1989 and the West (eBook, ePUB)
Western Europe since the End of the Cold War
Redaktion: Braat, Eleni; Corduwener, Pepijn
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1989 and the West (eBook, ePUB)
Western Europe since the End of the Cold War
Redaktion: Braat, Eleni; Corduwener, Pepijn
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In four thematic sections, the book analyses the changing position of Germany in Europe; studies the transformation of neoliberal capitalism; answers the question how Western Europe faced the geopolitical challenges after the Wall came down; and investigates the crisis of representative democracy.
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In four thematic sections, the book analyses the changing position of Germany in Europe; studies the transformation of neoliberal capitalism; answers the question how Western Europe faced the geopolitical challenges after the Wall came down; and investigates the crisis of representative democracy.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351379922
- Artikelnr.: 57137471
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351379922
- Artikelnr.: 57137471
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Eleni Braat is Assistant Professor at Utrecht University, where she teaches 20th century history of international relations and secret intelligence. She specializes in state secrecy, intelligence and security services, and the political and organizational tensions they led to in 20th century Europe. She holds a Ph.D. from the European University Institute in Florence, Italy, and she has been official historian of the Dutch General Intelligence and Security Service (AIVD). Pepijn Corduwener is Assistant Professor in Political History at Utrecht University. He is specialized in the history of democracy in 20th century Europe, with a particular focus on postwar France, Germany and Italy. He has published widely on this topic as well as on European populism. His monograph The Problem of Democracy in Postwar Europe was published by Routledge in 2017. He is currently conducting a research project on the crisis of people's parties in Europe, funded by the Netherlands Organisation of Scientific Research.
Eleni Braat and Pepijn Corduwener, Preface
Eleni Braat and Pepijn Corduwener, 1989 and the West. Revisiting the Cold
War Victory Narrative
I. A New Germany in a New Europe
Ch. 1 Jacco Pekelder, Germany and Europe after 1989. The Spectre of the
German Question versus the Resilience of Self-Restraint
Ch. 2 Adam Seipp, The View from Benjamin-Franklin Strasse: Politics,
Society, and Conversion in Western Germany, 1989-1995
Ch. 3 Ubaldo Villani-Lubelli, The Rise of a New Power: Germany's Political
Realism and Global Strategy
Ch. 4 Christian Wicke, Reunification and National Identity: A Return to
Normality?
II. Neoliberalism in and beyond the Nation State
Ch. 5 Annelien de Dijn, Neoliberalism after 1989
Ch. 6 Philipp Ther, The Year 1989 and the Global Hegemony of Neoliberalism
Ch. 7 Bram Mellink and P.W. Zuidhof, Market government: Neoliberalism and
the transformative power of 1989
Ch. 8 Stefan Couperus and Dora Vrhoci, A Profitable Friendship, Still? Town
Twinning between Eastern and Western European Cities before and after 1989
III. Remaking Europe after 1989
Ch. 9 Federico Romero, The pitfalls of Western triumphalism
Ch. 10 Cristina Blanco Sio-Lopez, The Future that Once Was: 1989, the EU's
Eastward Enlargement, and Democracy's Missed Chances
Ch. 11 Laurien Crump, A Missed Opportunity for a New Europe? The End of the
Cold War and its Consequences for Western European Relations with Russia
Ch. 12 Frank Gerits, The Reluctant Soft Power. 1989 and the European
Community's Hesitant Turn towards Normative Power in Africa
IV. Democracy between Triumph and Crisis since 1989
Ch. 13 Ido de Haan, Restrained Democracy and its Radical Alternatives after
1989: the Threefold Crisis of Democracy in the 'Former West'
Ch. 14 Martin J. Bull, The Radical Left since 1989: Decline, Transformation
and Revival
Ch. 15 Dan Stone, The Return of Fascism in Europe? Reflections on History
and the Current Situation
Index
Eleni Braat and Pepijn Corduwener, 1989 and the West. Revisiting the Cold
War Victory Narrative
I. A New Germany in a New Europe
Ch. 1 Jacco Pekelder, Germany and Europe after 1989. The Spectre of the
German Question versus the Resilience of Self-Restraint
Ch. 2 Adam Seipp, The View from Benjamin-Franklin Strasse: Politics,
Society, and Conversion in Western Germany, 1989-1995
Ch. 3 Ubaldo Villani-Lubelli, The Rise of a New Power: Germany's Political
Realism and Global Strategy
Ch. 4 Christian Wicke, Reunification and National Identity: A Return to
Normality?
