This study is the result of a four-year project led by a team at
the Royal Institute of International Affairs. Focusing on three
East Asian and three East European states - the former Soviet
Union, Hungary, the German Democratic Republic, China, Vietnam and
the People's Democratic Republic of Korea - it looks at why and how
communist states reform their foreign policy as they open to the
outside world. It also aims to cast light on the broader question
of the linkage of domestic and foreign policies and to examine ways
in which states can cope with increased international
interdependence. The book looks in detail at the different kinds of
reforms implemented by European and Asian communists. It attempts
to explain why some communist regimes collapsed and why, since the
European revolutions of 1989-1991, the rule of communist parties
has been confined largely to Asia.
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