Why the cold war ended: a range of interpretations/
Other Authors: | , |
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Westport, Conn.:
Greenwood Press,
1995
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Series: | Contributions in political science
353 |
Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction: Challenging the emergent orthodoxy / Ralph Summy
- Did Reagan "win" the cold war? / April F. Carter
- Ronald Reaganism ended the cold war
- in the 1960s / Robert Elias
- The End of the cold war: the Brezhnev doctrine / Joanne Wright
- Gorbachev, the peace movement, and the death of Lenin / Jennifer Turpin
- The Peace movement role in ending the cold war / David Cortright
- Europe 1989: the role of peace research and the peace movement / Johan Galtung
- The Erosion of regime legitimacy in Eastern European satellite states: the case of the German Democratic Republic / Ulf Sundhaussen
- "Upper Volta with rockets": internal versus external factors in the decline of the Soviet Union / Dennis Phillips
- Marxism, capitalism, and democracy: some post-Soviet dilemmas / Geoff Dow
- Whose cold war? / Rick Kuhn
- Carrots were more important than sticks in ending the cold war / Kevin P. Clements
- How the cold war became an expensive irrelevance / Keith Suter
- The Continuing cold war / John W. Burton
- In the shadow of the Middle Kingdom syndrome: China in the post-cold war world / C.L. Chiou
- The Cold war...and after: a new period of upheaval in world politics / Joseph A. Camilleri
- Conclusion: The End of the cold war: a political, historical, and mythological event / Michael E. Salla.