neutralism
But it seems likely that a more balanced sense of Burmese "neutralism" in foreign relations will resume, as it pervasively did during the Cold War - some sense of Chinese-Western equilibrium in Myanmar.
Mossadegh pursued a policy of neutralism by another name, calling it "negative equilibrium." Dulles saw it as a threat by any name.
Disagreements and third parties: Dilemmas of neutralism in panel news interviews.
Critical nonalignment better describes their position than "positive" neutralism (and this remained true during the 1980s resurgence of such movements).
Such changes harshly question the ethics and professionalism of traditional media; field correspondents and dispatchers themselves came between the rock and the dark blue sea and their values of neutralism and accuracy have been subjected to severe testing, said panelists.
Possibly the greatest work to come out of the Second World War (though let's not forget the Swiss Honegger, never mind his country's professional neutralism) is the Seventh Symphony of Shostakovich, subtitled "The Leningrad", as its first three movements were composed while the composer was fire-watching during the lengthy siege of that city.
Afghanistan abandoned its policy of strict isolationism and moved towards defensive neutralism. Amir Amanullah (1919-29) terminated the alliance with Britain because it had reduced Afghanistan to the position of a vassal, which the burgeoning spirit of nationalism in the populace was no longer willing to tolerate.
seen in the way younger journalists are much more negative towards the idea of "shared ideals" and "the same basic competence" as a journalistic ideal (in other words, rejecting journalistic universalism in favour of pluralism), and by their lesser concern with political neutralism, differences that can probably largely be linked to different historical experiences, their higher educational level and that they work in a more diverse range of journalistic mediums and departments.