Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T05:36:59.469Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2019

James Mark
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
Bogdan C. Iacob
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
Tobias Rupprecht
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
Ljubica Spaskovska
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
1989
A Global History of Eastern Europe
, pp. 312 - 363
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Castro, Fidel, ‘Comments on Czechoslovakia – Speech 24 August 1968’, https://marxists.org/history/cuba/archive/castro/1968/08/24.html.Google Scholar
Castro, Fidel, ‘Discurso pronunciado por el comandante en jefe Fidel Castro Ruz, Primer Secretario del Comite Central del Partido Comunista de Cuba y Presidente de los consejos de estado y de ministros, en la clausura de la sesion diferida del Tercer Congreso del Partido Comunista de Cuba, en el teatro “Carlos Marx”, el 2 de diciembre de 1986, año del xxx aniversario del desembarco del Granma’, www.cuba.cu/gobierno/discursos/1986/esp/f021286e.html.Google Scholar
Castro, Fidel, ‘Discurso pronunciado por Fidel Castro Ruz, Presidente de la República Cuba, en el acto de despedida de duelo a nuestros internacionalistas caidos durante el cumplimiento de honrosas misiones militares y civiles, efectuado en el Cacahual, el 7 de diciembre de 1989, año 31 de la revolucion’, www.cuba.cu/gobierno/discursos/1989/esp/f071289e.html.Google Scholar
Chalker, Lynda, ‘South Africa and Europe – The Way Ahead’, Speech at the South African Foundation Conference, 22 May 1990, South Africa International, 21 (July 1990), 1–7.Google Scholar
Clinton, William J., ‘Remarks at the Signing Ceremony for the Supplemental Agreements to the North American Free Trade Agreement’, 14 September 1993, www.govinfo.gov/app/details/PPP-1993-book2/PPP-1993-book2-doc-pg1485-2.Google Scholar
Klaus, Václav, Speech at the World Economic Forum, Davos, January 1990.Google Scholar
Milošević, Slobodan, ‘St. Vitus Day Speech, Gazimestan, 28 June 1989’, www.slobodan-milosevic.org/spch-kosovo1989.htm.Google Scholar
Mitterrand, François, Opening Address at the Conference of Heads of State of France and Africa, La Baule, 20 June 1990.Google Scholar
Nuscheler, F., ‘What Are the Possibilities for Africa Resulting from the Process of Political and Economic Change in Germany and Eastern Europe?’, Bonn, 7–8 May 1990.Google Scholar
Tito, Josip Broz, ‘Izlaganje predsednika Tita na sednici Izvršnog biroa, održanoj 22.III.1972. na Brionima’, BCA, Family Collection – Legacy of Koča Popović and Lepa Perović.Google Scholar
Trump, Donald, ‘Remarks by President Trump to the People of Poland’, 6 July 2017, www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-President-trump-people-poland/.Google Scholar
Abramowitz, Michael, Democracy in Crisis: Freedom in the World 2018 Report (New York: Freedom House, 2018).Google Scholar
Abulof, Uriel, ‘We the Peoples? The Strange Demise of Self-Determination’, European Journal of International Relations, 22/3 (2015), 536–65.Google Scholar
Adelman, Jeremy and Fajardo, Margarita, ‘Between Capitalism and Democracy: A Study in the Political Economy of Ideas in Latin America, 1968–1980’, Latin American Research Review, 51/3 (2016), 322.Google Scholar
Amar, Tarik Cyril, ‘Sovietisation as Civilizing Mission in the West’, in Apor, Balazs, Apor, Peter, and Rees, E. A. (eds.), The Sovietisation of Eastern Europe: New Perspectives on the Postwar Period (Washington, DC: New Academia, 2008), 2946.Google Scholar
Akçalı, Emel, ‘Hungary’, in Musil, Pelin Ayan and Mahfoud, Juraj (eds.), Public Portrayal of Turkey in Visegrad Countries (Prague: Anglo-American University, 2013), 3760.Google Scholar
Akçalı, Emel and Korkut, Umut, ‘Geographical Metanarratives in East-Central Europe: Neo-Turanism in Hungary’, Eurasian Geography and Economics, 53/5 (2012), 596614.Google Scholar
Akonor, Kwame, Africa and IMF Conditionality: The Unevenness of Compliance, 1983–2000 (London: Routledge, 2006).Google Scholar
Alamgir, Alena and Schwenkel, Christina, ‘From Socialist Assistance to National Self-Interest: Vietnamese Labor Migration into CMEA Countries’, in Mark, James, Kalinovsky, Artemy, and Marung, Steffi (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
‘Albania Willing to Take in Migrants Docked in Italy’, Transitions Online, 27 August 2018, www.tol.org/client/article/27917-albania-italy-migrants-refugees-quotas-crisis-eu.html.Google Scholar
Albon, Mary, ‘Project on Justice in Times of Transition: Inaugural Meeting’ (Salzburg, Austria, 7–10 March 1992), 1–19, www.pjtt.org/.Google Scholar
Aleksov, Bojan, ‘Perceptions of Islamisation in the Serbian National Discourse’, Southeast European and Black Sea Studies, 5/1 (2005), 113127.Google Scholar
Aligică, Paul Dragoș and Evans, Anthony John, The Neoliberal Revolution in Eastern Europe. Economic Ideas in the Transition from Communism (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Altrichter, Helmut, Russland 1989. Der Untergang des sowjetischen Imperiums (München: C.H. Beck, 2009).Google Scholar
Andreff, Wladimir, ‘The Double Transition from Underdevelopment and from Socialism in Vietnam’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, 23/4 (1993), 515–31.Google Scholar
Anglin, Douglas G., ‘Southern African Responses to Eastern European Developments’, Journal of Modern African Studies, 28/3 (1990), 431–55.Google Scholar
Antohi, Sorin, ‘Habits of the Mind: Europe’s Post-1989 Symbolic Geographies’, in Antohi, Sorin and Tismaneanu, Vladimir (eds.), Between Past and Future: The Revolutions of 1989 and Their Aftermath (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2000), 6177.Google Scholar
Antov, Nikolay, ‘Emergence and Historical Development of Muslim Communities in the Ottoman Balkans: Historical and Historiographical Remarks’, in Dragostinova, Theodora and Hashamova, Yana (eds.), Beyond Mosque, Church, and State: Alternative Narratives of the Nation in the Balkans (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2016), 4256.Google Scholar
Apor, Péter and Mark, James, ‘Mobilizing Generation: The Idea of 1968 in Hungary’, in von der Goltz, Anna (ed.) ‘Talkin’ ’bout My Generation’: Conflicts of Generation Building and Europe’s ‘1968 (Göttingen: Wallstein Verlag, 2011).Google Scholar
Apor, Péter and Mark, James, ‘Solidarity: Homefront, Closeness, Need’, in Mark, James and Betts, Paul (eds.), Socialism Goes Global: Cold War Connections between the ‘Second’ and ‘Third Worlds’, vol. 1 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming).Google Scholar
Applebaum, Anne, ‘How Orbán Duped the Brexiteers’, Spectator, 22 September 2018, www.spectator.co.uk/2018/09/how-orban-duped-the-brexiteers/.Google Scholar
Arat-Koç, Sedef, ‘Contesting or Affirming “Europe”? European Enlargement, Aspirations for “Europeanness” and New Identities in the Margins of Europe’, Journal of Contemporary European Studies, 18/2 (2010), 181–91.Google Scholar
Arielli, Nir, From Byron to bin Laden: A History of Foreign War Volunteers (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Arielli, Nir, ‘In Search of Meaning: Foreign Volunteers in the Croatian Armed Forces, 1991–95’, Contemporary European History, 21/1 (2012), 117.Google Scholar
Arthur, Paige, ‘How “Transitions” Reshaped Human Rights: A Conceptual History of Transitional Justice’, Human Rights Quarterly, 31/2 (2009), 321–67.Google Scholar
Aschmann, Birgit, ‘The Reliable Ally. Germany Supports Spain’s European Integration Efforts 1957–1967’, Journal of European Integration History, 7/1 (2011), 3751.Google Scholar
Åslund, Anders, How Capitalism Was Built. The Transformation of Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, the Caucasus, and Central Asia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Åslund, Anders and Djankov, Simeon, The Great Rebirth. Lessons from the Victory of Capitalism over Communism (Washington, DC: Peterson Institute for International Economics, 2014).Google Scholar
Aspaturian, Vernon, Valenta, Jiri, and Burke, David (eds.), Eurocommunism between East and West (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
Atanasova, Ivanka Nedeva, ‘Lyudmila Zhivkova and the Paradox of Ideology and Identity in Communist Bulgaria’, East European Politics and Societies, 18/2 (2004), 278315.Google Scholar
Ausch, Sándor, Theory and Practice of Cmea Cooperation (Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1972).Google Scholar
‘Ayatollah Khamenei in the DPRK in 1989’, www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXeuTGoYhcE.Google Scholar
Aydintasbas, Asli, ‘From Myth to Reality: How to Understand Turkey’s Role in the Western Balkans’ (European Council on Foreign Relations, 13 March 2019), www.ecfr.eu/publications/summary/from_myth_to_reality_how_to_understand_turkeys_role_in_the_western_balkans.Google Scholar
Babu, Abdulrahman Mohamed, ‘A New Europe: Consequences for Tanzania’, Review of African Political Economy, 18/50 (1991), 7578.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baćević, Ljiljana, et al. Jugoslavija na kriznoj prekretnici (Beograd: Institut društvenih nauka / Centar za politikološka istraživanja i javno mnenje, 1991).Google Scholar
Bach, Daniel C., ‘Europe-Afrique: le régionalisme sans co-prospérité’, Politique Africaine, 49 (1993), 3146.Google Scholar
Bacher, Jon, ‘Video Review: Bringing Down a Dictator’, Peace Magazine, 18/3 (2002), 28.Google Scholar
Badalassi, Nicolas and Snyder, Sarah B. (eds.), The CSCE and the End of the Cold War: Diplomacy, Societies and Human Rights, 1972–1990 (Oxford: Berghahn, 2018).Google Scholar
Baer, Werner and Love, Joseph, ‘Introduction’, in Baer, Werner and Love, Joseph (eds), Liberalisation and Its Consequences. A Comparative Perspective on Latin America and Eastern Europe (Cheltenham: Elgar, 2000), 111.Google Scholar
Baev, Jordan, ‘Infiltration of Non-European Terrorist Groups in Europe and Antiterrorist Responses in Western and Eastern Europe (1969–1991)’, in Ekici, Siddik (ed.), Counterterrorism in Diverse Communities (Amsterdam: IOS Press, 2011), 5874.Google Scholar
Bahrmann, Hannes, Abschied vom Mythos. Sechs Jahrzehnte kubanische Revolution, Eine kritische Bilanz (Berlin: CH. Links Verlag, 2016).Google Scholar
Bahro, Rudolf, ‘Gastrede auf dem SED/PDS-Parteitag am 16. Dezember 1989’, in Hornbogen, Lothar et al. (eds.), Außerordentlicher Parteitag der SED/PDS. Protokoll der Beratungen am 8./9. und 16/.17. Dezember 1989 in Berlin (Dietz: Berlin, 1999).Google Scholar
Bain, Mervyn, ‘Cuba–Soviet Relations in the Gorbachev Era’, Journal of Latin American Studies, 37 (2005), 769–91.Google Scholar
Baker, Catherine, Race and the Yugoslav Region: Postsocialist, Post-conflict, Postcolonial? (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Balcerowicz, Leszek, ‘Economic Reform. Lessons for Post-Saddam Iraq from Post-Soviet Europe’, American Enterprise Institute working paper, 24 March 2005.Google Scholar
Balcerowicz, Leszek, Post-Communist Transition. Some Lessons (London: Institute of Economic Affairs, 2002).Google Scholar
Balcerowicz, Leszek, Socialism, Capitalism and Transformation (Budapest: Central European University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Ban, Cornel, ‘Neoliberalism in Translation. Economic Ideas and Reforms in Spain and Romania’ (Ph.D. diss., University of Maryland College Park, 2011).Google Scholar
Ban, Cornel, Ruling Ideas: How Global Neoliberalism Goes Local (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Ban, Cornel, ‘Sovereign Debt, Austerity, and Regime Change. The Case of Nicolae Ceaușescu’s Romania’, East European Politics and Societies, 26/4 (2012), 743–76.Google Scholar
Ban, Cornel, ‘Translation and Economic Ideas’, in Evans, Jonathan and Fernandez, Fruela (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Translation and Politics (London: Routledge, 2018), 4863.Google Scholar
Banégas, Richard, ‘Tropical Democracy’, in Rupnik, Jacques (ed.), 1989 as a Political World Event. Democracy, Europe and the New International System in the Age of Globalisation (London: Routledge, 2007), 101–10.Google Scholar
Bánki, Erika, ‘Nemzetközi tapasztalok. A testi fenyítések újbóli bevezetése az iszlám országokban’, Módszertani Füzetek (March 1986), 62–64.Google Scholar
Bartley, Russell and Bartley, Sylvia Erickson, Eclipse of the Assassins. The C.I.A., Imperial Politics, and the Slaying of Mexican Journalist Manuel Buendía (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Baskar, Bojan, ‘Within or Without? Changing Attitudes towards the Balkans in Slovenia’, Ethnologica Balkanica, 7 (2003), 195206.Google Scholar
Basosi, Duccio, ‘An Economic Lens on Global Transformations. The Foreign Debt Crisis of the 1980s in the Soviet Bloc and Latin America’, in Kosicki, Piotr H. and Kunakhovich, Kyrill (eds.), The Legacy of 1989: Continuity and Discontinuity in a Quarter-Century of Global Revolution (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Bassin, Mark, The Gumilev Mystique: Biopolitics, Eurasianism, and the Construction of Community in Modern Russia (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Bayly, Susan, ‘Mapping Time, Living Space. The Moral Cartography of Renovation in Late-Socialist Vietnam’, Cambridge Anthropology, 31/2 (2013), 6084.Google Scholar
Bayly, Susan, ‘Vietnamese Narratives of Tradition, Exchange and Friendship in the Worlds of the Global Socialist Ecumene’, in West, Harry and Raman, Parvathi (eds.), Enduring Socialism. Explorations of Revolution and Transformation, Restoration and Continuation (Oxford: Berghahn, 2008), 125–47.Google Scholar
Beissinger, Mark R., Nationalist Mobilisation and the Collapse of the Soviet State (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Beissinger, Mark R., ‘Self-Determination as a Technology of Imperialism: The Soviet and Russian Experiences’, Ethnopolitics, 14/5 (2015), 479487.Google Scholar
Béja, Jean-Philipp, ‘China and the End of Socialism in Europe: A Godsend for Beijing Communists’, in Rupnik, Jacques (ed.), 1989 as a Political World Event: Democracy, Europe and the New International System in the Age of Globalisation (New York: Routledge, 2013), 212–22.Google Scholar
Bekus, Nelly, Struggle over Identity: The Official and the Alternative ‘Belarusianness’ (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Benedicto, Ainhoa Ruiz and Brunet, Pere, ‘Building Walls: Fear and Securitization in the European Union’ (2018). www.tni.org/files/publication-downloads/building_walls_-_full_report_-_english.pdf.Google Scholar
Berend, Ivan T., An Economic History of Twentieth-Century Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Berend, Ivan T., ‘Global Financial Architecture and East Central Europe Before and After 1989’, in Engel, Ulf, Hadler, Frank, and Middell, Matthias (eds.), 1989 in a Global Perspective (Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2015), 4962.Google Scholar
Berend, Ivan T., History in My Life: A Memoir of Three Eras (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Berman, Harold, ‘Joint Ventures between United States Firms and Soviet Economic Organizations’, Maryland Journal of International Law 1 (1976), 139–53.Google Scholar
Berrios, Ruben, ‘The Political Economy of East-South Relations’, Journal of Peace Research, 20/3 (1983), 239–52.Google Scholar
Bessner, Daniel, ‘The Globalist: George Soros after the Open Society’, N+1, 18 June 2018, https://nplusonemag.com/online-only/online-only/the-globalist/.Google Scholar
Bethlehem, Daniel and Weller, Marc (eds.), The Yugoslav Crisis in International Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Betts, Paul, Mark, James, Goddeeris, Idesbald, and Christiaens, Kim, ‘Race, Socialism and Solidarity: Anti-Apartheid in Eastern Europe’, in Skinner, Robert and Konieczna, Anna (eds.), A Global History of Anti-Apartheid: ‘Forward to Freedom’ in South Africa (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019), 151200.Google Scholar
Beyrau, Dietrich, ‘Das sowjetische Modell. Über Fiktionen zu den Realitäten’, in Hübner, Peter, Kleßmann, Christoph, and Tenfelde, Klaus (eds.), Arbeiter im Staatssozialismus. Ideologischer Anspruch und soziale Wirklichkeit (Wien: Böhlau, 2005), 4770.Google Scholar
