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By the late 1960s, West Germany and Israel were moving in almost
opposite diplomatic directions in a political environment dominated
by the Cold War. The Federal Republic launched ambitious policies
to reconcile with its Iron Curtain neighbors, expand its influence
in the Arab world, and promote West European interests vis-a-vis
the United States. By contrast, Israel, unable to obtain peace with
the Arabs after its 1967 military victory and threatened by
Palestinian terrorism, became increasingly dependent upon the
United States, estranged from the USSR and Western Europe, and
isolated from the Third World. Nonetheless, the two countries
remained connected by shared security concerns, personal bonds, and
recurrent evocations of the German-Jewish past. Drawing upon
newly-available sources covering the first decade of the countries'
formal diplomatic ties, Carole Fink reveals the underlying issues
that shaped these two countries' fraught relationship and sets
their foreign and domestic policies in a global context.
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien.
Collection de l'Association internationale d'histoire contemporaine
de l'Europe publiee sous la direction de Jean-Claude Favez. This
book deals with a remarkable period of human history from the end
of Second World War to the end of the Cold War, when Europe
established the world's most advanced human-rights regime. During
this half century a continent, divided by arms and ideology,
divested of its colonial empires, and faced with a huge influx of
foreigners, drew on old ideas and on post-First World War
experiments, to expand the political, judicial, and diplomatic
practices of human-rights advocacy and protection. The book
contains the major part of the contributions of the colloquium of
the 19th International Congress of Historical Sciences held in Oslo
in August 2000. It represents one of the first collaborative,
historical inquiries into the field of human rights. Cet ouvrage
traite d'une periode importante de l'histoire europeenne, qui
s'etend de la fin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale jusqu'a la fin de
la guerre froide. Elle a ete marquee par l'instauration en Europe
du regime des droits de l'homme le plus avance du monde. Durant ce
demi-siecle, le continent europeen, divise sur le plan strategique
et ideologique, depouille de ses possessions coloniales, confronte
a un vaste afflux d'immigres, s'est engage a developper des
instruments politiques, judiciaires et diplomatiques de protection
et de defense des droits de l'homme. Ce livre reunit la majeure
partie des contributions du colloque tenu a Oslo en aout 2000 dans
le cadre du XIX(e) Congres international des sciences historiques.
Il s'agit d'une des premieres enqueteshistoriques dans le domaine
des droits de l'homme, entreprise avec la collaboration
d'historiens de divers horizons. Contents/Contenu: Antoine Fleury:
Introduction - Albert P. van Goudoever: The Problem of the
International Protection of Human Rights since 1945: from
International Legal Declarations to Commitment in Global Politics -
Michael Biddiss: Human Rights and "Crimes against Humanity": the
Development of a Supranational Concept at the Nuremberg Trials -
Carole Fink: The European Court of Human Rights: Protecting Freedom
of Expression - Bernard A. Cook: The Rights of Linguistic and
Cultural Minorities in post-1945 Europe - Gerard Bossuat: La
France, terre d'asile: l'avenir brouille d'un grand destin - Jozef
Laptos: Les aspects politiques de l'action humanitaire de l'UNRRA
envers les personnes deplacees en 1943-1947 - Tatiana A. Pavlova:
The Human Rights Movement in the Soviet Union, 1945-1975 - C.
Serban Radulescu-Zoner: Les violations des droits de l'homme en
Roumanie (1945-1975): reactions contradictoires des milieux
politiques franais - Josefina Cuesta Bustillo: Histoire comparee
des droits sociaux dans les pays d'Europe occidentale de 1945 a
1950 - Peter Malcontent: Myth or Reality? The Dutch Crusade against
the Human Rights Violations in the Third World, 1973-1981 -
Giovanni Barberini: La politique du Saint-Siege dans le domaine des
droits de l'homme - Antoine Fleury: Les autorites suisses et la
question des droits de l'homme - Jaques Bariety: La France, les
droits de l'homme et la genese de la conference d'Helsinki de 1975
- Mikhail M. Narinski: L'Union sovietique et le probleme des droits
de l'homme dans la premiere moitie des annees soixantedix -
Floribert H. Baudet: TheNetherlands and the Rank of Denmark:
Prestige as Stimulus for Human Rights Policies - Carole Fink:
Afterword.
