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World Affairs Online
World Affairs Online
Beyond the divide: entangled histories of Cold War Europe
"Cold War history has emphasized the division of Europe into two warring camps with separate ideologies and little in common. This volume presents an alternative perspective by suggesting that there were transnational networks bridging the gap and connecting like-minded people on both sides of the divide. Long before the fall of the Berlin Wall, there were institutions, organizations, and individuals who brought people from the East and the West together, joined by shared professions, ideas, and sometimes even through marriage. The volume aims at proving that the post-WWII histories of Western and Eastern Europe were entangled by looking at cases involving France, Denmark, Poland, Romania, Switzerland, and others"--Provided by publisher
Cold War energy: a transnational history of Soviet oil and gas
This book examines the role of Soviet energy during the Cold War. Based on hitherto little known documents from Western and Eastern European archives, it combines the story of Soviet oil and gas with general Cold War history. This volume breaks new ground by framing Soviet energy in a multi-national context, taking into account not only the view from Moscow, but also the perspectives of communist Eastern Europe, the US, NATO, as well as several Western European countries - namely Italy, France, and West Germany. This book challenges some of the long-standing assumptions of East-West bloc relations, as well as shedding new light on relations within the blocs regarding the issue of energy. By bringing together a range of junior and senior historians and specialists from Europe, Russia and the US, this book represents a pioneering endeavour to approach the role of Soviet energy during the Cold War in transnational perspective.
World Affairs Online
Science and christian faith in post-cold war Europe: a comparative analysis 25 years after the fall of the Berlin wall
In: Ecclesia mater : [...], Studi 5
Science studies during the Cold War and beyond: paradigms defected
In: Palgrave studies in the history of science and technology
This book recounts how during the Cold War the study of science moved to the centre of academic through the creation of the new discipline of science studies. In this way the volume charts the importance of these studies for the trajectory of Cold War nations through the elaboration of new national science policies and the transnational dialogue, even across the Iron Curtain, between key scholars involved in shaping their trajectory. By examining how a new group of intellectuals was mobilized by state administrators to convincingly set up a discipline deemed to have major repercussions on the advancement of science in developed and undeveloped nations. Secondly, by putting the study of science at the centre of the dialogue (as well as the confrontation) between nations and Cold War blocs. The volume thus shows how an often considered arcane field of enquiring had in fact major implications for the understanding and fostering of Cold War science.
The United States, Japan, and the future of nuclear weapons
In: Report of the U.S.-Japan Study Group on Arms Control and Non-Proliferation after the Cold War
World Affairs Online
Europe and China in the Cold War: exchanges beyond the bloc logic and the Sino-Soviet split
In: New perspectives on the Cold War volume 6
Risk methodologies for technological legacies: [proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on Risk Assessment Activities for the Cold War Facilities and Environmental Legacies, Bourgas, Bulgaria, 2 - 11 May 2000]
In: NATO science series. IV, Earth and environmental sciences 18
Investigating, punishing, agitating: Nazi perpetrator trials in the Eastern Bloc
In: Studien zur Geschichte und Wirkung des Holocaust Band 8
On the Nazi trials in Eastern Europe in the 1960s and the place of the Holocaust in them: About 15 years after the end of the war, a second wave of trials against Nazi criminals occurred in many Eastern Bloc states, which followed a different logic than the ones immediately after the war. At the height of the Cold War in the 1960s, the trials on the one hand obliged cooperation between East and West, on the other hand they were determined by the defensive attitude towards the respective opponent in the system conflict. Within the Eastern bloc, unity was to be demonstrated through a coordinated approach on the international stage, while at the same time national interests led to their own paths in criminal prosecution. The essays collected in this volume are devoted to the history of criminal trials on National Socialist crimes in Hungary, the GDR, Poland, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union after the "thaw" and ask about the preconditions and peculiarities of these proceedings. What rules applied to the trials? What goals did they pursue? And last but not least: What significance did the Holocaust have in the clarification of the crimes?
Next steps in arms control and non-proliferation: report of the U.S.-Japan Study Group on Arms Control and Non-Proliferation After the Cold War
In: Report of the U.S.-Japan Study Group on Arms Control and Non-Proliferation after the Cold War
World Affairs Online
Nuclear threats, nuclear fear, and the Cold War of the 1980s
In: Publications of the German Historical Institute
This book brings together cutting-edge scholarship from the United States and Europe to address political as well as cultural responses to both the arms race of the 1980s and the ascent of nuclear energy as a second, controversial dimension of the nuclear age. Diverse in its topics and disciplinary approaches, Nuclear Threats, Nuclear Fear and the Cold War of the 1980s makes a fundamental contribution to the emerging historiography of the 1980s as a whole. As of now, the era's nuclear tensions have been addressed by scholars mostly from the standpoint of security studies, focused on the geo-strategic deliberations of political elites and at the level of state policy. Yet nuclear anxieties, as the essays in this volume document, were so pervasive that they profoundly shaped the era's culture, its habits of mind, and its politics, far beyond the domain of policy.
World Affairs Online