Bhambra, Gurminder K. and Narayan, John, ‘Introduction. Colonial Histories and the Postcolonial Present of European Cosmopolitanism’, in Bhambra, Gurminder K. and Narayan, John (eds.), European Cosmopolitanism. Colonial Histories and Postcolonial Societies (Abingdon: Routledge, 2017), 113.Google Scholar
Bialasiewicz, Luiza and Minca, Claudio, ‘Old Europe, New Europe: For a Geopolitics of Translation’, Area, 37/4 (2005), 365–72.Google Scholar
Bieri, Matthias, ‘The Western Balkans between Europe and Russia’, CSS Analyses in Security Policy, 170 (2015), www.research-collection.ethz.ch/bitstream/handle/20.500.11850/99131/eth-47456-01.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y.Google Scholar
Bing, Adotey, ‘Salim A. Salim on the OAU and the African Agenda’, Review of African Political Economy, 18/50 (1991), 6069.Google Scholar
Blair, Tony, ‘Forging a New Agenda’, Marxism Today, 10 (1991), 3234.Google Scholar
Bléjer, Mario I. and Coricelli, Fabrizio, The Making of Economic Reform in Eastern Europe: Conversations with Leading Reformers in Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 1995).Google Scholar
Blokker, Paul, ‘Building Democracy by Legal Means: The East-Central European Experience’ (paper presented at ‘Revolution from Within. Experts, Managers and Technocrats in the Long Lawyers, Human Rights and Democratisation in Eastern Europe’, Jena, 14–15 June 2018).Google Scholar
Boatcă, Manuela, ‘Semi-peripheries in the World-System: Reflecting Eastern European and Latin American Experiences’, Journal of World-Systems Research, 12/2 (2006), 321–46.Google Scholar
Bobako, Monika, ‘Semi-peripheral Islamophobias: The Political Diversity of Anti-Muslim Discourses in Poland’, Patterns of Prejudice, 52/5 (2018), 448–60.Google Scholar
Bockman, Johanna, ‘The Long Road to 1989. Neoclassical Economics, Alternative Socialisms, and the Advent of Neoliberalism’, Radical History Review, 112 (2012), 942.Google Scholar
Bockman, Johanna, Markets in the Name of Socialism. The Left-Wing Origins of Neoliberalism (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Bockman, Johanna, ‘The 1980s Debt Crisis Revisited: The Second and Third Worlds as Creditors’ (manuscript).Google Scholar
Bockman, Johanna, ‘Scientific Community in a Divided World. Economists, Planning, and Research Priority during the Cold War’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 50 (2008), 581613.Google Scholar
Bockman, Johanna, ‘Socialist Globalisation against Capitalist Neocolonialism: The Economic Ideas behind the New International Economic Order’, Humanity, 6/1 (2015), 109–28.Google Scholar
Bogatova, E., ‘V’etnamskaja model’ dviženija k konvertiruemosti nacional’noj valjuty’, Voprosy Ekonomiki, 9 (1990), 6975.Google Scholar
Bogatova, E., ‘V’etnam. Put’ k novoj khozjajstvennoj modeli’, Kommunist, 3 (1990), 106–10.Google Scholar
Bohle, Dorothee, Europas neue Peripherie. Polens Transformation und transnationale Integration (Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot, 2002).Google Scholar
Bohle, Dorothee and Greskovits, Béla, Capitalist Diversity on Europe’s Periphery (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
‘Boris Buden: Narodu koji je ostao bez svega ostaje još samo iluzija identiteta’, www.glas-slavonije.hr/337535/11/Boris-Buden-Narodu-koji-je-ostao-bez-svega-ostaje-jos-samo-iluzija-identiteta.Google Scholar
Boutros-Ghali, Boutros, ‘The Marginalisation of Africa’, in Stavrou, Nikolaos A. (ed.), Mediterranean Security at the Crossroads: A Reader (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1999), 2134.Google Scholar
Bowring, Bill, ‘Positivism versus Self-Determination: The Contradictions of Soviet International Law’, in Marks, Susan (ed.), International Law on the Left: Re-examining Marxist Legacies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), 133–68.Google Scholar
Bradley, Mark, ‘Human Rights and Communism’, in Pons, Silvio and Smith, Stephen (eds.), The Cambridge History of Communism. Volume 1: World Revolution and Socialism in One Country 1917–1941 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), 151–77.Google Scholar
Braghiroli, Stefano and Makarychev, Andrey, ‘Redefining Europe: Russia and the 2015 Refugee Crisis’, Geopolitics, 23/4 (2017), 823–48.Google Scholar
Bren, Paulina and Neuburger, Mary, ‘Introduction’, in Bren, and Neuburger, (eds.), Communism Unwrapped. Consumption in Cold War Eastern Europe (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012), 319.Google Scholar
Brier, Robert, ‘Broadening the Cultural History of the Cold War: The Emergence of the Polish Workers’ Defence Committee and the Rise of Human Rights’, Journal of Cold War Studies, 15/4 (2013), 104–27.Google Scholar
Brier, Robert, ‘Entangled Protest. Dissent and the Transnational History of the 1970s and 1980s’, in Brier, (ed.), Transnational Approaches to the History of Dissent in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union (Osnabrück: Fibre, 2013), 1143.Google Scholar
Brier, Robert, ‘Poland’s Solidarity as a Contested Symbol of the Cold War: Transatlantic Debates after the Polish Crisis’, in Patel, Kiran and Weisbrode, Kenneth (eds.), European Integration and the Atlantic Community in the 1980s (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 83104.Google Scholar
Bright, Christopher, ‘Neither Dictatorships nor Double Standards: The Reagan Administration’s Approach to Human Rights’, World Affairs, 153/2 (1990), 5180.Google Scholar
Brown, Archie, ‘Did Gorbachev as General Secretary Become a Social Democrat?’, Europe-Asia Studies, 65/2 (2013), 198220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Archie, The Gorbachev Factor (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers, Nationalism Reframed: Nationhood and the National Question in the New Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Brucan, Silviu, Generația irosită (București: Editurile Univers & Calistrat Hogaș, 1992).Google Scholar
Brucan, Silviu, Piață și democrație (București: Editura știintifică, 1990).Google Scholar
Brucan, Silviu, World Socialism at the Crossroads (New York: Praeger, 1987).Google Scholar
Brudny, Yitzhak M., Reinventing Russia: Russian Nationalism and the Soviet State, 1953–1991 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Bruszt, Laszlo, ‘Regional Normalisation and National Deviations: EU Integration and Transformations in Europe’s Eastern Periphery’, Global Policy 6/Supplement, 1 (2015), 3845.Google Scholar
Buchanan, Tom, ‘Human Rights, the Memory of War and the Making of a “European” Identity, 1945–1975’, in Conway, Martin and Patel, Kiran Klaus (eds.), Europeanisation in the Twentieth Century. Historical Approaches (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), 157–71.Google Scholar
Budryte, Dovile, Taming Nationalism? Political Community Building in the Post-Soviet Baltic States (London: Ashgate, 2005).Google Scholar
Bunce, Valerie, Subversive Institutions: The Design and the Destruction of Socialism and the State (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Bunck, Julie Marie, ‘Marxism and the Market. Vietnam and Cuba in Transition’ (working paper, Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy, 30 November 1996).Google Scholar
Burg, Steven L. and Shoup, Paul S., The War in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Ethnic Conflict and International Intervention (New York: M. E. Sharpe, 1999).Google Scholar
Burke, Roland, Decolonisation and the Evolution of International Human Rights (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Bustikova, Lenka and Guasti, Petra, ‘The Illiberal Turn or Swerve in Central Europe?’, Politics and Governance, 5/4 (2017), 166–76.Google Scholar
Cadier, David, ‘Après le retour à l’Europe: les politiques étrangères des pays d’Europe central’, Politique Étrangère 3 (Automme 2012), 573–84.Google Scholar
Calandri, Elena, Caviglia, Daniele, and Varsori, Antonio (eds.), Détente in Cold War Europe: Politics and Diplomacy in the Mediterranean and the Middle East (London: I.B. Tauris, 2015).Google Scholar
Caldwell, Bruce and Montes, Leonidas, ‘Friedrich Hayek and His Visits to Chile’, Journal of Austrian Economics, 28/3 (2015), 261309.Google Scholar
Calic, Marie-Janine, The History of Yugoslavia (West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Calori, Anna, ‘Making Transition, Remaking Workers. Market and Privatisation Reforms in Bosnia and Herzegovina: The Case of Energoinvest (1988–2008)’ (PhD thesis, University of Exeter, 2019).Google Scholar
Caplan, Richard, Europe and the Recognition of New States in Yugoslavia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Caplan, Richard, ‘International Diplomacy and the Crisis in Kosovo’, International Affairs, 74/4 (1998), 745–61.Google Scholar
Carothers, Thomas, Aiding Democracy Abroad: The Learning Curve (Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1999).Google Scholar
Carothers, Thomas, ‘The End of the Transition Paradigm’, Journal of Democracy, 13/1 (2002), 521.Google Scholar
Caspersen, Nina, Contested Nationalism: Serb Elite Rivalry in Croatia and Bosnia in the 1990s (New York: Berghahn Books, 2010).Google Scholar
Castañeda, Carlos, Utopia Unarmed. The Latin American Left after the Cold War (New York: Penguin Random House, 1993).Google Scholar
Castillo, Greg, ‘East as True West: Redeeming Bourgeois Culture, from Socialist Realism to Ostalgie’, Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History, 9/4 (2008), 747–68.Google Scholar
Cemović, Momčilo, Zašto, kako i koliko smo se zadužli? Kreditni odnosi Jugoslavije sa inostranstvom (Beograd: Institut za unapredenje robnog prometa, 1985).Google Scholar
‘CEU to Open Vienna Campus for US Degrees in 2019; University Determined to Uphold Academic Freedom’ (Central European University), www.ceu.edu/article/2018-10-25/ceu-open-vienna-campus-us-degrees-2019-university-determined-uphold-academic.Google Scholar
Chari, Sharad and Verdery, Katherine, ‘Thinking between the Posts. Postcolonialism, Postsocialism, and Ethnography after the Cold War’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 51/1 (2009), 634.Google Scholar
Chaudet, Didier, Parmentier, Florent, and Pélopidas, Benoît, When Empire Meets Nationalism: Power Politics in the US and Russia (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2009).Google Scholar
Chen, Zhong Zhong, ‘Defying Moscow: East German-Chinese Relations during the Andropov-Chernenko Interregnum, 1982–1985’, Cold War History, 14/2 (2014), 259–80.Google Scholar
Chen, Zhong Zhong, ‘Defying Moscow, Engaging Beijing: The German Democratic Republic’s Relations with the People’s Republic of China, 1980–1989’ (PhD diss., London School of Economics, 2014).Google Scholar
Chirot, Daniel, ‘Problematic Analogies and Forgotten Details of 1989’, East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 28/4 (2014), 657–63.Google Scholar
Christiaens, Kim, ‘Europe at the Crossroads of Three Worlds: Alternative Histories and Connections of European Solidarity with the Third World, 1950s–80s’, European Review of History: Revue européenne d’histoire, 24/6 (2017), 932–54.Google Scholar
Christiaens, Kim and Goddeeris, Idesbald, ‘Competing Solidarities? Solidarność and the Global South during the 1980s’, in Mark, James, Marung, Steffi, and Kalinovsky, Artemy M. (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Christiaens, Kim, Mark, James, and Faraldo, José M., ‘Entangled Transitions: Eastern and Southern European Convergence or Alternative Europes? 1960s–2000s’, Contemporary European History, 26/4 (2017), 577–99.Google Scholar
Christian, Michel, Kott, Sandrine, and Matejka, Ondrej (eds.), Planning in Cold War Europe. Competition, Cooperation, Circulations (1950s–1970s) (Berlin: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2018).Google Scholar
Christofferson, Michael Scott, French Intellectuals against the Left (New York: Berghahn Books, 2004).Google Scholar
Cima, Ronald J., ‘Vietnam in 1989. Initiating the Post-Cambodia Period’, Asian Survey, 30/1 (1990), 8895.Google Scholar
Claudio, Lisandro E., ‘Memories of the Anti-Marcos Movement: The Left and the Mnemonic Dynamics of the Post-authoritarian Philippines’, South East Asia Research, 18/1 (2010), 3366.Google Scholar
Clayer, Nathalie, ‘The Muslims in South-Eastern Europe: From Ottoman Subjects to European Citizens’, in Tottoli, Roberto (ed.), Routledge Handbook of Islam in the West (London: Routledge 2015), 7084.Google Scholar
Cliffe, Jeremy, ‘The Great Survivor. Angela Merkel’s Last Stand’, New Statesman, 27 June 2018, www.newstatesman.com/world/europe/2018/06/great-survivor-angela-merkel-s-last-stand.Google Scholar
Cliffe, Lionel, and Seddon, David, ‘Africa in a New World Order’, Review of African Political Economy, 18/50 (1991), 311.Google Scholar
Clinton, Bill, My Life (London: Arrow, 2005).Google Scholar
Clover, Joshua, 1989: Bob Dylan Didn’t Have This to Sing About (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Collinson, Sarah, ‘Visa Requirements, Carrier Sanctions, “Safe Third Countries” and “Readmission”: The Development of an Asylum “Buffer Zone” in Europe’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 21/1 (1996), 7690.Google Scholar
‘The Concluding Document of the Madrid Meeting 1980 of Representatives of the Participating States of the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe, Held on the Basis of the Provisions of the Final Act Relating to the Follow-Up to the Conference’ (Madrid, 1983), www.osce.org/mc/40871?download=true.Google Scholar
Conférence Internationale des Balkanologues, Belgrade, 7–8 September 1982 (Belgrade: Académie Serbe des Sciences et des Arts, Institut des Etudes Balkaniques, 1984).Google Scholar
Constantin, François, and Contamin, Bernard, ‘Perspectives africaines et bouleversements internationaux’, Politique Africaine, 39 (October 1990), 5567.Google Scholar
Coughlan, Sean, ‘How a University Became a Battle for Europe’s Identity’, BBC News, 3 May 2017, www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-39780546.Google Scholar
Cox, Michael, Ikenberry, John, and Inoguchi, Takashi (eds.), American Democracy Promotion: Impulses, Strategies, and Impacts (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Crawford, Beverly, ‘German Foreign Policy and European Political Cooperation: The Diplomatic Recognition of Croatia in 1991’, German Politics & Society, 13/2 (35) (1995), 134.Google Scholar
Cronin, Jeremy, ‘The Boat, the Tap and the Leipzig Way’, African Communist, 130 (1992), 4154.Google Scholar
Cross, Peter, ‘Soviet Perestroika: The Cuban Effect’, Third World Quarterly, 13/1 (1992), 143–58.Google Scholar
Crowe, David, A History of the Gypsies of Eastern Europe and Russia (New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 1994).Google Scholar
Crump, Laurien, The Warsaw Pact Reconsidered: International Relations in Eastern Europe, 1955–1969 (London: Routledge, 2015).Google Scholar
Cruz, Rodolfo, ‘New Directions in Soviet Policy towards Latin America’, Journal of Latin American Studies, 21/1 (1989), 122.Google Scholar
Csaba, László, Eastern Europe in the World Economy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Csillag, Tamás, and Szelényi, Iván, ‘Drifting from Liberal Democracy: Traditionalist/Neo-conservative Ideology of Managed Illiberal Democratic Capitalism in Post-communist Europe’, Intersections, 1/1 (2013), 1848.Google Scholar
Daddow, Oliver, ‘“Tony’s War?” Blair, Kosovo and the Interventionist Impulse in British Foreign Policy’, International Affairs, 85/3 (2009), 547560.Google Scholar
Dahrendorf, Ralf, Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: In a Letter Intended to Have Been Sent to a Gentleman in Warsaw, 1990 (London: Chatto & Windus, 1990).Google Scholar
Dahrendorf, Ralf, ‘Straddling Theory and Practice’, 4 April 1989, http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/Elberg/Dahrendorf/dahrendorf0.html.Google Scholar
Dale, Gareth, Between State Capitalism and Globalisation. The Collapse of the East German Economy (Bern: Peter Lang, 2004).Google Scholar