By the late 1960s, West Germany and Israel were moving in almost
opposite diplomatic directions in a political environment dominated
by the Cold War. The Federal Republic launched ambitious policies
to reconcile with its Iron Curtain neighbors, expand its influence
in the Arab world, and promote West European interests vis-a-vis
the United States. By contrast, Israel, unable to obtain peace with
the Arabs after its 1967 military victory and threatened by
Palestinian terrorism, became increasingly dependent upon the
United States, estranged from the USSR and Western Europe, and
isolated from the Third World. Nonetheless, the two countries
remained connected by shared security concerns, personal bonds, and
recurrent evocations of the German-Jewish past. Drawing upon
newly-available sources covering the first decade of the countries'
formal diplomatic ties, Carole Fink reveals the underlying issues
that shaped these two countries' fraught relationship and sets
their foreign and domestic policies in a global context.
Recent studies of the Cold War transcend a narrow focus on four
decades of superpower rivalry, recognizing that leaders and
governments outside of Washington and Moscow also exerted
political, economic, and moral influence well beyond their own
borders. One striking example was the Ostpolitik of Chancellor
Willy Brandt, which not only redefined Germany s relation with its
Nazi past but also altered the global environment of the Cold War.
This book examines the years 1969 1974, when Brandt broke the Cold
War stalemate in Europe by assuming responsibility for the crimes
of the Third Reich and by formally renouncing several major West
German claims, while also launching an assertive policy toward his
Communist neighbors and conducting a deft balancing act between
East and West. Not everyone then, or now, applauds the ethos and
practice of Ostpolitik, but no one can deny its impact on German,
European, and world history.
Studies of the Cold War transcend a narrow focus on four decades of
superpower rivalry, recognizing that leaders and governments
outside of Washington and Moscow also exerted political, economic,
and moral influence well beyond their own borders. One striking
example was the Ostpolitik of Chancellor Willy Brandt, which not
only redefined Germany's relation with its Nazi past but also
altered the global environment of the Cold War. This book examines
the years 1969-1974, when Brandt broke the Cold War stalemate in
Europe by assuming responsibility for the crimes of the Third Reich
and by formally renouncing several major West German claims, while
also launching an assertive policy toward his Communist neighbors
and conducting a deft balancing act between East and West. Not
everyone then, or now, applauds the ethos and practice of
Ostpolitik, but no one can deny its impact on German, European, and
world history.
Statesmen and scholars were inspired by a period after World War I
(when the victors devised Minority Treaties for the new and
expanded states of Eastern Europe) at the time that the Cold War
ended between 1989-1991. This book is the first study of that
period--between 1878 and 1938--when the Great Powers established a
system of external supervision to reduce the threats in Europe's
most volatile regions of Irredentism, persecution, and uncontrolled
waves of westward migration. It is a study of the strengths and
weaknesses of an early state of international human rights
diplomacy as practiced by rival and often-uninformed Western
political leaders, ardent but divided Jewish advocates, and
aggressive state minority champions, in the tumultuous age of
nationalism and imperialism, Bolshevism and fascism between
Bismarck and Hitler.
When the Cold War ended between 1989 and 1991, statesmen and
scholars reached back to the period after World War I when the
victors devised minority treaties for the new and expanded states
of Eastern Europe. This book is the first study of the entire
period between 1878 and 1938, when the great powers established a
system of external supervision to reduce the threats in Europe's
most volatile regions of irredentism, persecution, and uncontrolled
waves of westward migration. It is a study of the strengths and
weaknesses of an early state of international human rights
diplomacy as practised by rival and often-uninformed Western
political leaders, by ardent but divided Jewish advocates, and also
by aggressive state minority champions, in the tumultuous age of
nationalism and imperialism, bolshevism and fascism between
Bismarck and Hitler.
