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Soviet Foreign Policy from the Spanish Civil War to the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, 1936–1939
In: Dictatorships & democracies: journal of history and culture, S. 69-96
ISSN: 2564-8829
Having consolidated his power in the late 1920s, Joseph Stalin long focused on internal affairs: the Five Year Plans, collectivization of agriculture, rapid industrialization, and modernization of the Red Army. Despite his penchant for domestic policy, from the summer of 1936 Stalin's Soviet Union was increasingly drawn into foreign affairs. This article explores Stalin's foreign policy on the eve of the Second World War. The Soviet Union's multiple failures in forging an anti-Fascist alliance with Britain and France, most notably in the Spanish Civil War, will be explored as the prelude to Stalin's eventual decision, in August 1939, to authorize the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.
Dossier: "From Munich to Paris (1938–1940). From the Spanish Civil War to the German New Europe". Presentation
In: Dictatorships & democracies: journal of history and culture
ISSN: 2564-8829
Presentation of the dossier "From Munich to Paris (1938-1940). From the Spanish Civil War to the German New Europe"
The view from the left, 1
In: Seeds of conflict
In: Series 3, The Spanish Civil War, 1936 - 1939 1
El dibuixant Josep Simont i Guillén (1875 - 1968), reporter gràfic de la I Guerra Mundial: un dibuixant d'actualitats y l'època de la naixent fotografia de reportatge
In: Publicacions de la Fundació Salvador Vives Casajuana 134
Campus per la pau: els efectes de les guerres sobre el desenvolupament dels països pobres
In: Sud-nord 20
Guerra i expansió industrial: País Valencià, 1914-1923
In: Col·lecció Politècnica 15
«Menos Camboyas, Caperucita». Reflexión sobre la represión franquista, 1939–1953
In: Dictatorships & democracies: journal of history and culture, Heft 8, S. 77-94
ISSN: 2564-8829
This article examines the repression following General Franco's unconditional victory in the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). It argues that the surrender of the Republic did not alter the Franco regime's determination to punish its ideological enemies. The repression was based on a cruel irony: the defeated republicans were responsible for the civil war and thus guilty of the crime of 'military rebellion'. Nevertheless, although thousands were punished, the article challenges claims that the post-war repression implemented a programme of ideological extermination.
L' onze de setembre i Catalunya: guerra, resistència y repressió
In: Col·lecció Base històrica 71