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| pilcy by a stronger to attempt to create an empire by dominating weaker nations economically, politically, culturally, or militarily |
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| to join or attach, as in the joining of a new territory to an existing country |
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| to used to describe a Central American nation dominated by United States business interests |
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| settlement of a dispute by a person or a panel chosen to listen to both sides and come to a decision |
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| a feeling of strong national pride and desire for an aggressive foreign policy |
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| an addition to the 1900 Cuban constitution by the American government that gave the US the right to establish naval bases in Cuba and to intervene in Cuban affairs whenever necessary |
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| an area of economic and political control exerted by one nation over another nation or other nations |
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| American approach to China around 1900, favoring open trade relations between China and other nations |
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| a grant for a piece of land in exchange for a promise to use the land for a specific purpose |
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| President Theodore Roosevelt's 1904 extension of the Monroe Doctrine in which he asserted the right of the United States to intervene in the affairs of Latin American nations |
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| President Taft's policy of encouraging American investment in foreign economies |
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| belief that differences in characteristic or intelligence are due to one's race; asserting the superiority of one race over another or others |
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| a force of US Navy ships that undertook a world cruise in 1907 |
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