One of the largest twentieth century summit meetings, the Genoa
Conference of 1922, was also a notable failure, due to the gulf
between the Allies and Germany, between the West and Soviet Russia,
and among the World War I victors and their small allies. This
book, a unique international collaboration, presents various
perspectives on the Genoa Conference: its leadership, goals, and
outcome. The authors present new findings on such questions as the
sensational Rapallo Treaty between Germany and Russia; the strategy
of the small neutral powers; and the policy of the United States
toward European debts. Readers will find contrasting as well as
complementary views in this volume.
1968: The World Transformed provides an international perspective on the most tumultuous year in the era of the Cold War. Authors from Europe and the United States explain why the crises of 1968 erupted almost simultaneously in vastly different cultures and societies. Together, the eighteen chapters provide an interdisciplinary and comparative approach to the rise and fall of protest movements worldwide by integrating international relations, the role of media, and the cross-cultural exchange of people and ideas into the global history of 1968.
One of the largest twentieth century summit meetings, the Genoa
Conference of 1922, was also a notable failure, due to the gulf
between the Allies and Germany, between the West and Soviet Russia,
and among the World War I victors and their small allies. This
book, a unique international collaboration, presents various
perspectives on the Genoa Conference: its leadership, goals, and
outcome. The authors present new findings on such questions as the
sensational Rapallo Treaty between Germany and Russia; the strategy
of the small neutral powers; and the policy of the United States
toward European debts. Readers will find contrasting as well as
complementary views in this volume.
The first biography of Marc Bloch (1886-1944), historian, soldier, and French Resistance martyr, is based on the private letters and diaries of the French-Jewish patriot as well as other unpublished documents.
This is the first biography of Marc Bloch (1886-1944), historian,
soldier in both world wars, and leader of the Resistance, who was
captured, tortured, and died a heroic death. Based largely on
Bloch's private letters, diaries and papers, as well as on other
unpublished documents, it traces the remarkable life of this
French-Jewish patriot under the Third Republic. As an historian,
Bloch is perhaps best known for The Historian's Craft, an inspiring
set of meditations on his life's work, and as co-founder of the now
legendary journal Annales, which gave rise to a major school of
historical writing. Profoundly influenced by the dark events that
shaped his era - world wars, anti-semitism, and totalitarianism -
Bloch has become something of an intellectual hero of our century,
his life an epitome of the endeavour to uphold, in the face of such
events, the spirit of unfettered critical enquiry.
Les nouvelles frontieres sont l'un des resultats les plus visibles
des deux guerres mondiales en Europe. Les Actes des colloques de
Strasbourg et de Montreal abordent la question de l'etablissement
des frontieres apres les deux guerres mondiales dans une
perspective comparative, en depassant la sphere purement
diplomatique pour englober les aspects economiques, culturels et
sociaux. Ils font ressortir la complexite croissante des problemes
avec l'irruption des opinions publiques dans les relations
internationales et le poids accru des considerations economiques et
culturelles. Mais les frontieres en Europe sont, en derniere
analyse, comme par le passe, la traduction spatiale d'un equilibre
entre les puissances. La grande nouveaute des deux apres-guerres
est l'intervention decisive de puissances non-europeennes dans la
determination des nouveaux equilibres. The establishment of new
frontiers in Europe was one of the most significant results of the
two World Wars. The proceedings of two international conferences,
in Strasbourg and Montreal, treat this question from a comparative
historical point of view. This book not only deals with the purely
diplomatic sphere but also includes the economic, cultural, social,
and political dimensions of frontier changes. These proceedings
analyze the impact of public opinion on contemporary international
relations. They also illustrate the global aspects of European
politics as well as the role of outside states in the alteration of
Europe's borders and in the quest for a new power balance in the
two postwar periods."