Dale, Gareth, The East German Revolution of 1989 and Popular Protest in East Germany (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Darmanović, Srdjan, ‘The Never-Boring Balkans: The Elections of 2016’, Journal of Democracy 28/1 (2017), 116–28.Google Scholar
‘Darowizny dla europosjkiego centrum solidarnosci. Jest juz numer konta do wpłat’ (Donations for the European Solidarity Centre. There Is Already an Account Number for Deposits), Portal Miasta Gdańska, 31 January 2019, www.gdansk.pl/wiadomosci/darowizny-dla-europosjkiego-centrum-solidarnosci-jest-juz-numer-konta,a,136983#.XFGai2w5bzc.facebook.Google Scholar
Daskalov, Roumen and Vezenkov, Alexander, ‘Introduction’, in Daskalov, and Vezenkov, (eds.), Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume Three: Shared Pasts, Disputed Legacies (Leiden: Brill, 2015), 19.Google Scholar
Daudin, Guillaume, Morys, Matthias, and O’Rourke, Kevin, ‘Europe and Globalisation 1870–1914’, in Broadberry, Stephen N. and O’Rourke, Kevin H. (eds.), Unifying the European Experience: An Economic History of Modern Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 529.Google Scholar
Davidson, Basil and Munslow, Barry, ‘The Crisis of the Nation‐State in Africa’, Review of African Political Economy, 7/49 (1990), 921.Google Scholar
Decalo, Samuel, ‘The Process, Prospects and Constraints of Democratisation in Africa’, African Affairs, 91 (1992), 735.Google Scholar
‘Declaration of Principles’, XVIII Congress of the Socialist International, 20–22 June 1989, www.socialistinternational.org/viewArticle.cfm?ArticlePageID=984.Google Scholar
‘Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, Adopted by General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV) of 14 December 1960’, United Nations, www.un.org/en/decolonisation/declaration.shtml.Google Scholar
‘Declaration on the Political and Socio-economic Situation in Africa and the Fundamental Changes Taking Place in the World’, Twenty-Sixth Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the Organisation of African Unity, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 9–11 July 1990, AHG/Decl.1 (XXVI) 1990, https://archive.au.int/collect/auassemb/import/English/AHG%20Decl%201%20XXVI_E.pdf.Google Scholar
De Macedo, Jorge Braga, Colm, Foy, and Oman, Charles (eds.), Development Is Back (Paris: OECD Development Studies, 2002).Google Scholar
De Oliveira, Ricardo Soares, Magnificent and Beggar Land: Angola since the Civil War (London: Hurst, 2015).Google Scholar
Deutch, Gabby, ‘Ukraine’s Spiritual Split from Russia Could Trigger a Global Schism’, Atlantic, 11 October 2018, www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2018/10/ukraine-orthodox-church-independence-russia/571333/.Google Scholar
De Zepetnek, Steven Tötösy, ‘Configurations of Postcoloniality and National Identity: Inbetween Peripherality and Narratives of Change’, Comparatist, 23 (May 1999), 89110.Google Scholar
Dieng, Amady Aly, ‘L’Afrique noire après la chute du Mur de Berlin’, Présence Africaine, 153 (1996), 189–93.Google Scholar
Dietz, Hella, Polnischer Protest. Zur pragmatistischen Fundierung von Theorien sozialen Wandels (Frankfurt am Main: Campus, 2015).Google Scholar
Dimant, Jeff and Gardner, Scott, ‘In EU, There’s an East-West Divide over Religious Minorities, Gay Marriage, National Identity’, www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018/10/29/east-west-divide-within-the-eu-on-issues-including-minorities-gay-marriage-and-national-identity/.Google Scholar
Dimitrov, Martin, ‘Understanding Communist Collapse and Resilience’, in Dimitrov, Martin (ed.), Why Communism Did Not Collapse: Understanding Authoritarian Regime Resilience in Asia and Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 339.Google Scholar
Dimitrov, Vesselin, Bulgaria: The Uneven Transition (London: Routledge, 2008).Google Scholar
Dimitrova, Antoaneta, ‘The Uncertain Road to Sustainable Democracy: Elite Coalitions, Citizen Protests and the Prospects of Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe’, East European Politics, 34/3 (2018), 257–75.Google Scholar
Dimitrova, Antoaneta and Buzogány, Aron, ‘Post-accession Policy-Making in Bulgaria and Romania: Can Non-state Actors Use EU Rules to Promote Better Governance?’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 52/1 (2014), 139–56.Google Scholar
Dinescu, Mircea, ‘În căutarea timpului pierdut’, Agora, 3/2 (1990), 168–72.Google Scholar
Dirar, Luwam, ‘Rethinking the Concept of Colonialism in Bandung and Its African Union Aftermath’, in Eslava, Luis, Fakhri, Michael, and Nesiah, Vasuki (eds.), Bandung, Global History, and International Law: Critical Pasts and Pending Futures (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), 355–66.Google Scholar
Dobozi, István, ‘Patterns, Factors and Prospects of East-South Economic Relations’, in Bożyk, Pawel (ed.), Global Challenges and East European Responses (Warsaw: Polish Scientific Publishers, 1988), 326–49.Google Scholar
Domber, Gregory, ‘The AFL-CIO, The Reagan Administration and Solidarność’, Polish Review 52/3 (2007), 277304.Google Scholar
Domber, Gregory, ‘Skepticism and Stability: Reevaluating US Policy during Poland’s Democratic Transformation in 1989’, Journal of Cold War Studies, 13/3 (Summer 2011), 5282.Google Scholar
Dosch, Jörn and Vuving, Alexander L., ‘The Impact of China on Governance Structures in Vietnam’ (discussion paper, Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik, 2008).Google Scholar
Downey, John, and Mihelj, Sabina (eds.), Central and Eastern European Media in Comparative Perspective: Politics Economy and Culture (Farnham: Ashgate, 2012).Google Scholar
Drăghiciu, Andra-Octavia, ‘Between “Totalitarianism” and “Terrorism”. An Introductory Study about the “Arab” Students in the Romanian Socialist Republic (1974–1989)’, Caietele CNSAS, 4/1–2 (2013), 323–34.Google Scholar
‘Dragnea: NATO și EU au finanțat statul paralel’, Digi24, 11 June 2018, www.digi24.ro/stiri/actualitate/politica/dragnea-nato-si-ue-au-finantat-statul-paralel-944886.Google Scholar
Dragović-Soso, Jasna, ‘Saviours of the Nation’: Serbia’s Intellectual Opposition and the Revival of Nationalism (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Drahokoupil, Jan, Globalisation and the State in Central and Eastern Europe (London: Routledge, 2009).Google Scholar
Drakulić, Slavenka, ‘Competing for Victimhood. Why Eastern Europe Says No to Refugees’, Eurozine, 4 November 2015, www.eurozine.com/articles/2015-11-04-drakulic-en.html.Google Scholar
Drelová, Agata Šústová, ‘A Cultural History of Catholic Nationalism in Slovakia, 1985–1993’ (PhD thesis, University of Exeter, 2015).Google Scholar
Duda, Igor, ‘Adriatic for All: Summer Holidays in Croatia’, in Luthar, Breda and Pušnik, Maruša (eds.), Remembering Utopia: The Culture of Everyday Life in Socialist Yugoslavia (Washington, DC: New Academia Publishing, 2010), 289311.Google Scholar
Dufner, GeorgChile als Partner, Exempel und Prüfstein. Deutsch-deutsche Außenpolitik und Systemkonkurrenz in Lateinamerika’, Vierteljahreshefte für Zeitgeschichte, 4 (2013), 513–49.Google Scholar
Dumitru, Petru, ‘The History and Evolution of the New or Restored Democracies Movement’, https://csrdar.org/content/resource/history-and-evolution-new-or-restored-democracies-movement.Google Scholar
Dymek, Jakub, ‘A New Solidarity for the New Poland’, Dissent, 5 May 2014, www.dissentmagazine.org/blog/polands-children-of-tina.Google Scholar
Dzenovska, Dace, ‘Coherent Selves, Viable States: Eastern Europe and the “Migration/Refugee Crisis”’, Slavic Review 76/2 (2017), 297306.Google Scholar
Dzielski, Mirosław, Duch nadchodzącego czasu, 1–2 (Wrocław: Wektory, 1985).Google Scholar
Dzielski, Mirosław, ‘Potrzeba twórczego antykomunizmu’, 13 Grudnia 11 (1987), 78.Google Scholar
Eckel, Jan and Moyn, Samuel (eds.), The Breakthrough of Human Rights in the 1970s (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014).Google Scholar
‘Economic Shock Therapy – A Prescription for the Middle East?’ (American Enterprise Institute, 15 April 2003), www.aei.org/events/2003/04/15/economic-shock-therapy--a-prescription-for-the-middle-east/.Google Scholar
Egerton, Frazer, Jihad in the West: The Rise of Militant Salafism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Ekiert, Grzegorz and Kubik, Jan, Rebellious Civil Society: Popular Protest and Democratic Consolidation in Poland, 1989–1993 (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001).Google Scholar
El Difraoui, Asiem, ‘No “Facebook Revolution” – But an Egyptian Youth We Know Little About’, in Asseburg, Muriel (ed.), Protest, Revolt and Regime Change in the Arab World (Berlin: German Institute for International and Security Affairs, 2011), 1820.Google Scholar
Elenkov, Ivan, ‘“The Second Golden Age”: Historicisation of Official Culture in the Context of Bulgaria’s 1,300th Anniversary Celebrations (1976–1981)’, Critique & Humanism, 23/1 (2007), 3158.Google Scholar
Endlich, Luise, NeuLand: ganz einfache Geschichten (Frankfurt am Main: Fischer-Taschenbuch, 2000).Google Scholar
Engel, Jeffrey, ‘1989: An Introduction to an International History’, in Engel, Jeffrey (ed.), The Fall of the Berlin Wall: The Revolutionary Legacy of 1989 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 130.Google Scholar
Engel, Ulf, ‘Africa’s “1989”’, in Engel, Ulf, Hadler, Frank, and Middell, Matthias (eds.), 1989 in a Global Perspective (Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2015), 331–48.Google Scholar
English, Robert, ‘Ideas and the End of the Cold War: Rethinking Intellectual and Political Change’, in Pons, Silvio and Romero, Federico (eds.), Reinterpreting the End of the Cold War: Issues, Interpretations, Periodisations (London: Frank Cass, 2005), 116–36.Google Scholar
Erler, Brigitte, Tödliche Hilfe. Bericht von meiner letzten Dienstreise in Sachen Entwicklungshilfe (Freiburg: Dreisam-Verlag 1985).Google Scholar
Fábián, Katalin (ed.), Globalization. Perspectives from Central and Eastern Europe (Bingley: Emerald, 2007).Google Scholar
Fabry, Adam, ‘The Origins of Neoliberalism in Late “Socialist” Hungary. The Case of the Financial Research Institute and “Turnabout and Reform”’, Capital & Class, 42/1 (2017), 77107.Google Scholar
Falk, Barbara, Dilemmas of Dissidence in East-Central Europe: Citizen Intellectuals and Philosopher Kings (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Falk, Barbara, ‘From Berlin to Baghdad: Learning the “Wrong” Lessons from the Collapse of Communism’, in Lawson, George et al. (eds.), The Global 1989. Continuity and Change in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 243–70.Google Scholar
Falk, Barbara, ‘Reflections on the Revolutions in Europe. Lessons for the Middle East and the Arab Spring’, in Kind-Kovács, Friederike and Labov, Jessie (eds.), Samizdat, Tamizdat, and Beyond. Transnational Media during and after Socialism (Oxford: Berghahn, 2013), 281315.Google Scholar
Falk, Richard, ‘The Afghan Settlement and the Future of World Politics’, in Saikal, Amin and Maley, William (eds.), The Soviet Withdrawal from Afghanistan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 142–60.Google Scholar
Falk, Richard, ‘Self-Determination under International Law: The Coherence of Doctrine versus the Incoherence of Experience’, in Danspeckgruber, Wolfgang F. (ed.), The Self-Determination of Peoples: Community, Nation, and State in an Interdependent World (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 2002), 3166.Google Scholar
Falkenheim Meyer, Peggy, ‘Gorbachev and Post-Gorbachev Policy toward the Korean Peninsula. The Impact of Changing Russian Perceptions’, Asian Survey, 32/8 (1992), 757–72.Google Scholar
Falser, Michael and Lipp, Wilfried (eds.), A Future for Our Past: The 40th Anniversary of European Architectural Heritage Year (1975–2015) (Berlin: Hendrik Bäßler Verlag, 2015).Google Scholar
Feckoua, Laoukissam, ‘The Changing World: A Glance at the International Geo-political Evolution since 1989’, Présence Africaine, 153 (1996), 528.Google Scholar
Fekete, Liz, A Suitable Enemy: Racism, Migration and Islamophobia in Europe (London: Pluto Books, 2009).Google Scholar
Fekete, Liz and Webber, Frances, Inside Racist Europe (London: Institute of Race Relations, 1994).Google Scholar
Fewsmith, Joseph, China since Tiananmen: The Politics of Transition (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Fischer, Karin, ‘The Influence of Neoliberals in Chile before, during, and after Pinochet’, in Plehwe, Dieter and Mirowski, Philip (eds.), The Road from Mont Pèlerin. The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press), 305–46.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Malgosia, ‘Badinter Commission (for the Former Yugoslavia)’, in Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law, http://opil.ouplaw.com/view/10.1093/law:epil/9780199231690/law-9780199231690-e13.Google Scholar
Fónai, Imre, ‘Épp kitört az új migránspánik, mire kiderült: “csak” venezuelai magyarok költöztek a balatonőszödi üdülőbe’, Magyar Narancs, 13 April 2018, https://magyarnarancs.hu/kismagyarorszag/epp-kitort-az-ujabb-migranspanik-mire-kiderult-csak-venezuelai-magyarok-koltoztek-a-balatonoszodi-udulobe-110578.Google Scholar
Foot, Rosemary, ‘The Cold War and Human Rights’, in Leffler, Melvyn and Westad, Odd Arne (eds.), The Cambridge History of the Cold War. Volume III Endings (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 445–65.Google Scholar
Forlenza, Rosario, ‘The Politics of the Abendland: Christian Democracy and the Idea of Europe after the Second World War’, Contemporary European History, 26/2 (2017), 261–86.Google Scholar
Fowkes, Ben and Gökay, Bülent, ‘Unholy Alliance: Muslims and Communists – An Introduction’, Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 25/1 (2009), 131.Google Scholar
Frank, Andre Gunder Crisis: In the World Economy (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1980).Google Scholar
Frank, Andre Gunder, ‘Long Live Transideological Enterprise! The Socialist Economies in the Capitalist International Division of Labor and West-East-South Economic Relations’, Review (Fernand Braudel Center), 1/1 (1977), 91140.Google Scholar
Frank, Andre Gunder, ‘No Escape from the Laws of World Economics’, Review of African Political Economy, 18/50 (1991), 2132.Google Scholar
Frank, Andre Gunder, ‘Nothing New in the East: No New World Order’, Social Justice, 19/1 (1992), 3459.Google Scholar
Fraser, Nancy, ‘Postcommunist Democratic Socialism?’, in Katsiaficas, George (ed.), After the Fall: 1989 and the Future of Freedom (London: Routledge, 2001), 200202.Google Scholar
Freizer, Sabine, ‘Central Asian Fragmented Civil Society: Communal and Neoliberal Forms in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan’, in Glasius, Marlies, Lewis, David, and Seckinelgin, Hakan (eds.), Exploring Civil Society: Political and Cultural Contexts (Abingdon: Routledge, 2011), 130–40.Google Scholar
Frings, Viviane, ‘Cambodia after Decollectivisation (1989–1992)’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, 24/1 (1994), 4966.Google Scholar
Fröberg Idling, Peter, Pol Pots leende (Skönlitterär dokumentär, Atlas Förlag, 2006).Google Scholar
Fukuyama, Francis, The End of History and the Last Man (New York: Penguin, 2012).Google Scholar
Gabowitsch, Mischa, Protest in Putin’s Russia (Cambridge: Polity, 2017).Google Scholar
Gagnon, Chip, The Myth of Ethnic War (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Gagyi, Ágnes, ‘The Non-post-communist Left in Hungary after 1989: Diverging Paths of Leftist Criticism, Civil Activism, and Radicalizing Constituency’, in Kopeček, Michal and Wciślik, Piotr (eds.), Thinking through Transition: Liberal Democracy, Authoritarian Pasts, and Intellectual History in East Central Europe after 1989 (Budapest: Central European Univrsity Press, 2015), 335–70.Google Scholar
Gaidar, Yegor, Days of Defeat and Victory (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Gaidar, Yegor, Gibel’ Imperii: Uroki Dlja Sovremennoj Rossii (Moskva: Rosspen, 2006).Google Scholar
Gallagher, Tom, Theft of a Nation: Romania since Communism (London: Hurst, 2006).Google Scholar
