Austria, 1945-1995

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3rd Ukrainian Front
Anton Pelinka
Austria's Foreign Policy
Austrian Foreign Policy
Austrian National Identity
Austrian Neutrality
Austrian political culture analysis
Austria’s Foreign Policy
Category=JHB
Central European studies
CIA Fund
CSCE Process
Edward Timms
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eq_nobargain
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eq_society-politics
Erika Weinzierl
Ernst BruckmLler
EU Association Agreement
EU Membership
EU's Eastern Enlargement
EU's INTERREG
European integration history
EU’s Eastern Enlargement
EU’s INTERREG
Foreign Minister
Hanspeter Neuhold
Helmut Kramer
Hilde Spiel
L?L? J. Kiss
Large EU Member State
neutrality policy
Oliver Rathkolb
party system evolution
Permanent Neutrality
Peter Pulzer
political transformation
Post-war Party System
postwar identity formation
Renner Government
Republic's Party System
Republic’s Party System
Robert Knight
Sentimental Days
Shaping Party Competition
State Secretary
Walter Lukan
West Germany
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138610651
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 219mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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First published in 1998. This is the only up to date English language work which seeks to assess the whole of the post war Austrian experience in the light of the latest research, using a multi-disciplinary approach by historians, political scientists, economists, international relations specialists and literary historians. It is addressed not only to specialists in Austrian affairs, but also to studies and scholars concerned with the evaluation of small democracies, their place in an integrated continent and the shape of post-Communist Central Europe.

The formative first few decades of the Second Republic are reassessed in four contributions: analysis of the key actors and events involved in the genesis of post war state; of the activities of Karl Renner’s first coalition government; of how tensions regarding Austrian identity were played out in post-war literature and of the competing domestic and superpower perceptions of Austria’s fledging neutrality.

Kurt Richard Luther, Peter Pulzer