This book offers a new and pioneering history of the vital role played in nineteenth-century Great Power politics.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Maartje Abbenhuis is Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, where she has worked since 2003. She completed her PhD in History at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, in 2001. Her research interests lie in the history of neutrality and internationalism, especially in the period 1815 to 1918, the history of borderlands, and popular representations of Nazism. She has published widely on the history of the Netherlands in the First World War and co-edited two interdisciplinary collections, one on non-combatants and the other on Nazism in post-1945 popular culture. She was the recipient of two prestigious Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Grants (one in 2004, the other in 2013) as well as a University of Auckland Early Career Excellence Award in 2008. The Faculty of Arts at the University of Auckland awarded her an Early Career Teaching Excellence Award in 2006 and a Sustained Excellence in Teaching Award in 2013. She is a member of several history associations including the Royal Dutch Historical Association, the New Zealand Historical Association and the Australasian Association of European Historians.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: it is not the neutrals or lukewarms that make history 1. Neutrality on the eve of the industrial age 2. Neutrality, neutralisation and the Concert of Europe 3. The neutrals' war: Britain and the global implications of the Crimean War 4. How to be neutral: negotiating neutrality in the wars of nationhood, 1859-72 5. Neutrality as an international and patriotic ideal 6. Regulating neutrality from The Hague to The Hague, 1898-1907 7. Neutral no more: neutrality and the origins of the First World War Conclusion: international law's 'finest and most fragile flower' Bibliography Index.
Introduction: it is not the neutrals or lukewarms that make history 1. Neutrality on the eve of the industrial age 2. Neutrality, neutralisation and the Concert of Europe 3. The neutrals' war: Britain and the global implications of the Crimean War 4. How to be neutral: negotiating neutrality in the wars of nationhood, 1859-72 5. Neutrality as an international and patriotic ideal 6. Regulating neutrality from The Hague to The Hague, 1898-1907 7. Neutral no more: neutrality and the origins of the First World War Conclusion: international law's 'finest and most fragile flower' Bibliography Index.
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