Ganev, Venelin I., Preying on the State. The Transformation of Bulgaria after 1989 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Ganev, Venelin I., ‘“Soft Decisionism” in Bulgaria’, Journal of Democracy, 29/3 (2018), 91103.Google Scholar
Garavini, Giuliano, After Empires: European Integration, Decolonisation, and the Challenge from the Global South, 1957–1986 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Garba, Joseph N., ‘Changing East-West Relations and Their Implications for Africa’ (lecture, Carter Center, Atlanta, GA, 9 April 1990).Google Scholar
Garver, John W., China’s Quest: The History of the Foreign Relations of the People’s Republic of China (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Ge, Liu, Theoretical Literacy of the Top Leaders of the CPSU and the Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union (Seattle: Current Affairs Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Georgiadis, George, ‘“Differentiation by Design” as a Determinant of Convergence: Comparing Early EU Selection Policies in Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States’, Southeast European and Black Sea Studies, 8/4 (2008), 399429.Google Scholar
Germuska, Pál, ‘Failed Eastern Integration and a Partly Successful Opening Up to the West: The Economic Re-orientation of Hungary during the 1970s’, European Review of History, 21/2 (2014), 271–91.Google Scholar
Gewirtz, Julian, Unlikely Partners. Chinese Reformers, Western Economists, and the Making of Global China (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Ghellab, Grazia Scarfò, de Saint Martin, Monique, and Mellakh, Kamal (eds.), Étudier à l’Est. Expériences de diplômés africains (Paris: Karthala, 2015).Google Scholar
Ghodsee, Kristen, Muslim Lives in Eastern Europe: Gender, Ethnicity, and the Transformation of Islam in Postsocialist Bulgaria (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Gigova, Irina, ‘The Feeble Charm of National(ist) Communism: Intellectuals and Cultural Politics in Zhivkov’s Bulgaria’, in Dragostinova, Theodora and Hashamova, Yana (eds.), Beyond Mosque, Church, and State: Alternative Narratives of the Nation in the Balkans (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2016), 151–77.Google Scholar
Gille, Zsuzsa, ‘Is There a Global Postsocialist Condition?’, Global Society, 24/1 (2010), 930.Google Scholar
Gilley, Bruce, ‘Deng Xiaoping and His Successors’, in Joseph, William (ed.), Politics in China: An Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), 103–25.Google Scholar
Gills, Barry and Rocamora, Joel, ‘Low Intensity Democracy’, Third World Quarterly¸ 13/3 (1992), 501–23.Google Scholar
Gills, Barry, Rocamora, Joel, and Wilson, Richard (eds.), Low Intensity Democracy: Political Power in the New World Order (London: Pluto Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Gilman, Nils, ‘The New International Economic Order: A Reintroduction’, Humanity, 6/1 (2015), 116.Google Scholar
Girvan, Norman, ‘Economic Nationalists v. Multinational Corporations: Revolutionary or Evolutionary Change?’, in Widstrand, Carl (ed.), Multinational Firms in Africa (Dakar/Uppsala: African Institute for Economic Development and Planning/Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, 1975), 2556.Google Scholar
Glaurdić, Josip, The Hour of Europe: Western Powers and the Breakup of Yugoslavia (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Glenny, Misha, McMafia (London: Vintage, 2009).Google Scholar
Gnoinska, Margaret, ‘“Socialist Friends Should Help Each Other in Crises”: Sino-Polish Relations within the Cold War Dynamics, 1980–1987’, Cold War History, 17/2 (2017), 143–59.Google Scholar
Godehardt, Nadine, ‘Constructing Global Connectivity: The European Politics of China’s Belt & Road Initiative’ (paper presented at Eastern Europe – Global Area – Annual Conference of GWZO and EEGA, University of Leipzig, July 2018).Google Scholar
Godehardt, Nadine, ‘No End of History: A Chinese Alternative Concept of International Order?’ (Berlin: Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik Research Paper, 2/2016), https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-461135.Google Scholar
Gorbatschow, Michail, Erinnerungen (Berlin: Siedler, 1995).Google Scholar
Gorbatschow, Michail, Perestroika. Die zweite Russische Revolution (München: Droemer Knaur, 1987).Google Scholar
Gorz, André, Le socialisme difficile (Paris: Seuil, 1967).Google Scholar
‘Gotovina et al. (IT-06–90)’, ICTY, www.icty.org/en/case/gotovina/4.Google Scholar
Gowan, Peter, ‘Neo-liberal Theory and Practice for Eastern Europe’, New Left Review, 213/1 (1995), 360.Google Scholar
Graff, Agnieszka, ‘Report from the Gender Trenches: War against “Genderism” in Poland’, European Journal of Women’s Studies, 21/4 (2014), 431–42.Google Scholar
Graff, Agnieszka and Korolczuk, Elżbieta, ‘“Worse Than Communism and Nazism Put Together”: War on Gender in Poland’, in Kuhar, Roman and Paternotte, David (eds.), Anti-gender Campaigns in Europe: Mobilizing Against Equality (New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2017), 175–94.Google Scholar
Grandin, Greg, ‘The Instruction of Great Catastrophe: Truth Commissions, National History, and State Formation in Argentina, Chile, and Guatemala’, American Historical Review, 110/1 (2005), 4667.Google Scholar
Greskovits, Béla, ‘The Hollowing and Backsliding of Democracy in East Central Europe’, Global Policy, 6/Supplement 1 (2015), 2837.Google Scholar
Greskovits, Bela, ‘Rebuilding the Hungarian Right through Civil Organisation and Contention: The Civic Circles Movement’ (EUI Working Paper RSCAS 37, 2017).Google Scholar
Grilli, Enzo R., The European Community and the Developing Countries (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Grosescu, Raluca, Les communistes dans l’après communisme: Trajectoires de conversion politique de la nomenklatura roumaine après 1989 (Paris: Michel Houdiard Éditeur, 2012).Google Scholar
Grote, Inga, ‘Donald Rumsfeld’s Old and New Europe and the United States’ Strategy to Destabilize the European Union’, Rivista di Studi Politici Internazionali, 74/3 (2007), 347–56.Google Scholar
Grudzińska-Gross, Irena, ‘The Backsliding’, East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 28/4 (2014), 664–68.Google Scholar
Grupinski, Rafal, ‘Schwierigkeiten mit der Mitte Europas’, in Burmeister, Hans-Peter et al. (eds.), Mitteleuropa—Traum oder Trauma? (Bremen: Edition Temmen, 1988), 5164.Google Scholar
Grzybowski, K., ‘Socialist Countries in GATT’, American Journal of Comparative Law, 4 (1980), 539–54.Google Scholar
Guihai, Guan, ‘The Influence of the Collapse of the Soviet Union on China’s Political Choices’, in Bernstein, Thomas and Li, Hua-Yu (eds.), China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949–Present (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2010), 505–16.Google Scholar
Guilhot, Nicolas, The Democracy Makers: Human Rights and International Order (New York: Columbia University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Guilhot, Nicolas, ‘A Network of Influential Friendships: The Fondation Pour Une Entraide Intellectuelle Européenne and East–West Cultural Dialogue, 1957–1991’, Minerva, 44 (2006), 379409.Google Scholar
Guilhot, Nicolas, ‘Une vocation philanthropique: George Soros, les sciences sociales et la régulation du marché mondial’, Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales, 151–152/1 (2004), 3648.Google Scholar
Gunder Frank, André, ‘Long Live Transideological Enterprise! The Socialist Economies in the Capitalist International Division of Labor and West-East-South Economic Relations’, Review (Fernand Braudel Center), 1/1 (1977), 91140.Google Scholar
Gutman, Patrick, ‘Tripartite Industrial Cooperation and Third Countries’, in Saunders, Christopher T. (ed.), East-West-South: Economic Interactions between Three Worlds (London: Macmillan, 1981), 337–64.Google Scholar
Gvishiani, D., Organisation and Management. A Sociological Analysis of Western Theories (Moscow: Progress, 1972).Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen, ‘What Does Socialism Mean Today? The Rectifying Revolution and the Need for New Thinking on the Left’, New Left Review, 183 (1990), 321.Google Scholar
Hall, Richard Andrew, ‘Theories of Collective Action and Revolution: Evidence from the Romanian Transition of December 1989’, Europe-Asia Studies, 52/6 (2000), 1069–93.Google Scholar
Halliday, Fred, ‘Third World Socialism. 1989 and After’, in Lawson, George et al. (eds.), The Global 1989. Continuity and Change in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 112–34.Google Scholar
Hamburg, Roger, ‘Soviet Foreign Policy toward Different Audiences and with Conflicting Premises: The Case of Nicaragua’, Conflict Quarterly, 9/1 (Winter 1989), 519.Google Scholar
Hanley, Eric, ‘Cadre Capitalism in Hungary and Poland. Property Accumulation among Communist-Era Elites’, East European Politics and Societies, 14/1 (1999), 143–78.Google Scholar
Hanley, Seán and Vachudova, Milada Anna, ‘Understanding the Illiberal Turn: Democratic Backsliding in the Czech Republic’, East European Politics, 34/3 (2018), 276–96.Google Scholar
Hansen, Peo and Jonsson, Stefan, Eurafrica: The Untold History of European Integration and Colonialism (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2015).Google Scholar
Hanson, Stephen, ‘Plebiscitarian Patrimonialism in Putin’s Russia’, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 636/1 (2011), 3268.Google Scholar
Harrison, Lawrence E., Underdevelopment Is a State of Mind: the Latin American Case (Cambridge, MA: Center for International Affairs, Harvard University and University Press of America, 1985).Google Scholar
Harvey, David, A Brief History of Neoliberalism (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Hassner, Pierre, ‘L’avenir des alliances en Europe’, Revue française de science politique, 26/6 (1976), 1029–53.Google Scholar
Hassner, Pierre, ‘L’avenir prévisible des deux alliances en Europe’, Le Monde diplomatique, June 1977, 8.Google Scholar
Havel, Václav, “Preface” in Forbrig, Joerg and Demeš, Pavol (eds.), Reclaiming Democracy: Civil Society and Electoral Change in Central and Eastern Europe (Washington DC: German Marshall Fund of the United States, 2007), 78.Google Scholar
Hawk, David, The Hidden Gulag. The Lives and Voices of ‘Those Who Are Sent to the Mountains’ (Washington, DC: US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, 2012).Google Scholar
Hayden, Robert M., Blueprints for a House Divided – The Constitutional Logic of the Yugoslav Conflicts (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Hayek, Friedrich, The Road to Serfdom (London: Routledge 1944).Google Scholar
Hegedüs, Daniel, ‘The Great Orbán-Salvini Hack’, Visegrád Insight, 14 September 2018, https://visegradinsight.eu/the-great-orban-salvini-hack/.Google Scholar
Heimann, Mary, Czechoslovakia: The State That Failed (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Helleiner, G. K., The IMF and Africa in the 1980s: Essays in International Finance (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Hibbing, John and Patterson, Samuel, ‘A Democratic Legislature in the Making the Historic Hungarian Elections of 1990’, Comparative Political Studies, 24/2 (1992), 430–54.Google Scholar
Hidalgo, Ariel, Disidencia. Segunda revolución cubana? (Miami: Ediciones Universal, 1994).Google Scholar
Hîncu, Adela, ‘Managing Culture, Locating Consent: The Sociology of Mass Culture in Socialist Romania, 1960s–1970s’, Revista Română de Sociologie, 1–2 (2017), 314.Google Scholar
Hirschhausen, Ulrike v. and Patel, Klaus Kiran, ‘Europeanisation in History: An Introduction’, in Conway, Martin and Patel, Klaus Kiran (eds.), Europeanisation in the Twentieth Century. Historical Approaches (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), 118.Google Scholar
Hockenos, Paul, Homeland Calling: Exile Patriotism & the Balkan Wars (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Hockenos, Paul and Hunter, Jane, ‘Pretoria Gold’, Australian Left Review, 1/121 (1990), 1619.Google Scholar
Hoffman, David E., The Oligarchs. Wealth and Power in the New Russia (New York: Public Affairs, 2002).Google Scholar
Högselius, Per, Red Gas: Russia and the Origins of European Energy Dependence (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).Google Scholar
Holubec, Stanislav, ‘The Formation of the Czech Post-communist Intellectual Left: Twenty Years of Seeking an Identity’, in Kopeček, Michal and Wciślik, Piotr (eds.), Thinking through Transition: Liberal Democracy, Authoritarian Pasts, and Intellectual History in East Central Europe after 1989 (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2015), 397430.Google Scholar
Hook, Steven, ‘Inconsistent US Efforts to Promote Democracy Abroad’, in Schraeder, Peter (ed.), Exporting Democracy: Rhetoric vs. Reality (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 2002), 109–28.Google Scholar
Horvath, Robert, ‘“The Solzhenitsyn Effect”: East European Dissidents and the Demise of the Revolutionary Privilege’, Human Rights Quarterly, 29/4 (2007), 879907.Google Scholar
Hosking, Geoffrey, Rulers and Victims: The Russians in the Soviet Union (Cambridge, MA: Belknap, 2006).Google Scholar
Hough, Jerry, ‘The Evolving Soviet Debate on Latin America’, Latin American Research Review, 16/1 (1981), 124143.Google Scholar
Hudáková, Zuzana, ‘Czech/o/Slovak Democracy: 30 Years in the Making’, Eurozine, 20 April 2018, www.eurozine.com/czechoslovak-democracy-30-years-making/.Google Scholar
Huntington, Samuel, The Clash of Civilizations (New York: Simon & Shuster, 1996).Google Scholar
Huntington, Samuel, The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Husarka, Anna, ‘Los derechos humanos’, Vuelta, 168 (1990), 6162.Google Scholar
Hutchful, Eboe, ‘Eastern Europe: Consequences for Africa’, Review of African Political Economy, 18/50 (1991), 5159.Google Scholar
Huysmans, Jef, ‘The European Union and the Securitisation of Migration’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 38/5 (December 2000), 751–77.Google Scholar
Iacob, Bogdan C., ‘Balkan Counter-circulation: Internationalizing Area Studies from the Periphery during the Cold War’, in Middell, Matthias (ed.), Handbook of Transregional Studies (London: Routledge, 2018), 2937.Google Scholar
Iacob, Bogdan C., ‘South-East by Global South: The Balkans, UNESCO and the Cold War’, in Mark, James, Kalinovsky, Artemy, and Marung, Steffi (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Iacob, Bogdan C., ‘Together but Apart: Balkan Historians, the Global South, and UNESCO’s History of Humanity 1978–1989’, East Central Europe, 45/2–3 (2018), 245–78.Google Scholar
Iacob, Bogdan C., ‘Transition to What and Whose Democracy? 1990 in Bulgaria and Romania’, in von Puttkamer, Joachim and Borodziej, Włodzimierz (eds.), From Revolution to Uncertainty: The Year 1990 in Central and Eastern Europe (London: Routledge, 2019), 117–41.Google Scholar
Iliescu, Ion, Revoluție și reformă (București: Editura Enciclopedică, 1994).Google Scholar
Imre, Anikó, ‘Whiteness in Post-socialist Eastern Europe: The Time of the Gypsies, the End of Race’, in Lopez, Alfred J. (ed.), Postcolonial Whiteness: A Critical Reader on Race and Empire (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2005), 79102.Google Scholar
Ingrao, Charles W. and Emmert, Thomas Allan (eds.), Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies: A Scholars’ Initiative (West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
‘Interview with Gergely Prőhle, Former Ambassador of Hungary in Berlin’, Körber Stiftung, May 2018, www.koerber-stiftung.de/en/topics/the-value-of-europe/contributions-2018/interview-proehle.Google Scholar
Iriye, Akira, Goedde, Petra, and Hitchcock, William, The Human Rights Revolution: An International History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Irwin, Douglas I., ‘The Nixon Shock after Forty Years: The Import Surcharge Revisited’, World Trade Review, 12/1 (2013), 2956.Google Scholar
Irwin, Zachary T., ‘The Fate of Islam in the Balkans: A Comparison of Four State Policies’, in Ramet, Pedro (ed.), Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1989), 378409.Google Scholar
Isaac, Jeffrey, ‘The Meanings of 1989’, Social Research, 63/2 (1996), 291344.Google Scholar
