Challenges, Concepts, Ideas during the Cold War of the 1970s & 1980s

Challenges, Concepts, Ideas during the Cold War of the 1970s & 1980s

Veranstalter
Collaborative Research Centre (CRC) 923 „Threatened Order. Societies under Stress“ University of Tübingen
Veranstaltungsort
Ort
Blaubeuren
Land
Deutschland
Vom - Bis
13.09.2013 - 15.09.2013
Website
Von
Martin Deuerlein

The year 1983 marked a dramatic climax in the “Second Cold War”. In November, Soviet-American tensions escalated during the NATO command post exercise Able Archer 83. High-ranking Soviet military and intelligence officers feared that the West was preparing for a nuclear first strike. Thus, some historians consider this crisis the most dangerous moment in the Cold War since the Cuban missile crisis.

The events of 1983 mark the culmination of tensions, which had already started with the crisis of détente in the 1970s. However, the beginning of a new American-Soviet rapprochement also made the year a turning point in the Cold War.

Understanding 1983 as a watershed year thus points to phases of confrontation and cooperation in East-West relations. This workshop takes the 30th anniversary of these events as an opportunity to discuss new approaches to the Cold War of the 70s and 80s.

To register, please contact martin.deuerlein@uni-tuebingen.de

Programm

Friday, September 13, 2013

3:00 - 4:00 pm
Welcome by Katharina Kucher & Georg Schild
Heads of Project at the Collaborative Research Center 923

Welcome by Ewald Frie
Head of the Collaborative Research Center 923

Introduction by Martin Deuerlein & Roman Krawielicki
Organizers of the Conference

4:00 - 6:15 pm, Panel 1, The Shock of Globalization?
Chair: Klaus Gestwa

“Reduced to ‘Handmaidens‘ of OPEC and the Soviet Union: The
October War, Oil, and the Origins of the Second Cold War, 1973-
1983“ - John Rosenberg (Brown)

“Oil, the Persian Gulf, and the Second Cold War“ -
Victor McFarland (Yale)

“Western Europe and China‘s Great Transformation“ -
Martin Albers (Cambridge)

6:30 - 7:30 pm, Dinner

7:30 - 8:30 pm, Keynote I
Chair: Georg Schild

“Detente’s Failure and Soviet Collapse: A Search for Historical
Causality“ - Vladislav Zubok (London)

Saturday, September 14, 2013

8:00 - 9:00 am, Breakfast

9:00 - 10:30 am, Panel 2, The 1970s
Decade of Uncertainty, Decade of Ideas?
Chair: Martin Deuerlein

“Beyond the Wall: The Trilateralist Approach of the Carter
Administration“ - Fulvio Drago (Rome)

“‘Making Lions Lie Down with Lambs?’ The Resumption of the
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks after President Carter’s Accession
to Office in the Spring of 1977” - Arvid Schors (Freiburg)

10:30 - 11:00 am, Coffee Break

11:00 am - 12:00 pm, Keynote II
Chair: Klaus Gestwa

“Globalization and Eastern Europe” -
Mark Kramer (Harvard)

12:15 - 1:15 pm, Lunch

1:15 - 2:45 pm, Panel 3, The Role of Experts
Chair: Katharina Kucher

“The Soviet and East European Branch of the USIA Office of
Research” - Steven Grant (Washington)

“From Pashtunwali to Communism? Soviet Advisors in Southern
Afghanistan an dthe Soviet War in Afghanistan, c. 1979-1989”
Timothy Nunan (Oxford)

3:00 - 4:30 pm, Panel 4, Transnational Actors
Chair: Carl Bethke

“Perception of the Other - East and West German Analysts in
Mutual Perception, 1970-1989” -
Sabine Loewe-Hannatzsch (Mannheim)

“Unconditional Friendship? Soviet ‘Friendship Societies’ in
Western Europe and the Challenges of the ‘Second Cold War’”
Sonja Großmann (Munich/Tuebingen)

4:30 - 5:00 pm, Coffee Break

5:00 - 6:30 pm, Panel 5, 1983
Chair: Georg Schild

“The 1983 War Scare: ‘The Last Paroxysm’ of the Cold War” -
Nathan Jones (Washington)

“The Able Archer 83 Non-Crisis: Did Soviet Leaders Really Fear
an Imminent Nuclear Attack in 1983?” - Mark Kramer (Harvard)

6:30 - 7:30 pm, Dinner

Sunday, September 15, 2013

8:00 - 9:00 am, Breakfast

9:00 - 11:15 am, Panel 6, The 1980s - Decade of Fear, Decade of Trust?
Chair: Roman Krawielicki

“The Challenge of Peace: The Reagan Administration and Anti-
Nuclear Activism in the 1980s” - Henry Maar (Santa Barbara)

“Nuclear Arms Control and the Politics of Trust in the Reagan
Administration” - Laura Considine (Aberystwyth)

“Ethnicity and Revolution at the End of the Cold War: The
Case of Nicaragua’s Miskitu Indians“ - David Lee (Temple)

11:30 am - 12:30 pm, Lunch

12:30 pm - 14:00 pm, Panel 7, Legacies of the Cold War?
Chair: Johannes Großmann

“The Cold War and Terrorism: Two Sides of the Same Coin?“ -
Bernhard Blumenau (Geneva)

“Discoursive Construction of the ‘Terrorist Threat’ in the
Reagan Era” - Adrian Hänni (Zurich)

14:00 - 15:00 pm, Concluding Discussion
Chair: Martin Deuerlein & Roman Krawielicki

Concluding Statement - Bernd Schäfer (Washington)

Kontakt

Martin Deuerlein

CRC 923 „Threatened Order. Societies under Stress“, University of Tübingen

martin.deuerlein@uni-tuebingen.de