Cette analyse géopolitique permet de poser un regard nouveau sur la problématique des questions nationales et de l'organisation du territoire des Etats multiculturels qui composent l'Europe centrale. L'émergence de l'Etat-nation y a posé en effet problème, la question nationale étant étroitement liée à la problématique des minorités et des frontières.
L'auteur étudie dans sa recherche l'influence des facteurs historiques, géographiques, démographiques, géopolitiques et stratégiques sur l'évolution des questions nationales dans cette région. Il présente notamment les difficultés liées à l'acceptation de l'Etat-nation unitaire et critique également l'interprétation "classique" du principe d'autodétermination qui inclut le droit de sécession. La présentation de la question nationale hongroise dans le contexte géopolitique régional et européen éclaire le propos.
L'auteur étudie dans sa recherche l'influence des facteurs historiques, géographiques, démographiques, géopolitiques et stratégiques sur l'évolution des questions nationales dans cette région. Il présente notamment les difficultés liées à l'acceptation de l'Etat-nation unitaire et critique également l'interprétation "classique" du principe d'autodétermination qui inclut le droit de sécession. La présentation de la question nationale hongroise dans le contexte géopolitique régional et européen éclaire le propos.
"Michael Broers writes with ... warmth and even compassion ... It makes for an enjoyable and illuminating book." (Professor Alan Forrest, University of York)
"Michael Broers demonstrates in this lively and entertaining book that Napoleon's 'other war' against draft dodgers, deserters, bandits, and guerrilla insurgents shaped Europe and the world as powerfully as conventional warfare ever did. This is a 'tour de force' of comparative history that very few scholars aside from Michael Broers could accomplish." (Professor John Lawrence Tone, Georgia Institute of Technology)
"In this book Michael Broers addresses the dirty little wars engendered by conquest, revolutionary reform and military policy in the Napoleonic era. His grasp of the sources is solid; his writing is passionate. His book deserves to become a classic." (Professor Clive Emsley, Open University)
"A brilliantly written and highly original contribution to a neglected but crucial aspect of Napoleonic Europe." (Professor T.C.W. Blanning, University of Cambridge)
"(...) the book is a splendid addition to the literature, and all the more so as it is greatly enriched by comparative chapters on areas of Europe and the wider world that were never touched by the French armies, namely Spanish America and the Ottoman Balkans." (Charles Esdaile, Literary Review)
"(...) this is an excellent and stimulating book, written with all the dashing prose of his mentor Richard Cobb, whom Broers warmly acknowledges." (D.M.G. Sutherland, The Journal of Military History)
"Michael Broers has written a masterful study of banditry and insurgency in the Napoleonic age, one that in every way both complements and updates work by Eric Hobsbawm and Charles Esdaile. [...] This excellent study, well provided with maps and illustrations, should occupy pride of place on the desk of any student of modern-day insurgency and counter-insurgency." (Alex Marshall, War in History)
"[An] outstanding work on war, statebuilding, and banditry during the revolutionary era." (Katherine B. Aaslestad, Journal of Social History, Spring 2013)
"Michael Broers demonstrates in this lively and entertaining book that Napoleon's 'other war' against draft dodgers, deserters, bandits, and guerrilla insurgents shaped Europe and the world as powerfully as conventional warfare ever did. This is a 'tour de force' of comparative history that very few scholars aside from Michael Broers could accomplish." (Professor John Lawrence Tone, Georgia Institute of Technology)
"In this book Michael Broers addresses the dirty little wars engendered by conquest, revolutionary reform and military policy in the Napoleonic era. His grasp of the sources is solid; his writing is passionate. His book deserves to become a classic." (Professor Clive Emsley, Open University)
"A brilliantly written and highly original contribution to a neglected but crucial aspect of Napoleonic Europe." (Professor T.C.W. Blanning, University of Cambridge)
"(...) the book is a splendid addition to the literature, and all the more so as it is greatly enriched by comparative chapters on areas of Europe and the wider world that were never touched by the French armies, namely Spanish America and the Ottoman Balkans." (Charles Esdaile, Literary Review)
"(...) this is an excellent and stimulating book, written with all the dashing prose of his mentor Richard Cobb, whom Broers warmly acknowledges." (D.M.G. Sutherland, The Journal of Military History)
"Michael Broers has written a masterful study of banditry and insurgency in the Napoleonic age, one that in every way both complements and updates work by Eric Hobsbawm and Charles Esdaile. [...] This excellent study, well provided with maps and illustrations, should occupy pride of place on the desk of any student of modern-day insurgency and counter-insurgency." (Alex Marshall, War in History)
"[An] outstanding work on war, statebuilding, and banditry during the revolutionary era." (Katherine B. Aaslestad, Journal of Social History, Spring 2013)