I se spunea Machiavelli. Ştefan Andre în dialog cu Lavinia Betea (Bucureşti: Adevărul, 2011).Google Scholar
Izetbegović, Alija, The Islamic Declaration: A Programme for the Islamisation of Muslims and the Muslim Peoples (Sarajevo, 1990), www.angelfire.com/dc/mbooks/Alija-Izetbegovic-Islamic-Declaration-1990-Azam-dot-com.pdf.Google Scholar
Izumi, Hajime, ‘North Korea and the Changes in Eastern Europe’, Korean Studies 16 (1992), 112.Google Scholar
Jacoby, Wade and Korkut, Umut, ‘Vulnerability and Economic Re-orientation: Rhetoric and in Reality in Hungary’s “Chinese Opening”’, East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 30/3 (2016), 496518.Google Scholar
Jakubowski, Jerzy, Przedsiebiorstwa w Handlu Miedzynarodowym. Problematyka prawna (Warsaw, 1970).Google Scholar
James, Harold, International Monetary Cooperation since Bretton Woods (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Jansen, Hanna, ‘Internationalizing the Thaw: Soviet Orientalists and the Contested Politics of Spiritual Solidarity in Asia 1954–1959’, in Mark, James, Kalinovsky, Artemy, and Marung, Steffi (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Jarausch, Konrad H., ‘People Power? Towards a Historical Explanation of 1989’, in Tismaneanu, Vladimir and Iacob, Bogdan C. (eds.), The Revolutions of 1989 and the Resurgence of History (Budapest: Central European Press, 2012), 109–25.Google Scholar
Jarausch, Konrad H., The Rush to German Unity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Jasińska-Kania, Aleksandra, ‘National Stereotypes and Economic Cooperation: Images of Korea in Poland’ (paper presented at ‘Korean and Korean Business Interests in Central Europe and CIS Countries’, Seoul National University, August 1997).Google Scholar
Jeffery, Renée, Transitions to Democracy: Amnesties, Accountability, and Human Rights (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Jelzin, Boris, Mitternachtstagebuch. Meine Jahre im Kreml (Berlin: Propyläen Verlag, 2000).Google Scholar
Jensen, Steven L. B., The Making of International Human Rights: The 1960s, Decolonization, and the Reconstruction of Global Values (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Jones, Sara, ‘Cross-border Collaboration and the Construction of Memory Narratives in Europe’, in Andersen, Tea Sindbæk and Törnquist-Plewa, Barbara (eds.), The Twentieth Century in European Memory: Transcultural Mediation and Reception (Leiden: Brill, 2017), 2755.Google Scholar
Jović, Dejan, Yugoslavia: A State That Withered Away (West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Junes, Tom, ‘Students Take Bulgaria’s Protests to the Next Level. Can They Break the Political Stalemate?’, Tr@nsit Online (2013), www.iwm.at/read-listen-watch/transit-online/students-take-bulgarias-protests-to-the-next-level-why-the-student-protests-could-break-the-political-stalemate/.Google Scholar
Jurkat, Kathrin, ‘“I’m both a Worker and a Shareholder”. Workers’ Narratives and Property Transformations, Continuity and Change in Post-socialist Bosnia and Serbia’, Südosteuropa, 4 (2017), 654–78.Google Scholar
Kádár, János, A fejlett szocialista társadalom építésének utján (Budapest: Kossuth, 1975).Google Scholar
Kagarlitsky, Boris, The Disintegration of the Monolith (London: Verso, 1992).Google Scholar
Kaldor, Mary, Holden, Gerard, and Falk, Richard A. (eds.), The New Detente: Rethinking East-West Relations (London: Verso, 1989).Google Scholar
Kalinovsky, Artemy, Laboratory of Socialist Development: Cold War Politics and Decolonization in Soviet Tajikistan (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Kalinovsky, Artemy, ‘Writing the Soviet South’, in Mark, James, Kalinovsky, Artemy, and Marung, Steffi (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Kalmar, Ivan, ‘Islamophobia in the East of the European Union: An Introduction’, Patterns of Prejudice, 52/5 (2018), 389405.Google Scholar
Kamusella, Tomasz, ‘Central Europe in the Distorting Mirror of Maps, Languages and Ideas’, Polish Review, 57/1 (2012), 3394.Google Scholar
Kansikas, Suvi, ‘Acknowledging Economic Realities. The CMEA Policy Change vis-à-vis the European Community 1970–3’, European Review of History, 21/2 (2014), 311–28.Google Scholar
Kanyinga, Karuti, ‘Limitations of Political Liberalisation: Parties and Electoral Politics in Kenya’, in Oyugi, Walter, Wanyande, Peter, and Odhiambo-Mbai, C. (eds.), The Politics of Transition in Kenya: From Kanu to NARC (Nairobi: Heinrich Böll Foundation, 2003), 96127.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Robert, Balkan Ghosts (New York: Piacador, 1993).Google Scholar
Kapuściński, Ryszard, Emperor: Downfall of an Autocrat (London: Quartet Books, 1983).Google Scholar
Kapuściński, Ryszard, Imperium (Warszawa: Czytelnik, 1993).Google Scholar
Karčić, Harun, ‘Globalisation and Islam in Bosnia: Foreign Influences and Their Effects’, Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions, 11/2 (2010), 151–66.Google Scholar
Karkova, Nikolay R. and Valiavicharska, Zhivka, ‘Rethinking East-European Socialism: Notes toward an Anticapitalist Decolonial Methodology’, Interventions, 20/6 (2018), 785813.Google Scholar
Katsakioris, Constantin, ‘Soviet Lessons for Arab Modernisation: Soviet Educational Aid to Arab Countries after 1956’, Journal of Modern European History, 8/1 (2010), 85106.Google Scholar
Katzenstein, Peter and Weygandt, Nicole, ‘Mapping Eurasia in an Open World: How the Insularity of Russia’s Geopolitical and Civilisational Approaches Limits Its Foreign Policies’, Perspectives on Politics, 15/2 (2017), 428–54.Google Scholar
Kaufman Purcell, Susan, ‘Cuba’s Cloudy Future’, Foreign Affairs, 69/3 (Summer 1990), 113–30.Google Scholar
Kázecký, Stanislav, ‘La oposición interna en Cuba desde el triunfo de la Revolución en 1959 hasta 2006’ (PhD diss., Univerzita Karlova v Praze, 2007).Google Scholar
Keber, Dušan, ‘Čigava je obletnica JBTZ?’, Mladina 22, 31 May 2013, www.mladina.si/144718/cigava-je-obletnica-jbtz/.Google Scholar
Keck-Szajbel, Mark, ‘The Politics of Travel and the Creation of a European Society’, Global Society, 24 (2010), 3150.Google Scholar
Kelertas, Violeta (ed.), Baltic Postcolonialism (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2006).Google Scholar
Kemper, Michael, ‘Propaganda for the East, Scholarship for the West. Soviet Strategies at the 1960 International Congress of Orientalists in Moscow’, in Kalinovsky, Artemy and Kemper, Martin (eds.), Reassessing Orientalism: Interlocking Orientologies during the Cold War (London: Routledge, 2015), 170210.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Paul, The Spanish Socialist Party and the Modernisation of Spain (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Kenney, Padraic, The Burdens of Freedom: Eastern Europe since 1989 (London: Zed Books, 2006).Google Scholar
Kenney, Padraic, A Carnival of Revolution. Central Europe 1989 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Kenney, Padraic, ‘Electromagnetic Forces and Radio Waves or Does Transnational History Really Happen?’, in Brier, Robert (ed.), Entangled Protest: Transnational Approaches to the History of Dissent in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union (Osnabrück: Fibre, 2013), 4352.Google Scholar
Kentikelenis, Alexander and Babb, Sarah, ‘The Making of Global Neoliberalism: Norm Substitution and the Clandestine Politics of International Institutional Change’ (paper presented at ‘Global Neoliberalisms: Lost and Found in Translation’, British Academy, 7 June 2018).Google Scholar
Kepel, Gilles, Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Keys, Barbara, Reclaiming American Virtue: The Human Rights Revolution of the 1970s (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Kilibarda, Konstantin, ‘Non-aligned Geographies in the Balkans: Space, Race and Image in the Construction of New “European” Foreign Policies’, in Kumar, Abhinava and Maisonville, Derek (eds.), Security beyond the Discipline: Emerging Dialogues on Global Politics (Toronto: York Centre for International and Security Studies, 2010), 2757.Google Scholar
Kisić-Kolanović, Nada, ‘Envisioning the “Other” East: Bosnia-Herzegovina, Muslims, and Modernisation in the Ustaša State’, in Yeomans, Rory (ed.), The Utopia of Terror: Life and Death in Wartime Croatia (Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2015), 188216.Google Scholar
Kitchen, J. Coleman and Paddack, Jean-Paul, ‘The 1990 Franco-African Summit’, CSIS Africa Notes, no. 115 (30 August 1990), https://csis-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/legacy_files/files/publication/anotes_0890.pdf.Google Scholar
Klee, Hans-Dieter, Changes in Germany and Eastern Europe – Implications for Africa? (Berlin: Deutsche Afrika-Stiftung, 1990).Google Scholar
Klein, Naomi, The Shock Doctrine. The Rise of Disaster Capitalism (London: Penguin, 2007).Google Scholar
Klimó, Árpád, Hungary since 1945 (London: Routledge, 2018).Google Scholar
Koch, Alfred and Aven, Petr, Gaidar’s Revolution: The Inside Account of the Economic Transformation of Russia (New York: I.B. Tauris, 2015).Google Scholar
Koenen, Gerd, Das Rote Jahrzehnt. Unsere Kleine Deutsche Kulturrevolution, 1967–1977 (Köln: Kiepenheuer & Witsch, 2001).Google Scholar
Köhler, Volkmar, ‘European House or Third World: Are We Forgetting Development Policy?’ in Kirdar, Üner (ed.), Change: Threat or Opportunity for Human Progress, vol. 1 (New York: United Nations Publications, 1992), 212–24.Google Scholar
Kola, Adam, ‘A Prehistory of Postcolonialism in Socialist Poland’, in Mark, James, Kalinovsky, Artemy, and Marung, Steffi (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Kołodziejczyk, Dorota and Şandru, Cristina, ‘Introduction: On Colonialism, Communism and East-Central Europe – Some Reflections’, Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 48/2 (2012), 113–16.Google Scholar
Kølvraa, Christoffer, ‘Limits of Attraction: The EU’s Eastern Border and the European Neighbourhood Policy’, East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 31/1 (2017), 1125.Google Scholar
Kopátsy, Sándor, ‘A magyar privatizácio sajátos vonásai’, Mozgó Világ, 1 (1993), 2328.Google Scholar
Kopátsy, Sándor, ‘Új világrend felé. Vissza és előre ötven évet’, Társadalmi Szemle, 5 (1992), 1323.Google Scholar
Kopeček, Michal (ed.), Expertní kořeny postsocialismu: Československo sedmdesátých až devadesátých let (Prague: Argo, 2019).Google Scholar
Kopeček, Michal, ‘From Scientific Social Management to Neoliberal Governmentality? Czechoslovak Sociology and Social Research on the Way from Authoritarianism to Liberal Democracy, 1969–1989’, Stan Rzeczy, 13 (2017), 171–96.Google Scholar
Kopeček, Michal, ‘Human Rights Facing a National Past. Dissident “Civic Patriotism” and the Return of History in East Central Europe, 1968–1989’, Geschichte und Gesellschaft, 38/4 (2012), 573602.Google Scholar
Kopeček, Michal, ‘The Socialist Conception of Human Rights and Its Dissident Critique. East Central Europe 1960s–1980s’, East Central Europe (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Kopeček, Michal, ‘Sovereignty, “Return to Europe” and Democratic Distrust in the East after 1989 in the Light of Brexit’, Central European History, 28/1 (2019), 7376.Google Scholar
Kornai, János, By Force of Thought. Irregular Memoirs of an Intellectual Journey (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Kornai, János, The Road to a Free Economy. Shifting from a Socialist System (New York: Norton, 1990).Google Scholar
Kornetis, Kostis, ‘Introduction: The End of a Parable? Unsettling the Transitology Model in the Age of Crisis’, Historein, 15/1 (2015), 512.Google Scholar
Korosteleva, Elena, ‘Eastern Partnership and the Eurasian Union: Bringing “the Political” Back in the Eastern Region’, European Politics and Society, 17/Supplement 1 ‘The Eurasian Project in Global Perspective’ (2016), 6781.Google Scholar
Korosteleva, Elena, Casier, Tom, and Whitman, Richard, ‘Building a Stronger Eastern Partnership: Towards an EaP 2.0’ (working paper, Global Europe Centre, University of Kent GEC policy paper, 2014).Google Scholar
Kotkin, Stephen, Armageddon Averted: The Soviet Collapse 1970–2000 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Kotkin, Stephen, ‘The Kiss of Debt. The East Bloc Goes Borrowing’, in Ferguson, Niall et al. (eds.), Shock of the Global. The 1970s in Perspective (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2010), 8093.Google Scholar
Kotkin, Stephen, Uncivil Society: 1989 and the Implosion of the Communist Establishment (New York: Modern Library 2009).Google Scholar
Kovács, János Mátyás, ‘Importing Spiritual Capital. East-West Encounters and Capitalist Cultures in Eastern Europe after 1989’, in Berger, Peter and Redding, Gordon (eds.), The Hidden Form of Capital. Spiritual Influences in Societal Progress (London: Anthem Press, 2010), 133–69.Google Scholar
Kovács, János Mátyás and Zentai, Violetta, ‘Prologue’, in Kovács, and Zentai, (eds.), Capitalism from Outside? Economic Cultures in Eastern Europe after 1989 (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2012), 114.Google Scholar
Kowalski, Bartosz, ‘China’s Foreign Policy towards Central and Eastern Europe: The 16+1 Format in the South–South Cooperation Perspective. Cases of the Czech Republic and Hungary’, Cambridge Journal of Eurasian Studies, 1 (2017), www.veruscript.com/CJES/publications/china-s-foreign-policy-towards-the-cee-countries/?journalSlug=cambridge-journal-of-eurasian-studies.Google Scholar
Kramer, Mark, ‘The Collapse of East European Communism and the Repercussions within the Soviet Union (Part 1)’, Journal of Cold War Studies, 5/4 (2003), 178256.Google Scholar
Kramer, Mark, ‘The Decline in Soviet Arms Transfers to the Third World, 1986–1991’, in Kalinovsky, Artemy and Radchenko, Sergey (eds.), The End of the Cold War and The Third World: New Perspectives on Regional Conflict (Abingdon: Routledge, 2011), 46100.Google Scholar
Kramer, Mark, ‘The Dynamics of Diffusion in the Soviet Bloc and the Impact on Regime Survival’, in Dimitrov, Martin K. (ed.), Why Communism Did Not Collapse. Understanding Authoritarian Regime Resilience in Asia and Europe (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 149–81.Google Scholar
Krapfl, James, Revolution with a Human Face: Politics, Culture, and Community in Czechoslovakia, 1989–1992 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Krastev, Ivan, After Europe (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Krastev, Ivan, ‘The Global Politics of Protest’, IWM Post, 113 (Spring/Summer 2014), 34.Google Scholar
Krastev, Ivan, The Inflexibility Trap: Frustrated Societies, Weak States and Democracy (Sofia: Centre for Liberal Strategies, 2002).Google Scholar
Krauze, Enrique, ‘Diario de Praga’, Vuelta 1 (1990), 1721.Google Scholar
Krekó, Péter, ‘The Vote on the Sargentini Report: Good News for Europe, Bad News for Orbán, No News for Hungary’, Heinrich Böll Stiftung, 21 September 2018, https://eu.boell.org/en/2018/09/21/vote-sargentini-report-good-news-europe-bad-news-orban-no-news-hungary.Google Scholar
Krepp, Stella, ‘A View from the South. The Falklands/Malvinas and Latin America’, Journal of Transatlantic Studies, 15/4 (2017), 348–65.Google Scholar
Krzemiński, Ireneusz, ‘Radio Maryja and Fr. Rydzyk as a Creator of the National-Catholic Ideology’, in Ramet, Sabrina and Borowik, Irena (eds.), Religion, Politics, and Values in Poland: Continuity and Change since 1989 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), 85112.Google Scholar
Kudaibergenova, Diana, ‘The Use and Abuse of Postcolonial Discourses in Post-independent Kazakhstan’, Europe-Asia Studies, 68/5 (2016), 917–35.Google Scholar
Kukliński, Antoni, ‘The Geography of New Europe’, GeoJournal, 30/4 (1993), 459–60.Google Scholar
Kuroń, Jacek and Aytoun, Krystyna, ‘Reflections on a Program of Action’, Polish Review, 22/3 (1977), 5169.Google Scholar
Kurspahić, Kemal, Prime Time Crime: Balkan Media in War and Peace (Washington, DC: US Institute of Peace Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Kuus, Merje, ‘Europe’s Eastern Expansion and the Reinscription of Otherness in East-Central Europe’, Progress in Human Geography, 28/4 (2004), 472–89.Google Scholar
