Cold War History 20 (2020), 2

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Cold War History 20 (2020), 2
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London 2020: Routledge
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4 issues per year
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Institutions: Print & Online €702,00; Online €614,00; Personal: Print €132,00

 

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Cold War History
Land
United Kingdom
Von
Morawski, Paul

As the Cold War ended in the early 1990s, scholars of contemporary international affairs started taking a new look at the basic conflicts that had dominated the latter part of the twentieth century. A plentiful new historical literature on the Cold War era has come into being, greatly helped by the increase in access to archives and other source materials in most countries of the world, from the former Communist states in Europe, to China, to South Africa and elsewhere.

Cold War History is based in the Cold War Studies Programme at LSE IDEAS, the London School of Economics Centre for International Affairs, Strategy and Diplomacy. It makes available the results of recent research on the origins and development of the Cold War and its impact on nations, alliances and regions at various levels of statecraft, as well as in areas such as the military and intelligence, the economy, and social and intellectual developments. The new history of the Cold War is a fascinating example of how experts – often working across national and disciplinary boundaries – are able to use newly available information to refine, or in some cases destroy, old images and interpretations. Cold War History publishes the best of this emerging scholarship, from a perspective that attempts to de-centre the era through paying special attention to the role of Europe and the Third World. The journal welcomes contributions from historians and representatives of other disciplines on all aspects of the global Cold War and its present repercussions.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Original Articles

Tending the flock: German Lutherans, reconstruction, and prisoners of war
Augusta Lynn Dell’Omo
Pages: 123–141 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2019.1573814

Victim of kidnapping or an unfortunate defector? The strange case of Otto John
Mark Fenemore
Pages: 143–160 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2019.1689390

The Cold War, the Arab world, and West Germany’s ‘Mediterranean moment’, 1967–73
Philipp Hirsch
Pages: 161–178 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2019.1690460

Diplomacy beyond deterrence: Helmut Schmidt and the economic dimension of Ostpolitik
Stephan Kieninger
Pages: 179–196 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2019.1607308

‘Red’ nations: Marxists and the Native American sovereignty movement of the late Cold War
György Tóth
Pages: 197–221 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2019.1645126

Tearing down the ‘buckskin curtain’: domestic policy-making and Indigenous intellectuals in the Cold War United States and Canada
Reetta Humalajoki
Pages: 223–242 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2019.1673738

Book Reviews

The rise and fall of OPEC in the twentieth century
Giuliano Garavini, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2019), 448 pp.
Michael Franczak
Pages: 243–246 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2020.1746008

Stalin and the fate of Europe: the post-war struggle for sovereignty
Norman M. Naimark, (Cambridge, MA and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2019), 320 pp.
Balázs Apor
Pages: 246–248 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2020.1746007

The final act: the Helsinki Accords and the transformation of the Cold War. Series: America in the world
Michael Cotey Morgan / edited by Sven Becket and Jeremi Suri, (Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2018), xi + 396 pp.
Susanne Schattenberg
Pages: 248–250 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2020.1743032

Retraction

Statement of Retraction: ‘“Fraternal Socialism”: The International Reconstruction of North Korea, 1953-62’
Pages: 253–253 / DOI: 10.1080/14682745.2020.1724643

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Bestandsnachweise 1468-2745 (Print), 1743-7962 (Online)