricket Committee and the Board of Control of Test Matches at Home, had responsibility for all first-class and minor-counties cricket in England and for overseas…
- National Crime Information Center (United States government agency)
police: Computerization: In the United States the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) was established in 1967; police records were subsequently computerized and made available to police agencies throughout the country. The NCIC’s database enables local police departments to apprehend offenders who might otherwise evade capture. The database contains fingerprints, a registry of…
- National Dance Institute (American organization)
Jacques d’Amboise: …became director of the nonprofit National Dance Institute (NDI), which he founded (1976) in order to take the teaching of dance into an ever-widening circle of public schools. The NDI, which was based in New York City, later became involved with a number of associate organizations across the country. D’Amboise’s…
- National Day (Chinese holiday)
National Day, holiday celebrated on October 1 to mark the formation of the People’s Republic of China. The holiday is also celebrated by China’s two special administrative regions: Hong Kong and Macau. Traditionally, the festivities begin with the ceremonial raising of the Chinese national flag in
- National Day (Swiss holiday)
Switzerland: Daily life and social customs: August 1 is National Day (German: Bundesfeier; French: Fête Nationale; and Italian: Festa Nazionale), which commemorates the agreement between representatives of the Alpine cantons of Uri, Schwyz, and Nidwalden, who signed an oath of confederation in 1291. The holiday itself, however, dates only from 1891, and it became…
- national debt (economics)
history of Latin America: Debt crisis: …full service on its foreign debt, which had grown to dangerously high levels. Both Mexico and Venezuela, as major petroleum exporters, benefited from rising international oil prices during the 1970s, but, instead of concluding that foreign credit was no longer necessary, they assumed that any amount of indebtedness would be…
- national defense (national defense)
international trade: National defense: …argument is fairly clear: the national-defense argument is frequently a red herring, an attempt to “wrap oneself in the flag,” and insofar as an industry is essential, the tariff is a dubious means of ensuring its survival. Economists say instead that essential industries ought to be given a direct subsidy…
- National Defense (Serbian nationalist organization)
Narodna Odbrana, Serbian nationalist organization, founded in 1908, that gathered recruits from Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbia, and Croatia and tried to foment an anti-Habsburg revolution in Bosnia. Although it officially transformed itself into a cultural society in 1909, it continued its clandestine
- National Defense Act (United States [1947])
United States: National security: The National Security Act of 1947 created a coordinated command for security and intelligence-gathering activities. The act established the National Security Council (NSC) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the latter under the authority of the NSC and responsible for foreign intelligence. The National Security Agency,…
- National Defense Authorization Act (United States [2014])
Mike Lee: He notably voted against the National Defense Authorization Act of 2014, which allowed the government to detain without trial anyone—including U.S. citizens—suspected of fighting with al-Qaeda and other forces hostile to the United States. Lee also supported the government shutdown of 2013, along with many members of his party, but…
- National Defense Authorization Act (United States [1991])
Cooperative Threat Reduction: …Nunn and Lugar cosponsored the National Defense Authorization Act. The act originally provided U.S. funding for either the elimination of Soviet nuclear weapons or their removal to carefully guarded sites, storage of nuclear material obtained from decommissioned missiles, and efforts to prevent the sale or illegal dispersal of destructive weapons.…
- National Defense Commission (North Korean government)
Kim Jong-Un: Childhood and rise to power: …a post on the powerful National Defense Commission (NDC); the chairmanship of the NDC, defined in the constitution as the country’s highest office, was held by Kim Jong Il. By mid-2009 Kim Jong-Un was being referred to within the country by the title “Brilliant Comrade,” and in June it was…
- National Defense Council (government, Serbia)
Serbia: Security: …the other republics, established a National Defense Council, which in time of war “or any other peril” could assume sweeping police powers—even making its own determination that such a situation exists. As a result, a small number of military officers held a considerable amount of power. The council invoked its…
- National Defense Education Act (United States [1958])
National Defense Education Act (NDEA), U.S. federal legislation passed by Congress and signed into law by Pres. Dwight D. Eisenhower on September 2, 1958, that provided funding to improve American schools and to promote postsecondary education. The goal of the legislation was to enable the
- National Defense Research Committee (United States government organization)
Vannevar Bush: Architect of the military-industrial complex: …about forming an organization, the National Defense Research Committee (NDRC), to organize research of interest to the military and to inform the armed services about new technologies. The NDRC was formed with Bush as its chairman on June 27, 1940. One year later, the Office of Scientific Research and Development…
- National Defense University (United States Department of Defense institutuion)
National Defense University (NDU), American graduate-level institution of higher education for members of the U.S. military and allied countries’ militaries that was designed to prepare military and civilian leaders to face present and emerging security threats through education in military
- National Democracy (political party, Poland)
Poland: Accommodation with the ruling governments: …Democratic movement originated with a Polish League organized in Switzerland; by 1893 the organization had transformed into the clandestine National League, based in Warsaw. It stressed its all-Polish character, rejected loyalism, and promoted national resistance, even uprisings, when opportune. Its nationalist ideology tinged with populism gradually evolved into “integral” nationalism,…
- National Democratic Alliance (political organization, India)
National Democratic Alliance (NDA), alliance of right-leaning political parties in India, led by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The National Democratic Alliance (NDA) held power first from 1999 until 2004 under the leadership of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and again from 2014
- National Democratic Congress (political party, Ghana)
John Mahama: …under the banner of the National Democratic Congress (NDC); he was reelected in 2000 and 2004. While in Parliament he held several posts, including Minister of Communications (1998–2001), before being chosen as the vice presidential candidate on the NDC ticket in 2008 with John Evans Atta Mills. Mills won the…
- National Democratic Congress (political party, Grenada)
Grenada: Independence of Grenada: …in March 1990, Braithwaite, whose National Democratic Congress (NDC) fell one seat shy of a parliamentary majority, was appointed prime minister by Scoon.
- National Democratic Movement (political party, Jamaica)
Jamaica: The independent country: …(creating a third party, the National Democratic Movement). The start of disengagement by the political parties from gang leaders and the establishment of the Electoral Commission contributed significantly to a decrease in political violence.
- National Democratic Party (political party, Suriname)
Suriname: Suriname since independence: …served as president of the National Democratic Party (Nationale Democratische Partij; NDP) and was widely viewed as the real power behind Jules Wijdenbosch, who was elected president of the country in 1996. In 1997 the government of the Netherlands issued an arrest warrant for Bouterse on charges of drug smuggling,…
- National Democratic Party (political party, Venezuela)
Democratic Action (AD), social-democratic political party of Venezuela. Democratic Action was founded in 1936–37 as the National Democratic Party during a period when Venezuela’s government had relaxed its restrictive laws regulating political organizations. By the end of 1937, however, the
- National Democratic Party (political party, Egypt)
Egypt: The Mubarak regime: His National Democratic Party (NDP) continued to increase its majority of delegates in the People’s Assembly in the elections held every five years. The Muslim Brotherhood, unofficially allowed to revive under Sadat but never authorized to become a political party, threw its popular support to the…