Kuus, Merje, Geopolitics Reframed: Security and Identity in Europe’s Eastern Enlargement (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007).Google Scholar
Kuus, Merje, ‘“Love, Peace and NATO”: Imperial Subject-Making in Central Europe’, Antipode, 39/2 (2007), 269–90.Google Scholar
Labov, Jessie, ‘A Russian Encounter with the Myth of Central Europe’ (paper presented at ‘Contours of Legitimacy in Central Europe: New Approaches in Graduate Studies’, European Studies Centre, St. Antony’s College, Oxford, 1988).Google Scholar
Laczó, Ferenc, ‘Five Faces of Post-dissident Hungarian Liberalism: A Study in Agendas, Concepts, and Ambiguities’, in Kopeček, Michal and Wciślik, Piotr (eds.), Thinking through Transition: Liberal Democracy, Authoritarian Pasts, and Intellectual History in East Central Europe after 1989 (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2015), 3972.Google Scholar
Laczó, Ferenc and Wawrzyniak, Joanna, ‘Memories of 1989 in Europe between Hope, Dismay, and Neglect’, East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 31/3 (2017), 431–38.Google Scholar
Ladányi, Éva and Rózsa, Erzsébet N., ‘Hungary and the Arab Spring’, 5 August 2014, www.grotius.hu/doc/pub/TKYIUP/2014-08-05_ladanyi_n.rozsa_hungary-and-the-arab-spring.pdf.Google Scholar
Laruelle, Marlène, Russian Eurasianism: An Ideology of Empire (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Laqueur, Walter, Black Hundreds: The Rise of the Extreme Right in Russia (New York: HarperCollins, 1993).Google Scholar
Lavelle, Ashley, The Death of Social Democracy. Political Consequences in the 21st Century (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008).Google Scholar
Lebow, Katherine, Mazurek, Małgorzata, and Wawrzyniak, Joanna, ‘Making Modern Social Science: The Global Imagination in East Central and Southeastern Europe after Versailles’, Contemporary European History, 28/2 (2019), 137–42.Google Scholar
Lee, Hy-Sang, ‘North Korea’s Closed Economy. The Hidden Opening’, Asian Survey, 28/12 (1988), 1264–79.Google Scholar
Leffler, Melvyn, ‘Dreams of Freedom, Temptations of Power’, in Engel, Jeffrey (ed.), The Fall of the Berlin Wall: The Revolutionary Legacy of 1989 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 132–61.Google Scholar
‘Le fossé démographique se creuse entre l’est et l’ouest de l’Europe’, Le Vif, 22 June 2018, www.levif.be/actualite/international/le-fosse-demographique-se-creuse-entre-l-est-et-l-ouest-de-l-europe/article-normal-857547.html.Google Scholar
Lehmann, Maike, ‘Apricot Socialism: The National Past, the Soviet Project, and the Imagining of Community in Late Soviet Armenia’, Slavic Review, 74/1 (2015), 931.Google Scholar
Leonov, N., Fediakova, E., and Fermandois, J., ‘El general Nikolai Leonov en el CEP’, Estudios Públicos 73 (1999), 65102.Google Scholar
Lepenies, Wolf, The Seduction of Culture in German History (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
‘“Letter of Six,” Making the History of 1989: Primary Sources’, https://chnm.gmu.edu/1989/items/show/698.Google Scholar
Lévesque, Jacques, The Enigma of 1989: The USSR and the Liberation of Eastern Europe (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Li, Peng, Liu si ri ji zhen xiang (Xianggang: Ao ya chu ban you xian gong si, 2010).Google Scholar
Liebich, André, ‘Central Europe and the Refugees’, Tr@nsit Online, 2 November 2015, www.iwm.at/read-listen-watch/transit-online/central-europe-refugees/.Google Scholar
Linz, Juan and Stepan, Alfred, Democratic Transitions and Consolidation: Eastern Europe, Southern Europe and Latin America (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Łodziński, Sławomir, ‘Foreigners in Poland. Selected Issues in Poland’s Migrational Policy 1989–1998’, Polish Sociological Review, 126 (1999), 301–21.Google Scholar
London, Jonathan, ‘Vietnam and the Making of Market-Leninism’, Pacific Review, 22/3 (2009), 375–99.Google Scholar
Lorenzini, Sara, ‘Comecon and the South in the Years of Détente: A Study on East–South Economic Relations’, European Review of History, 21/2 (2014), 183–99.Google Scholar
Lorenzini, Sara, ‘Globalising Ostpolitik’, Cold War History, 9/2 (2009), 223–42.Google Scholar
Loth, Wilfred, Building Europe: A History of European Unification (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2015).Google Scholar
Loxley, John, ‘The IMF, the World Bank and Sub-Saharan Africa: Policies and Politics’, in Havenik, Kjell J. (ed.), The IMF and the World Bank in Africa. Conditionality, Impact and Alternatives (Uppsala: Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, 1987), 4763.Google Scholar
Lucic, Iva, In Namen der Nation: Der politische Aufwertungsprozess der Muslime im sozialistischen Jugoslawien 1956–1971 (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2018).Google Scholar
Ludlow, Piers (ed.), European Integration and the Cold War Ostpolitik–Westpolitik, 1965–1973 (London: Routledge, 2007).Google Scholar
Luif, Paul, ‘Embargoes in East-West Trade and the European Neutrals: The Case of Austria’, Current Research on Peace and Violence, 7/4 (1984), 221–28.Google Scholar
Ma, Shaohua, Dongou [Eastern Europe] 1989–1993 (Xi’an: Sha’anxi Renmin Jiaoyu Chubanshe, 1993).Google Scholar
Maier, Charles, ‘What Have We Learned’, Contemporary European History, 18/3 (2009), 253–69.Google Scholar
Maier, Valentin, ‘Foreign Students Enrolled in the Medicine and Pharmacy Higher Education in Romania (1975–1989)’, Clujul Medical, 89/2 (2016), 307–12.Google Scholar
Makai, György, Today’s Questions: What Are Arabs Fighting For? (Budapest: Kossuth, 1971).Google Scholar
Maliţa, Mircea, ‘Dimensiunea culturală a noii ordini economice internaţionale’, Revista Comisie Naţionale a RSR pentru UNESCO, 19/1–2 (1977), 2935.Google Scholar
Mälksoo, Lauri, ‘The Soviet Approach to the Right of Peoples to Self-determination: Russia’s Farewell to jus publicum europaeum’, Journal of the History of International Law, 19/2 (2017), 200218.Google Scholar
Mälksoo, Maria, ‘Criminalizing Communism: Transnational Mnemopolitics in Europe’, International Political Sociology, 8/1 (2014), 8299.Google Scholar
Mälksoo, Maria, The Politics of Becoming European. A Study of Polish and Baltic Post-Cold War Security Imaginaries (London: Routledge, 2010).Google Scholar
Mandela, Nelson and Langa, Mandla, Dare Not Linger: The Presidential Years (London: Macmillan, 2017).Google Scholar
Manela, Erez, The Wilsonian Moment: Self-Determination and the Origins of Anticolonial Nationalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Mann, Michael, The Dark Side of Democracy: Explaining Ethnic Cleansing (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Marchesi, Aldo, Latin America’s Radical Left. Rebellion and Cold War in the Global 1960s (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Mark, James, ‘“The Spanish Analogy”: Imagining the Future in State Socialist Hungary, 1948–1989’, Contemporary European History, 26/4 (2017), 600620.Google Scholar
Mark, James, The Unfinished Revolution. Making Sense of the Communist Past in Central-Eastern Europe (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Mark, James and Apor, Péter, ‘Socialism Goes Global: Decolonisation and the Making of a New Culture of Internationalism in Socialist Hungary, 1956–1989’, Journal of Modern History, 87/4 (2015), 852–91.Google Scholar
Mark, James, Apor, Péter, Vučetić, Radina, and Osęka, Piotr, ‘“We Are with You, Vietnam”: Transnational Solidarities in Socialist Hungary, Poland and Yugoslavia’, Journal of Contemporary History, 50/3 (2015), 439–64.Google Scholar
Mark, James and Feygin, Yakov, ‘The Soviet Union, Eastern Europe and Alternative Visions of a Global Economy 1950s–1980s’, in Mark, James, Kalinovsky, Artemy, and Marung, Steffi (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Mark, James, Kalinovsky, Artemy, and Marung, Steffi (eds.), ‘Introduction – Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World’, in Mark, , Kalinovsky, , and Marung, (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Mark, James, Saunders, Anna, Blaive, Muriel, Hudek, Adam, and Tyszka, Stanislaw, ‘1989 after 1989: Remembering the end of State Socialism in East-Central Europe’, in Kopecek, Michal and Wciślik, Piotr (eds.), Thinking through Transition: Liberal Democracy, Authoritarian Pasts, and Intellectual History in East Central Europe after 1989 (Budapest/New York: Central European Press, 2015), 463503.Google Scholar
Mark, James and Slobodian, Quinn, ‘Eastern Europe in the Global History of Decolonisation’, in Thomas, Martin and Thompson, Andrew (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Ends of Empire (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), 351–72.Google Scholar
Mark, James and Tolmár, Bálint, ‘From Heroes Square to the Textile Factory: Encountering Cuba in Socialist Hungary 1959–1990’ (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Mark, James and von der Goltz, Anna, ‘Encounters’, in Gildea, Robert, Mark, James, and Warring, Anette (eds.), Europe’s 1968: Voices of Revolt (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 132–63.Google Scholar
Marples, David and Mills, Frederick (eds.), Ukraine’s Euromaidan: Analyses of a Civil Revolution (Stuttgart: Ibidem Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Marung, Steffi, Die wandernde Grenze. Die EU, Polen und der globale Wandel politischer Räume, 1990–2010 (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2013).Google Scholar
Marung, Steffi, ‘Moving Borders and Competing Civilizing Missions. Germany, Poland and Ukraine in the Context of the EU’s Eastern Enlargement’, in Silberman, Marc, Till, Karen E., and Ward, Janet (eds.), Walls, Borders, Boundaries Spatial and Cultural Practices in Europe (New York: Berghahn, 2012), 131–51.Google Scholar
Matusevich, Maxim, ‘Probing the Limits of Internationalism: African Students Confront Soviet Ritual’, Anthropology of East Europe Review, 27/2 (2009), 1939.Google Scholar
Matusevich, Maxim, ‘Testing the Limits of Soviet Internationalism. African Students in the Soviet Union’, in Muehlenbeck, Philip E. (ed.), Race, Ethnicity and the Cold War (Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 2012), 145–65.Google Scholar
Maxwell, Kenneth, ‘Portugal’s Revolution of the Carnations, 1974–75’ in Roberts, Adam and Garton-Ash, Timothy (eds.), Civil Resistance and Power Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 144–61.Google Scholar
Mayblin, Lucy, Piekut, Aneta, and Valentine, Gill, “Other” Posts in “Other” Places: Poland through a Postcolonial Lens?Sociology, 50/1 (2016), 6076.Google Scholar
Mazower, Mark, Governing the World: The History of an Idea, 1815 to the Present (New York: Penguin, 2013).Google Scholar
Medvedev, Roy, ‘Politics after the Coup’, New Left Review 189 (1991), 91109.Google Scholar
Meisner, Maurice, The Deng Xiaoping Era. An Inquiry Into the Fate of Chinese Socialism, 1978–1994 (New York: Hill & Wang, 1996).Google Scholar
Melenciu, Sorin, ‘Klaus Iohannis Has Support in Brussels to Become President of the European Council in 2019’, Business Review, 2 March 2018, http://business-review.eu/news/klaus-iohannis-has-support-in-brussels-to-become-President-of-the-european-council-in-2019-media-159807.Google Scholar
Mendelson, Sarah and Glenn, John, The Power and Limits of NGOs: A Critical Look at Building Democracy in Eastern Europe and Eurasia (New York: Columbia University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Menon, Nivedita and Nigam, Aditya, Power and Contestation: India since 1989 (London: Zed Books, 2007).Google Scholar
Mesa-Lago, Carmelo, ‘Efectos económicos en Cuba del derrumbe del socialismo en la Unión Soviética y Europa Oriental’, Estudios Internacionales, 26/103 (1993), 341414.Google Scholar
Michail, Eugene, ‘Western Attitudes to War in the Balkans and the Shifting Meanings of Violence, 1912–91’, Journal of Contemporary History, 47/2 (2012), 219–39.Google Scholar
Michnik, Adam, Letters from Freedom. Post–Cold War Realities and Perspectives (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Michnik, Adam, Letters from Prison and Other Essays (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985).Google Scholar
Migani, Guia, ‘The EEC and the Challenge of ACP States’ Industrialisation, 1972–1975’, in Grabas, Christian and Nützenadel, Alexander (eds.), Industrial Policy in Europe after 1945: Wealth, Power and Economic Development in the Cold War (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), 256–76.Google Scholar
Migani, Guia, ‘Lomé and the North-South Relations (1975–1984): From the “New International Economic Order” to a New Conditionality’, in Hiepel, Claudia (ed.), Europe in a Globalising World: Global Challenges and European Responses in the ‘Long’ 1970s (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2014), 123–45.Google Scholar
Migranjan, A., ‘Avtoritarizm – mechta dlja nas’, Latinskaja Amerika, 1 (1990), 4450.Google Scholar
Mihailović, S., et al., Deca krize: Omladina Jugoslavije krajem osamdesetih (Beograd: Institut društvenih nauka/Centar za politikološka istraživanja i javno mnenje, 1990).Google Scholar
Miller, Brenna, ‘Between Faith and Nation: Defining Bosnian Muslims in Tito’s Yugoslavia, 1945–1980’ (PhD thesis, Ohio State University, 2018).Google Scholar
Miller, Brenna, ‘Faith and Nation: Politicians, Intellectuals and the Official Recognition of a Muslim Nation in Tito’s Yugoslavia’, in Dragostinova, Theodora and Hashamova, Yana (eds.), Beyond Mosque, Church, and State: Alternative Narratives of the Nation in the Balkans (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2016), 129–50.Google Scholar
Miller, Brenna, ‘The Islamic Religious Community in Socialist Yugoslavia’s International Relations Program (1950s and 1960s)’ (paper presented at ‘(Re)thinking Yugoslav Internationalism’, University of Graz, 30 September–1 October 2016).Google Scholar
Miller, Chris, The Struggle to Save the Soviet Economy: Mikhail Gorbachev and the Collapse of the USSR (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Miller, Laurel, Martini, Jeffrey, Larrabee, Stephen, Rabasa, Angel, Pezard, Stephanie, Taylor, Julie, and Mengistu, Tewodaj, Democratisation in the Arab World: Prospects and Lessons from Around the Globe (Santa Monica, CA: Rand Corporation, 2012).Google Scholar
Miller, Nick, ‘Where Was the Serbian Havel?’, in Tismaneanu, Vladimir and Iacob, Bogdan C. (eds.), The End and the Beginning: The Revolutions of 1989 and the Resurgence of History (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2012), 363–79.Google Scholar
Mink, Georges and Szurek, Jean-Charles, La grande conversion: Le destin des communistes en Europe de l’Est (Paris: Seuil, 1999).Google Scholar
Mishkova, Diana, Beyond Balkanism: The Scholarly Politics of Region Making (London: Routledge, 2018).Google Scholar
Mishkova, Diana, Strath, Bo, and Trencsényi, Balázs, ‘Regional History as a “Challenge” to National Frameworks of Historiography: The Case of Central, Southeast, and Northern Europe’, in Middell, Matthias and Roura, Luis (eds.), Transnational Challenges to National History Writing (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 257314.Google Scholar
Mitrevska, Marina and Ruzhin, Nano, ‘Geopolitics of the Western Balkans: An Area of Geopolitical Competition of the Great Powers’, Contemporary Macedonian Defence, 18/34 (2018), 2135.Google Scholar
Mitrochin, Nikolaj, Die ‘Russische Partei’. Die Bewegung der russischen Nationalisten in der UdSSR 1953–1985 (Stuttgart: Ibidem-Verlag, 2014).Google Scholar
Mitrovits, Miklós, ‘From the Idea of Self-Management to Capitalism. The Characteristics of the Polish Transformation Process’, Debatte. Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe 18/2 (2010), 163–84.Google Scholar
Močnik, Rastko, Koliko Fašizma? (Zagreb: Arkzin, 1998).Google Scholar
Modzelewski, Karol, Quelle voie après le communisme? (Paris: Éditions de l’Aube, 1995).Google Scholar
Moeller, Robert, War Stories: The Search for a Usable Past in the Federal Republic of Germany (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Mong, Attila, Kádár hitele. A magyar államadósság története 1956–1990 (Budapest: Libri, 2012).Google Scholar
