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Divided between two military alliances, Europe has maintained
stability based on political status quo and military power balance.
However, European states-including neutral and nonaligned
countries-have felt a need for a common policy to guarantee their
security, and the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe
(CSCE) was convened to address this concern. Ten years later, the
authors of this study find that the outlines of a European security
regime are indeed discernible. The conference in Helsinki initiated
efforts for negotiated and controlled change in Europe.
Contributors to this volume analyze the achievements of CSCE,
consider more recent models of collective or common security
systems, and deal with political and military processes at work in
Europe as well as relationships with great powers and the Third
World. The role of Western Europe, and particularly Finland's role
as an initiator of the CSCE process, receives special attention.
Documentation of the tenth anniversary meeting and the CSCE process
in general are also included.
Divided between two military alliances, Europe has maintained
stability based on political status quo and military power balance.
However, European states-including neutral and nonaligned
countries-have felt a need for a common policy to guarantee their
security, and the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe
(CSCE) was convened to address this concern. Ten years later, the
authors of this study find that the outlines of a European security
regime are indeed discernible. The conference in Helsinki initiated
efforts for negotiated and controlled change in Europe.
Contributors to this volume analyze the achievements of CSCE,
consider more recent models of collective or common security
systems, and deal with political and military processes at work in
Europe as well as relationships with great powers and the Third
World. The role of Western Europe, and particularly Finland's role
as an initiator of the CSCE process, receives special attention.
Documentation of the tenth anniversary meeting and the CSCE process
in general are also included.
The Nobel Symposium on A Future Arms Control Agenda was organized by SIPRI to consider how arms control can contribute to creating a cooperative security system based on the peaceful resolution of disputes and the gradual demilitarization of international relations. The proceedings of the symposium include comprehensive discussions of the new normative and structural elements of the post-cold war global security system and the objectives and limits of arms control within that evolving system.
The subject of this book is Europe after the cold war. The European
security landscape has changed considerably. The period from
November 1989 to November 1990 can be compared with such decisive
dates in twentieth-century European history as 1918 and 1945.
Germany and Europe have entered a crucial period of transition.
While it was relatively easy to describe the dramatic events and
changes in the making, it is now more difficult to demonstrate
their mutual relationships within the framework of the new European
system emerging from them. The documents published in this volume -
many of them for the first time - provide an important record of
this historic period. Key papers by some of the leading German
politicians of this period, delivered at Potsdam in February 1990,
are also presented. The volume provides the background for a better
understanding of developments in Europe - particularly the role of
the new German state, to contribute to a sober assessment of the
role which the united Germany can play in an emerging new structure
for European security, and to facilitate further research on these
topics and related issues.
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