II. Neoliberalism in and beyond the Nation State
Ch. 5 Annelien de Dijn, Neoliberalism after 1989
Ch. 6 Philipp Ther, The Year 1989 and the Global Hegemony of Neoliberalism
Ch. 7 Bram Mellink and P.W. Zuidhof, Market government: Neoliberalism and
the transformative power of 1989
Ch. 8 Stefan Couperus and Dora Vrhoci, A Profitable Friendship, Still? Town
Twinning between Eastern and Western European Cities before and after 1989
III. Remaking Europe after 1989
Ch. 9 Federico Romero, The pitfalls of Western triumphalism
Ch. 10 Cristina Blanco Sio-Lopez, The Future that Once Was: 1989, the EU's
Eastward Enlargement, and Democracy's Missed Chances
Ch. 11 Laurien Crump, A Missed Opportunity for a New Europe? The End of the
Cold War and its Consequences for Western European Relations with Russia
Ch. 12 Frank Gerits, The Reluctant Soft Power. 1989 and the European
Community's Hesitant Turn towards Normative Power in Africa
IV. Democracy between Triumph and Crisis since 1989
Ch. 13 Ido de Haan, Restrained Democracy and its Radical Alternatives after
1989: the Threefold Crisis of Democracy in the 'Former West'
Ch. 14 Martin J. Bull, The Radical Left since 1989: Decline, Transformation
and Revival
Ch. 15 Dan Stone, The Return of Fascism in Europe? Reflections on History
and the Current Situation
Index
Eleni Braat and Pepijn Corduwener, Preface
Eleni Braat and Pepijn Corduwener, 1989 and the West. Revisiting the Cold
War Victory Narrative
I. A New Germany in a New Europe
Ch. 1 Jacco Pekelder, Germany and Europe after 1989. The Spectre of the
German Question versus the Resilience of Self-Restraint
Ch. 2 Adam Seipp, The View from Benjamin-Franklin Strasse: Politics,
Society, and Conversion in Western Germany, 1989-1995
Ch. 3 Ubaldo Villani-Lubelli, The Rise of a New Power: Germany's Political
Realism and Global Strategy
Ch. 4 Christian Wicke, Reunification and National Identity: A Return to
Normality?
II. Neoliberalism in and beyond the Nation State
Ch. 5 Annelien de Dijn, Neoliberalism after 1989
Ch. 6 Philipp Ther, The Year 1989 and the Global Hegemony of Neoliberalism
Ch. 7 Bram Mellink and P.W. Zuidhof, Market government: Neoliberalism and
the transformative power of 1989
Ch. 8 Stefan Couperus and Dora Vrhoci, A Profitable Friendship, Still? Town
Twinning between Eastern and Western European Cities before and after 1989
III. Remaking Europe after 1989
Ch. 9 Federico Romero, The pitfalls of Western triumphalism
Ch. 10 Cristina Blanco Sio-Lopez, The Future that Once Was: 1989, the EU's
Eastward Enlargement, and Democracy's Missed Chances
Ch. 11 Laurien Crump, A Missed Opportunity for a New Europe? The End of the
Cold War and its Consequences for Western European Relations with Russia
Ch. 12 Frank Gerits, The Reluctant Soft Power. 1989 and the European
Community's Hesitant Turn towards Normative Power in Africa
IV. Democracy between Triumph and Crisis since 1989
Ch. 13 Ido de Haan, Restrained Democracy and its Radical Alternatives after
1989: the Threefold Crisis of Democracy in the 'Former West'
Ch. 14 Martin J. Bull, The Radical Left since 1989: Decline, Transformation
and Revival
Ch. 15 Dan Stone, The Return of Fascism in Europe? Reflections on History
and the Current Situation
Index
Eleni Braat and Pepijn Corduwener, 1989 and the West. Revisiting the Cold
War Victory Narrative
I. A New Germany in a New Europe
Ch. 1 Jacco Pekelder, Germany and Europe after 1989. The Spectre of the
German Question versus the Resilience of Self-Restraint
Ch. 2 Adam Seipp, The View from Benjamin-Franklin Strasse: Politics,
Society, and Conversion in Western Germany, 1989-1995
Ch. 3 Ubaldo Villani-Lubelli, The Rise of a New Power: Germany's Political
Realism and Global Strategy
Ch. 4 Christian Wicke, Reunification and National Identity: A Return to
Normality?
II. Neoliberalism in and beyond the Nation State
Ch. 5 Annelien de Dijn, Neoliberalism after 1989
Ch. 6 Philipp Ther, The Year 1989 and the Global Hegemony of Neoliberalism
Ch. 7 Bram Mellink and P.W. Zuidhof, Market government: Neoliberalism and
the transformative power of 1989
Ch. 8 Stefan Couperus and Dora Vrhoci, A Profitable Friendship, Still? Town
Twinning between Eastern and Western European Cities before and after 1989
III. Remaking Europe after 1989
Ch. 9 Federico Romero, The pitfalls of Western triumphalism
Ch. 10 Cristina Blanco Sio-Lopez, The Future that Once Was: 1989, the EU's
Eastward Enlargement, and Democracy's Missed Chances
Ch. 11 Laurien Crump, A Missed Opportunity for a New Europe? The End of the
Cold War and its Consequences for Western European Relations with Russia
Ch. 12 Frank Gerits, The Reluctant Soft Power. 1989 and the European
Community's Hesitant Turn towards Normative Power in Africa
IV. Democracy between Triumph and Crisis since 1989
Ch. 13 Ido de Haan, Restrained Democracy and its Radical Alternatives after
1989: the Threefold Crisis of Democracy in the 'Former West'
Ch. 14 Martin J. Bull, The Radical Left since 1989: Decline, Transformation
and Revival
Ch. 15 Dan Stone, The Return of Fascism in Europe? Reflections on History
and the Current Situation
Index