Morató, Xavier Cuadras (ed.), Catalonia: A New Independent State in Europe? A Debate on Secession within the European Union (London: Routledge, 2016).Google Scholar
Moreh, Chris, ‘The Asianisation of National Fantasies in Hungary: A Critical Analysis of Political Discourse’, International Journal of Cultural Studies, 13 March 2015, http://ics.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/03/12/1367877915573781.refs.Google Scholar
Mortkowitz, Siegfried, ‘Czech President under Fire for Skipping Prague Spring Commemoration’, Politico, 21 August 2018, www.politico.eu/article/Miloš-zeman-skips-prague-spring-commemoration/.Google Scholar
Motes, Mary, Kosova, Kosovo: Prelude to War 1966–1999 (Homestead, FL: Redline, 1999).Google Scholar
Mrożek, Sławomir, ‘To the Deeply Revered United Nations’, reproduced in A Dél-Afrikai Magyar Egyesület Lapja, 4/2 (June 1986), 12.Google Scholar
Mrożek, Sławomir, Ucieczka na poludnie (Warsaw: Iskry, 1961).Google Scholar
Mudde, Cas, ‘Local Shocks. The Far Right in the 2014 European Elections’, Eurozine, 13 March 2015, www.eurozine.com/articles/2015-03-13-mudde-en.html.Google Scholar
Mudde, Cas, ‘The Populist Zeitgeist’, Government and Opposition, 39/3 (2004), 541–63.Google Scholar
Müller, Jan-Werner, ‘Should the EU Protect Democracy and the Rule of Law inside Member States?’, European Law Journal, 21/2 (2015), 141–60.Google Scholar
Müller, Martin, ‘In Search of the Global East: Thinking between North and South’, Geopolitics (2018), www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14650045.2018.1477757.Google Scholar
Murgescu, Bogdan, România și Europa. Acumularea decalajelor economice (1500–2010) (București: Polirom, 2010).Google Scholar
Murgescu, Costin (ed.), Criza economică mondială (București: Editura știintifică, 1986).Google Scholar
Musić, Goran, ‘“They Came as Workers and Left as Serbs”: The Role of Rakovica’s Blue-Collar Workers in Serbian Social Mobilisations of the late 1980s’, in Archer, Rory, Duda, Igor, and Stubbs, Paul (eds.), Social Inequalities and Discontent in Yugoslav Socialism (London: Routledge, 2016), 132–54.Google Scholar
Mustapha, Jennifer, ‘The Mujahideen in Bosnia: The Foreign Fighter as Cosmopolitan Citizen and/or Terrorist’, Citizenship Studies, 17/6–7 (2013), 742–55.Google Scholar
Naughton, , Barry, , Growing Out of the Plan. Chinese Economic Reform 1978–1993 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Nduka-Eze, Fatima, Joe Garba’s Legacy: Thirty-Two Selected Speeches and Lectures (New York: Xlibris Corporation, 2012).Google Scholar
Nekola, Martin, ‘The Assembly of Captive European Nations: A Transnational Organisation and a Tool of Anti-communist Propaganda’, in van Dongen, Luc, Roulin, Stephanie, and Scott-Smith, Giles (eds.), Transnational Anti-communism and the Cold War: Agents, Activities, and Networks (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), 96112.Google Scholar
Neumann, Iver, Russia and the Idea of Europe: A Study in Identity and International Relations (London: Routledge, 1996).Google Scholar
Neumann, Iver, Uses of the Other (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Neumayer, Laure, ‘Advocating for the Cause of the “Victims of Communism” in the European Political Space: Memory Entrepreneurs in Interstitial Fields’, Nationalities Papers, 45/6 (2017), 9921012.Google Scholar
Neumayer, Laure, The Criminalisation of Communism in the European Political Space after the Cold War (New York: Routledge, 2019).Google Scholar
Neumayer, Laure, ‘Integrating the Central European Past into a Common Narrative: The Mobilisations Around the “Crimes of Communism” in the European Parliament’, Journal of Contemporary European Studies, 23/3 (2015), 344–63.Google Scholar
Nifontov, Vadim, ‘Augusto Pinočet i ego rol‘ v russkoj istorii’, 11 December 2006, www.apn.ru/%20publications/article11121.htm.Google Scholar
‘Nikolić poklonio Si Đinpingu fotografiju, danas dobija orden’, N1, 18 June 2016, http://rs.n1info.com/Vesti/a169734/Nikolic-poklonio-Si-Djinpingu-fotografiju.html.Google Scholar
Nunan, Timothy, ‘Getting Reacquainted with the “Muslims of the USSR”: Staging Soviet Islam in Turkey and Iran, 1978–1982’, Ab Imperio, 4 (2011), 133–71.Google Scholar
Nunan, Timothy, Humanitarian Invasion: Global Development in Cold War Afghanistan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Nyíri, Pál, ‘Chinese Migration to Eastern Europe’, International Migration, 41/3 (1/2003), 239–65.Google Scholar
Obadic, Ivan, ‘A Troubled Relationship: Yugoslavia and the European Economic Community in Détente’, European Review of History, 21/2 (2014), 329–48.Google Scholar
Obasanjo, Olusegun and d’Orville, Hans (eds.), The Impact of Europe in 1992 on West Africa (New York: C. Russak, 1990).Google Scholar
O’Donnell, Guillermo and Schmitter, Philippe (eds.), Transitions from Authoritarianism: Comparative Perspectives (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986).Google Scholar
Oh, Kong Dan, ‘North Korea in 1989. Touched by Winds of Change?’, Asian Survey, 30/1 (1990), 7480.Google Scholar
Ojo, Oladeji, ‘Introduction’, in Ojo, (ed.), Africa and Europe. The Changing Economic Relationship (London: Zed Books, 1996), 19.Google Scholar
Ojo, Oladeji and Stevens, Christopher, ‘Recent Changes in the Former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe: Opportunities and Challenges for Africa’, in Ojo, Oladeji (ed.), Africa and Europe. The Changing Economic Relationship (London: Zed Books, 1996), 141142.Google Scholar
Olsen, Gorm, ‘The European Union: An Ad Hoc Policy with a Low Priority’, in Schraeder, Peter (ed.), Exporting Democracy: Rhetoric vs. Reality (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 2002), 131–46.Google Scholar
Omerika, Armina, ‘Competing National Orientalisms: The Cases of Belgrade and Sarajevo’, in Kalinovsky, Artemy and Kemper, Martin, Reassessing Orientalism: Interlocking Orientologies during the Cold War (New York: Routledge, 2015), 153–69.Google Scholar
‘Opyt Latinskoj Ameriki – na sluzhbu Rossii’, Latinskaja Amerika 7/12 (1993).Google Scholar
‘The Orbán Regime Feels Threatened by Gender Studies’, Hungarian Spectrum, 10 August 2018, http://hungarianspectrum.org/2018/08/10/the-orban-regime-feels-threatened-by-gender-studies/.Google Scholar
Osiatynski, Wiktor, ‘Revolutions in Eastern Europe’, University of Chicago Law Review, 58/2 (1991), 823–58.Google Scholar
Ost, David, ‘The Consequences of Postcommunism. Trade Unions in Eastern Europe’s Future’, East European Politics and Societies, 23/1 (2009), 1419.Google Scholar
Ost, David, Defeat of Solidarity. Anger and Politics in Postcommunist Europe (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Packham, Eric, Africa in War and Peace (New York: Nova Science, 2004).Google Scholar
Paczkowski, Andrzej, ‘Twenty-Five Years “After”: The Ambivalence of Settling Accounts with Communism: The Polish Case’, in Tismaneanu, Vladimir and Iacob, Bogdan C. (eds.), Remembrance, History, and Justice: Coming to Terms with Traumatic Pasts in Democratic Societies (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2015), 239–55.Google Scholar
Palairet, Michael, ‘The Inter-regional Struggle for Resources and the Fall of Yugoslavia’, in Cohen, Lenard J. and Dragović-Soso, Jasna (eds.), State Collapse in South-eastern Europe: New Perspectives on Yugoslavia’s Disintegration (West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2008), 221–48.Google Scholar
Pap, András, Democratic Decline in Hungary: Law and Society in an Illiberal Democracy (London: Routledge, 2017).Google Scholar
Papastamkou, Sofia, ‘Greece between Europe and the Mediterranean, 1981–1986. The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict and the Greek-Libyan Relations as Case Studies’, Journal of European Integration History, 21/1 (2015), 4969.Google Scholar
Pavlićević, Dragan, ‘“China Threat” and “China Opportunity”: Politics of Dreams and Fears in China-Central and Eastern European Relations’, Journal of Contemporary China, 27/113 (2018), 688702.Google Scholar
Pavlović, Momčilo, ‘Kosovo under Autonomy, 1974– 1990’, in Ingrao, Charles W. and Emmert, Thomas Allan (eds.), Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies: A Scholars’ Initiative (West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2009), 4882.Google Scholar
Peck, Jamie, Offshore: Exploring the Worlds of Global Outsourcing (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Perczyński, Maciej, ‘Global Determinants of East-South Relations’, in Bożyk, Pawel (ed.), Global Challenges and East European Responses (Warsaw: Polish Scientific Publishers, 1988), 309–25.Google Scholar
Perju, Vlad, ‘Cazul UE împotriva României – Ce urmează după Raportul MCV’, Contributors.ro, 16 November 2018, www.contributors.ro/editorial/cazul-ue-impotriva-romaniei-%E2%80%93-ce-urmeaza-dupa-raportul-mcv/.Google Scholar
Péteri, György, ‘Introduction’, in Péteri, (ed.), Imagining the West in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2010), 112.Google Scholar
Petrescu, Cristina, From Robin Hood to Don Quixote: Resistance and Dissent in Communist Romania (București: Editura Enciclopedică, 2013).Google Scholar
Petrović, Tanja, ‘Images of Europe and the Process of the West Balkans Countries’ Association to the European Union’, in Gyarfasova, Olga and Liebhart, Karin (eds.), Constructing and Communicating Europe (Zürich: LIT, 2014), 121–44.Google Scholar
Petrović, Tanja, (ed.), Mirroring Europe. Ideas of Europe and Europeanisation in Balkan Societies (Leiden: Brill, 2014).Google Scholar
Pettai, Vello, ‘Estonia and Latvia: International Influences on Citizenship and Minority Integration’, in Zielonka, Jan and Pravda, Alex (eds.), Democratic Consolidation in Eastern Europe, Volume 2: International and Transnational Factors (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), 257–80.Google Scholar
Pew Research Center, ‘End of Communism Cheered but Now with More Reservations’ (2009). www.pewglobal.org/2009/11/02/end-of-communism-cheered-but-now-with-more-reservations/.Google Scholar
Pfaff, Steven, Exit-Voice Dynamics and the Collapse of East Germany: The Crisis of Leninism and the Revolution of 1989 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Pichler, Peter, ‘A “Handmade” Historiographical Myth: The “East” and Eastern Europe in the Historiography of European Integration, 1968 to the Present’, History, 103/356 (2018), 505–19.Google Scholar
Pieper Mooney, Jadwiga, ‘East Germany: Chilean Exile and the Politics of Solidarity in the Cold War’, in Christiaens, Kim, Goddeeris, Idesbald, and García, Magaly Rodríguez (eds.), European Solidarity with Chile 1970s–1980s (Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2014), 275300.Google Scholar
Pinkert, Anke, ‘“Postcolonial Legacies”: The Rhetoric of Race in the East/West German National Identity Debate of the Late 1990s’, Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association, 35/2 (2002), 1332.Google Scholar
Plamper, Jan, ‘Foucault’s Gulag’, Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History, 3/2 (2002), 255–80.Google Scholar
Pluchinsky, Dennis, ‘Political Terrorism in Western Europe: Some Themes and Variations’, in Alexander, Yonah and Myers, Kenneth (eds.), Terrorism in Europe (London: Routledge, 1982/2015), 4078.Google Scholar
‘Poland’s Independence Turned Violent’, BBC News, 11 November 2014, www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-30012830.Google Scholar
Pons, Silvio, The Global Revolution. A History of International Communism 1917–1991 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Pons, Silvio, ‘Western Communists, Mikhail Gorbachev and the 1989 Revolutions’, Contemporary European History, 18/3 (2009), 349–62.Google Scholar
Pons, Silvio and di Donato, Michele, ‘Reform Communism’, in Fürst, Juliane, Pons, Silvio, and Selden, Mark (eds.), The Cambridge History of Communism. Volume 3: Endgames? Late Communism in Global Perspective, 1968 to the Present (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), 178202.Google Scholar
Pop, Doru, ‘Misrepresentation of Muslims and Islamophobic Public Discourses in Recent Romanian Media Narratives’, Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies, 44 (2016), 3351.Google Scholar
Poppe, Eberhard, ‘Self-Determination of the Germans and the Enforcement of Human Rights in the German Democratic Republic’, in Self-determination and Human Rights: 1968 Results in the Two German States (Berlin: Committee for the Protection of Human Rights, 1968), 1130.Google Scholar
Porter, Tom, ‘The Christian Right Is Looking to Putin’s Russia to Save Christianity from the Godless West’, Newsweek, 15 September 2018, www.newsweek.com/how-evangelicals-are-looking-putins-russia-save-christianity-godless-west-1115164.Google Scholar
Pospieszna, Paulina, Democracy Assistance from the Third Wave: Polish Engagement in Belarus and Ukraine (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2014).Google Scholar
‘Proglas na Edinstvena Makedonija za radikalen presvrt vo makedonskata politika – členstvo vo Evroaziskata Ekonomska Unija i strateško partnerstvo so Rusija’, Edinstvena Makedonija [United Macedonia], http://edinstvenamakedonija.mk/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/proglas-edinstvena-makedonija.pdf.Google Scholar
Przetacznik, Franciszek, ‘The Socialist Concept of Protection of Human Rights’, Social Research, 38/2 (1971), 337–61.Google Scholar
Przeworski, Adam, Democracy and the Market. Political and Economic Reforms in Eastern Europe and Latin America (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Przeworski, Adam, ‘The “East” Becomes the “South”? The “Autumn of the People” and the Future of Eastern Europe’, Political Science and Politics, 24/1 (March 1991), 2024.Google Scholar
Przybylski, Wojciech, ‘Can Poland’s Backsliding Be Stopped?’, Journal of Democracy, 29/3 (2018), 5264.Google Scholar
Pula, Besnik, Globalization Under and After Socialism: The Evolution of Transnational Capital in Central and Eastern Europe (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Půlpán, Karel, Economic Development of Spain as Inspiration for the Czech Republic (Stockholm: Institute of Economic Studies, 2001).Google Scholar
Quist-Adade, Charles, ‘From Paternalism to Ethnocentrism: Images of Africa in Gorbachev’s Russia’, Race and Class, 46/4 (2005), 7989.Google Scholar
Radchenko, Sergey, Unwanted Visionaries: The Soviet Failure in Asia at the End of the Cold War (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Radu, Roxana, ‘After a Violent Revolution: Romanian Democratisation in the Early 1990s’, Central European Journal of International and Security Studies, 7/1 (2013), 121.Google Scholar
Rahr, Alexander, Wladimir Putin: Der Deutsche im Kreml (Tübingen: Universitas, 2000).Google Scholar
Rakowski, Mieczysław, Dzienniki polityczne 1987–1990 (Warszawa: ISKRY, 2005).Google Scholar
Ramet, Sabrina, ‘Islam in Yugoslavia Today’, Religion, State and Society, 18/3 (1990), 226–35.Google Scholar
Ramet, Sabrina, Nationalism and Federalism in Yugoslavia, 1962–1991 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Ramšak, Jure, ‘“Neodvisna Slovenija do konca leta 1964!” Kritika položaja Slovenije v Jugoslaviji in zgodnje ideje o samostojnosti’, in Ferenc, Mitja, Hadalin, Jurij, and Babič, Blaž (eds.), Osamosvojitev 1991: država in demokracija na Slovenskem v zgodovinskih razsežnostih’ (Ljubljana: Univerza v Ljubljani, 2011), 197208.Google Scholar
Randall, Vicky, ‘The Media and Democratisation in the Third World’, Third World Quarterly, 14/3 (1993), 625–46.Google Scholar
Rein, Gerhard (ed.), Die Protestantische Revolution, 1987–1990 (Berlin: Wichern-Verlag, 1990).Google Scholar
Renwick, Alan, ‘Anti-political or Just Anti-communist? Varieties of Dissidence in East-Central Europe and Their Implications for the Development of Political Society’, East European Politics and Societies, 20/2 (2006), 286318.Google Scholar
Resler, Tamara, ‘The United States and Central Europe: Principles and Pragmatism in the Evolving Partnership’, in Šabič, Zlatko and Drulák, Petr (eds.), Regional and International Relations of Central Europe (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), 145–61.Google Scholar
