226 research outputs found

    Stalinism in Albania: Domestic Affairs under Enver Hoxha

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    Hungary: Soviet Forces Out, New Policies In

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    The Political Evolution of Intelligence

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    Review: Options on the Berlin Problem A Review Article

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    Few post-War European disputes have received greater long-term attention that the question of the division of Berlin. During numerous crises, Berlin has been regarded as the greatest existing threat to peace and during the era of detente it has been touted as a barometer of East-West relations. There has always been considerable rhetoric about the need to resolve the Berlin problem or, as Khrushchev said, to normalise the Berlin situation. The 1971 Quadripartite Agreement on Berlin has been seen by many as an important step in the long approach to a solution. The contributions of this agreement are carefully examined by Honore M. Catudal, Jr. in A Balance Sheet of the Quadripartite Agreement on Berlin (Berlin: Berlin Verlag, 1978). Although the scope of Catudal\u27s study is narrow, his examination does help the reader chart the evolution of the Berlin situation in terms of several scenarios for possible resolution of this problem

    Honecker’s Legacy

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    Soviet and Post-Soviet Environmental Problems

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    With the collapse of Communist power in the Soviet Union, considerable attention has focused on the lessons produced by the experiment with Marxist socialism in the Russian empire and what we might regard as the legacies of Communism. One of the most highly visible legacies of that system is a pattern of environmental neglect that stretches from the Baltics to the Kamchatka peninsula. As a public issue, ecology only emerged in the final years of communist rule in the USSR, initially as part of Gorbachev\u27s glasnost and, later, as a component of the country\u27s increasingly vocal nationalist movements. A radioactive explosion in Tomsk-7 in April, 1 993,1 served as a reminder that the system which produced Chernobyl had not disappeared but had simply been passed on to the successors of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, who now faced an ecological nightmare inherited from the old regime. This paper is an examination of the appearance of ecological concerns as a public issue, the often inadequate response of the system to those concerns, what that response revealed about the changing Soviet system, and, finally, the environmental situation which faces the post-Communist leadership of what was the Soviet Union

    East European Reactions to the Polish December

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    Tibet: Endurance of the National Idea

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