The end of the Cold War, in particular German unification and the
demise of the Soviet Empire, are among the best documented and the
most thoroughly researched events in recent history. Yet, efforts
to understand the end of the Cold War historically can be
described, to this day, as partial. The time has come for a broader
and, at the same time, more European-focused endeavor. Such an
effort is made possible by the growing availability of new sources,
including archives which are now beginning to open up
systematically. By choosing to concentrate on "Europe" in its
various dimensions (Western Europe, Eastern Europe as well as the
pan-European dimension) this book aims at bringing to the forefront
of historical research previously neglected actors or processes
whose contributions to the end of the Cold War were, in our view,
decisive, including key European nations, endemic evolutions in the
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, European integration, and the
pan-European process.
This book will be of great interest to students of Cold War
Studies, Contemporary European History and International Relations
in general.
General
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