Rév, István, ‘Parallel Autopsies’, Representations, 49 (Winter 1995), 1539.Google Scholar
Rév, István, Retroactive Justice: Prehistory of Post-communism (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Rexhepi, Piro, ‘Mainstreaming Islamophobia: The Politics of European Enlargement and the Balkan Crime-Terror Nexus’, East European Quarterly, 43/2–3 (2015), 189214.Google Scholar
Rexhepi, Piro, ‘Unmapping Islam in Eastern Europe. Periodisation and Muslim Subjectivities in the Balkans’, in Kacandes, Irene and Komska, Yuliya (eds.), Eastern Europe Unmapped. Beyond Borders and Peripheries (Oxford: Berghahn, 2017), 5378.Google Scholar
Richardson-Little, Ned, ‘Dictatorship and Dissent: Human Rights in East Germany in the 1970s’, in Eckel, Jan and Moyn, Samuel (eds.), The Breakthrough: Human Rights in the 1970s (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013), 4967.Google Scholar
Richardson-Little, Ned, ‘The Failure of the Socialist Declaration of Human Rights: Ideology, Legitimacy, and Elite Defection at the End of State Socialism, 1981–1991’, East Central Europe (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Richardson-Little, Ned, ‘Human Rights as Myth and History: Between the Revolutions of 1989 and the Arab Spring’, Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, 23/2–3 (2015), 151–66.Google Scholar
Richardson-Little, Ned, ‘Lawyers, Human Rights, and Democratization in Eastern Europe’ (paper presented at ‘Revolution from Within. Experts, Managers and Technocrats in the Long Lawyers, Human Rights and Democratisation in Eastern Europe’, Jena, 14–15 June 2018).Google Scholar
Rigg, Jonathan, Living with Transition in Laos. Market Integration in South-East Asia (London: Routledge, 2005).Google Scholar
Rinser, Luise, Nordkoreanisches Reisetagebuch (Frankfurt am Main: Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verlag, 1981).Google Scholar
Robinson, Pearl T., ‘The National Conference Phenomenon in Francophone Africa’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 36/3 (1994), 575610.Google Scholar
Rodt, Annemarie Peen and Wolff, Stefan, ‘EU Conflict Management in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Macedonia’, in Whitman, Richard G. and Wolff, Stefan (eds.), The European Union as a Global Conflict Manager (London: Routledge, 2012), 138–52.Google Scholar
Romano, Angela and Romero, Federico, ‘European Socialist Regimes Facing Globalisation and European Co-operation: Dilemmas and Responses. Introduction’, European Review of History, 21/2 (2014), 157–64.Google Scholar
Rother, Bernd, ‘Die SPD und El Salvador 1979 bis 1985. Linke Politik im atlantischen Dreieck von Bundesrepublik, Zentralamerika und USA’, Vierteljahreshefte für Zeitgeschichte, 1 (2019), 645–68.Google Scholar
Roy, Olivier, ‘The Arab Four Seasons. When an Excess of Religion Leads to Political Secularisation’, in Rupnik, Jacques (ed.), 1989 as a Political World Event. Democracy. Europe and the New International System in the Age of Globalisation (London: Routledge, 2007), 111–26.Google Scholar
Rupnik, Jacques, ‘The Post-Totalitarian Blues’, Journal of Democracy, 6/2 (1995), 6173.Google Scholar
Rupnik, Jacques, ‘Totalitarianism Revisited’, in Keane, John (ed.), Civil Society and the State: European Perspectives (London: Verso, 1988), 263–89.Google Scholar
Rupprecht, Tobias, ‘Formula Pinochet. Chilean Lessons for Russian Liberal Reformers during the Soviet Collapse, 1970–2000’, Journal of Contemporary History, 51/1 (2016), 165–86.Google Scholar
Rupprecht, Tobias, ‘Gestrandetes Flaggschiff: Die Moskauer Universität der Völkerfreundschaft’, Osteuropa, 1 (2010), 95114.Google Scholar
Rupprecht, Tobias, Soviet Internationalism after Stalin: Interaction and Exchange between the USSR and Latin America during the Cold War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Rus, Alin, Mineriadele: Între manipulare politică și solidaritate muncitorească (București: Curtea Vehce, 2007).Google Scholar
Ryall, Julian, ‘Polish Firms Employing North Korean “Slave Labourers” Benefit from EU Aid’, Telegraph, 31 May 2016, www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/05/31/polish-firms-employing-north-korean-slave-labourers-benefit-from/.Google Scholar
Šabič, Zlatko and Drulák, Petr, ‘Introduction to “Central Europe”’, in Šabič, and Drulák, (eds.), Regional and International Relations of Central Europe (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), 117.Google Scholar
Sachs, Jeffrey, The End of Poverty. Economic Possibilities of Our Time (New York: Penguin, 2006),Google Scholar
Sachs, Jeffrey, Poland’s Jump to the Market Economy (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Sadurski, Wojciech, Rights before Courts. A Study of Constitutional Courts in Postcommunist States of Central and Eastern Europe (Dordrecht: Springer, 2008).Google Scholar
Sahadeo, Jeff, ‘“Black Snouts Go Home”: Migration and Race in Late Soviet Leningrad and Moscow’, Journal of Modern History, 88/4 (2016), 797826.Google Scholar
Sakwa, Richard, ‘How the Eurasian Elites Envisage the Role of the EEU in Global Perspective’, European Politics and Society, 17/Supplement 1 (2016), 422.Google Scholar
Samokhvalov, Vsevolod, ‘What Kind of “Other”? Identity and Russian–European Security Interaction in Eurasia’, Europe-Asia Studies, 70/5 (2018), 791813.Google Scholar
Sang-Woo, Rhee, ‘North Korea in 1990: Lonesome Struggle to Keep Chuch’e’, Asian Survey, 31/1 (1991), 7178.Google Scholar
Sarotte, Mary Elise, ‘China’s Fear of Contagion. Tiananmen Square and the Power of the European Example’, Quarterly Journal: International Security, 37/2 (2012), 156–82.Google Scholar
Sarotte, Mary Elise, Collapse: The Accidental Opening of the Berlin Wall (New York: Basic Books, 2014).Google Scholar
Sarotte, Mary Elise, 1989: The Struggle to Create Post–Cold War Europe (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Saunders, Chris, ‘The Ending of the Cold War and Southern Africa’, in Kalinovsky, Artemy and Radchenko, Sergey (eds.), The End of the Cold War and the Third World: New Perspectives of Regional Conflict (London: Routledge, 2011), 264–76.Google Scholar
Saunders, Chris, ‘“1989” and Southern Africa’, in Engel, Ulf, Hadler, Frank and Middell, Matthias, (eds.), 1989 in a Global Perspective (Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2015), 349–61.Google Scholar
Savranskaya, Svetlana, ‘Gorbachev and the Third World’, in Kalinovsky, Artemy and Radchenko, Sergey (eds.), The End of the Cold War and The Third World: New Perspectives on Regional Conflict (London: Routledge, 2011), 2145.Google Scholar
Sawkins, Isabel, ‘Russia’s Nationalist Mobilisation of the Holocaust on the Screen: Khabensky’s film Sobibor (2018)’ (paper presented at ‘A Crisis in “Coming to Terms with the Past”? At the Crossroads of Translation and Memory’, London, February 2019).Google Scholar
Saxer, Carl, ‘Democratic Transition and Institutional Crafting: The South Korean Case’, Democratisation, 10/2 (2003), 4564.Google Scholar
Sayyid, Salman, ‘Islamophobia and the Europeanness of the Other Europe’, Patterns of Prejudice, 52/5 (2018), 420–35.Google Scholar
Scarborough, Isaac, ‘From February to February and From Ru ba Ru to Rastokhez: Political Mobilisation in Late Soviet Tajikistan (1989–1990)’, Cahiers d’Asie centrale, 26 (2016), 143–71.Google Scholar
Šćepanović, Vera and Bohle, Dorothee, ‘The Institutional Embeddedness of Transnational Corporations: Dependent Capitalism in Central and Eastern Europe’, in Nölke, Andreas and May, Christian (eds.), Handbook of the International Political Economy of the Corporation (Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2018), 152–66.Google Scholar
Schaefer, Bernd, ‘Socialist Modernisation in Vietnam: The East German Approach, 1976–1989’, in Slobodian, Quinn (ed.), Comrades of Color: East Germany in the Cold War World (New York: Berghahn, 2015), 95114.Google Scholar
Schimmelfennig, Frank and Sedelmeier, Ulrich, ‘Conceptualizing the Europeanisation of Central and Eastern Europe’, in Schimmelfennig, and Sedelmeier, (eds.), The Europeanisation of Central and Eastern Europe (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2005), 111.Google Scholar
Schimmelfennig, Frank and Sedelmeier, Ulrich, ‘The Europeanisation of Eastern Europe: the External Incentives Model Revisited’ (paper presented at the Jean Monnet Fellowship @25 Alumni Conference, Florence, 22–23 June 2017), www.eui.eu/Documents/RSCAS/JMF-25–Presentation/Schimmelfennig-Sedelmeier-External-Incentives-Revisited-JMF.pdf.Google Scholar
Schimmelfennig, Frank and Sedelmeier, Ulrich, The Politics of European Union Enlargement: Theoretical Approaches (London: Routledge 2005).Google Scholar
Schlosser, Nicholas J., Cold War on the Airwaves. The Radio Propaganda War against East Germany (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Schmidt, Andrea, ‘Friends Forever? The Role of the Visegrad Group and European Integration’, Politics in Central Europe, 12/3 (2016), 113–40.Google Scholar
Schneider, Peter, The Wall Jumper (London: Pantheon Books, 1985).Google Scholar
Schraeder, Peter, ‘Promoting an International Community of Democracies’, in Schraeder, (ed.), Exporting Democracy: Rhetoric vs. Reality (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 2002), 113.Google Scholar
Schwenkel, Christina, ‘Rethinking Asian Mobilities. Socialist Migration and Post-socialist Repatriation of Vietnamese Contract Workers in East Germany’, Critical Asian Studies, 46/2 (2014), 235–58.Google Scholar
Sedelmeier, Ulrich, ‘Anchoring Democracy from Above? The European Union and Democratic Backsliding in Hungary and Romania after Accession’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 52/1 (2014), 105–21.Google Scholar
Sells, Michael A., The Bridge Betrayed: Religion and Genocide in Bosnia (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Sharkov, Damien, ‘Poland Makes Big U-Turn on Holocaust Death Camps Law’, Newsweek, 27 June 2018, www.newsweek.com/poland-makes-big-u-turn-holocaust-death-camps-law-998071.Google Scholar
Shekhovtsov, Anton, ‘The No Longer Silent Counter-revolution’, Religion and Society in East and West, 44 (2016), 910.Google Scholar
Shivji, Issa G., ‘The Democracy Debate in Africa: Tanzania’, Review of African Political Economy, 18/50 (1991), 7991.Google Scholar
Shmelev, Nikolaj, Ekonomicheskie sviazi Vostok-Zapad. Problemy i vozmozhnosti (Moscow: Mysl’, 1976).Google Scholar
Shore, Marci, The Taste of Ashes. The Afterlife of Totalitarianism in Eastern Europe (New York: Random House, 2013).Google Scholar
Sikorski, Radosław, Dust of the Saints: A Journey to Herat in Time of War (London: Chatto & Windus, 1989).Google Scholar
Sikorski, Radosław, ‘The Polish Model: A Conversation with Radek Sikorski’, Foreign Affairs, 93/2 (May/June 2013).Google Scholar
Simai, Mihály, ‘The Emerging New Market Economies and the Evolving New Democracies in Central and Eastern Europe’, in Kirdar, Üner (ed.), Change: Threat or Opportunity to Human Progress? Volume 1: Political Change (New York: United Nations, 1992), 225–48.Google Scholar
Sizoo, Johannes and Rudolph, Th. Jurrjens, CSCE Decision-Making: The Madrid Experience (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1984).Google Scholar
Sjursen, Helene, ‘Enlargement and Identity: Studying Reasons’, in Ikonomou, Haakon, Andry, Aurélie, and Byberg, Rebekka (eds.), European Enlargement across Rounds and beyond Borders (New York: Routledge, 2017), 5774.Google Scholar
Slapšak, Svetlana (ed.), The War Started at Maksimir: Hate Speech in the Media (Belgrade: Media Center, 1997).Google Scholar
Slaughter, Joseph, ‘Hijacking Human Rights: Neoliberalism, the New Historiography, and the End of the Third World’, Human Rights Quarterly, 40/4 (2018), 735–75.Google Scholar
Slobodian, Quinn, ‘China Is Not Far! Alternative Internationalism and the Tiananmen Square Massacre in East Germany’s 1989’, in Kalinovsky, Artemy, Mark, James, and Marung, Steffi (eds.), Alternative Globalizations: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Smith, Shane, ‘North Korean Labor Camps in Siberia’, CNN, 15 December 2011, https://edition.cnn.com/2011/12/15/world/asia/north-korean-labor-camps-in-siberia/index.html.Google Scholar
Snitko, Aleksandr, ‘Skol’ko stoit naša sovest’ v Latinskoj Amerike? Zametki ešče bolee neravnodušnye’, Latinskaja Amerika, 4 (1991), 3844.Google Scholar
Soboczynski, Adam, “The Communist Roots of Anti-Refugee Sentiment,” Public Seminar, 22 March 2016, www.publicseminar.org/2016/03/the-communist-roots-of-anti-refugee-sentiment/#.VvGEc2SyOkp.Google Scholar
Solnick, Steven Lee, Stealing the State: Control and Collapse in Soviet Institutions (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Somerville, K., ‘Sub-Saharan Africa’, in Pravda, Alex (ed.), Yearbook of Soviet Foreign Relations (London: Tauris, 1991), 208–26.Google Scholar
Sommer, Vítězslav, ‘Forecasting the Post-socialist Future: Prognostika in Late Socialist Czechoslovakia, 1970–1989’, in Andersson, Jenny and Rindzevičiūtė, Eglė (eds.), The Struggle for the Long-Term in Transnational Science and Politics: Forging the Future (New York: Routledge, 2015), 144–68.Google Scholar
Sonnevend, Julia, Stories without Borders. The Berlin Wall and the Making of a Global Iconic Event (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Sosnowska, Anna, Zrozumieć zacofanie. Spory historyków o Europę Wschodnią, 1947–1994 (Warszawa: Trio, 2004).Google Scholar
Spaskovska, Ljubica, ‘The “Children of Crisis”. Making Sense of (Post)socialism and the End of Yugoslavia’, East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 31/3, (2017), 500517.Google Scholar
Spaskovska, Ljubica, ‘Landscapes of Resistance, Hope and Loss: Yugoslav Supra-Nationalism and Anti-nationalism’, in Bilić, Bojan and Janković, Vesna (eds.), Resisting the Evil: [Post] Yugoslav Anti-war Contention (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2012), 3762.Google Scholar
Spaskovska, Ljubica, The Last Yugoslav Generation: The Rethinking of Youth Politics and Cultures in Late Socialism (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
‘Společné prohlášení k situaci v Chile’, Informace o Chartě 77, 10/7 (1987), 24–25, www.vons.cz/data/pdf/infoch/INFOCH_07_1987.pdf.Google Scholar
Spooner, Mary Helen, The General’s Slow Retreat: Chile after Pinochet (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Springborg, Robert, ‘Whither the Arab Spring? 1989 or 1848?’, International Spectator, 46/3 (2011), 512.Google Scholar
Sridharan, Kripa, ‘G-15 and South-South Cooperation: Promise and Performance’, Third World Quarterly, 19/3 (1998), 357–73.Google Scholar
Stan, Marius and Tismaneanu, Vladimir, ‘Democracy under Siege in Romania’, Politico, 21 August 2018, www.politico.eu/article/protest-piata-victoriei-bucharest-democracy-under-siege-in-romania/.Google Scholar
Stanciu, Cezar, ‘Nicolae Ceaușescu and the Origins of Eurocommunism’, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, 48/1 (2015), 8395.Google Scholar
Staniszkis, Jadwiga, The Dynamics of the Breakthrough in Eastern Europe (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Staniszkis, Jadwiga, ‘“Political Capitalism” in Poland’, East European Politics and Societies, 5/1 (1991), 127141.Google Scholar
Steiner, André, ‘The Globalisation Process and the Eastern Bloc Countries in the 1970s and 1980s’, European Review of History, 21/2 (2014), 165–81.Google Scholar
Štiks, Igor, ‘“The Berlin Wall Crumbled Down upon Our Heads!”: 1989 and Violence in the Former Socialist Multinational Federations’, Global Society, 24/1 (2010), 91110.Google Scholar
Štiks, Igor and Horvat, Srećko (eds.), Welcome to the Desert of Post-Socialism: Radical Politics After Yugoslavia (London: Verso, 2015).Google Scholar
Štiks, Igor and Stojaković, Krunoslav, ‘Southeastern Europe’s New Left’, Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, February 2019, www.rosalux.de/en/publikation/id/39943/#_ftn1.Google Scholar
Stojanov, Robert, Bureš, Oldřich, and Duží, Barbora, ‘Migration and Development Policies: The State of Affairs before the 2015 European Migration Crises in the Czech Republic and Its Current Implications’, