The International Politics of East Central EuropeManchester University Press, 1996 - 300 strani The countries of East Central Europe - Hungary, Poland and what was then Czechoslovakia - played a starring role in the central political drama of the late-20th century, the 1989 revolutions. Adrian Hyde-Price analyzes the changing nature of international politics in the region since 1989, and the influence upon it of history, national identity and geography. |
Vsebina
Three Geopolitics culture and nationalism | 45 |
The distinctiveness of East Central Europe | 64 |
I | 78 |
Avtorske pravice | |
8 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
The International Politics of East Central Europe Adrian G. V. Hyde-Price Prikaz kratkega opisa - 1996 |
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
agreement argued Baltic become Belarus bilateral border Central and Eastern century changes Cold communist concerns continue cooperation Council of Europe created cultural Czech Czechoslovakia defence democracy democratic domestic early East Central Europe East Central Europeans Eastern Europe economic emergence established ethnic Euroregions example Finally forces foreign foreign policy former four future geopolitical German given Hungarian Hungary identity important independence influence Initiative institutions integration interests international relations issue Italy largely Lithuania London major March meeting membership military Minister minority Moscow multilateral nationalist NATO neighbours October organisations Poland Poles Polish political President Press problems question region regional cooperation relationship remains Republic RFE/RL Research Report role Russia Second signed significant Slovak Slovakia social society Soviet structures summit territorial trade treaty Ukraine University USSR Visegrad countries Warsaw West Western World