The Genoa Conference was one of the key events of European
diplomacy between the two world wars. In 1922, thirty four nations
met for six weeks to restore peace between victors and vanquished,
reestablish ties between Soviet Russia and the West, and promote
the economic reconstruction of Europe.This is the first scholarly
book-length study of this largest, most ambitious, and
controversial of the many interwar conferences, with a new preface
for the paperback edition.
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien.
Collection de l'Association internationale d'histoire contemporaine
de l'Europe publiee sous la direction de Jean-Claude Favez. This
book deals with a remarkable period of human history from the end
of Second World War to the end of the Cold War, when Europe
established the world's most advanced human-rights regime. During
this half century a continent, divided by arms and ideology,
divested of its colonial empires, and faced with a huge influx of
foreigners, drew on old ideas and on post-First World War
experiments, to expand the political, judicial, and diplomatic
practices of human-rights advocacy and protection. The book
contains the major part of the contributions of the colloquium of
the 19th International Congress of Historical Sciences held in Oslo
in August 2000. It represents one of the first collaborative,
historical inquiries into the field of human rights. Cet ouvrage
traite d'une periode importante de l'histoire europeenne, qui
s'etend de la fin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale jusqu'a la fin de
la guerre froide. Elle a ete marquee par l'instauration en Europe
du regime des droits de l'homme le plus avance du monde. Durant ce
demi-siecle, le continent europeen, divise sur le plan strategique
et ideologique, depouille de ses possessions coloniales, confronte
a un vaste afflux d'immigres, s'est engage a developper des
instruments politiques, judiciaires et diplomatiques de protection
et de defense des droits de l'homme. Ce livre reunit la majeure
partie des contributions du colloque tenu a Oslo en aout 2000 dans
le cadre du XIX(e) Congres international des sciences historiques.
Il s'agit d'une des premieres enqueteshistoriques dans le domaine
des droits de l'homme, entreprise avec la collaboration
d'historiens de divers horizons. Contents/Contenu: Antoine Fleury:
Introduction - Albert P. van Goudoever: The Problem of the
International Protection of Human Rights since 1945: from
International Legal Declarations to Commitment in Global Politics -
Michael Biddiss: Human Rights and "Crimes against Humanity": the
Development of a Supranational Concept at the Nuremberg Trials -
Carole Fink: The European Court of Human Rights: Protecting Freedom
of Expression - Bernard A. Cook: The Rights of Linguistic and
Cultural Minorities in post-1945 Europe - Gerard Bossuat: La
France, terre d'asile: l'avenir brouille d'un grand destin - Jozef
Laptos: Les aspects politiques de l'action humanitaire de l'UNRRA
envers les personnes deplacees en 1943-1947 - Tatiana A. Pavlova:
The Human Rights Movement in the Soviet Union, 1945-1975 - C.
Serban Radulescu-Zoner: Les violations des droits de l'homme en
Roumanie (1945-1975): reactions contradictoires des milieux
politiques franais - Josefina Cuesta Bustillo: Histoire comparee
des droits sociaux dans les pays d'Europe occidentale de 1945 a
1950 - Peter Malcontent: Myth or Reality? The Dutch Crusade against
the Human Rights Violations in the Third World, 1973-1981 -
Giovanni Barberini: La politique du Saint-Siege dans le domaine des
droits de l'homme - Antoine Fleury: Les autorites suisses et la
question des droits de l'homme - Jaques Bariety: La France, les
droits de l'homme et la genese de la conference d'Helsinki de 1975
- Mikhail M. Narinski: L'Union sovietique et le probleme des droits
de l'homme dans la premiere moitie des annees soixantedix -
Floribert H. Baudet: TheNetherlands and the Rank of Denmark:
Prestige as Stimulus for Human Rights Policies - Carole Fink:
Afterword.
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