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NATO's decision to open itself to new members and new missions is one of the most contentious and least understood issues of the post-Cold War world. This book, an unusual and intriguing blend of memoirs and scholarship, takes us back to the decade when those momentous decisions were made.

Produktbeschreibung
NATO's decision to open itself to new members and new missions is one of the most contentious and least understood issues of the post-Cold War world. This book, an unusual and intriguing blend of memoirs and scholarship, takes us back to the decade when those momentous decisions were made.
Autorenporträt
Daniel S. Hamilton is the Austrian Marshall Plan Foundation Professor and Senior Fellow at the Foreign Policy Institute Johns Hopkins University's Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies. He was the Founding Director of the SAIS Center for Transatlantic Relations and for 15 years he served as Executive Director of the American Consortium on EU Studies. Kristina Spohr is Helmut Schmidt Distinguished Professor at the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) of Johns Hopkins University, Washington DC. Normally she is on the faculty of the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). She has authored several books and her latest one on the global exit from the Cold War entitled Post Wall, Post Square: Rebuilding the World after 1989 will appear with HarperCollins (UK) and Yale UP (USA) as well as in a German edition with DVA entitled Wendezeit: Die Neuordnung der Welt nach 1989 in fall 2019.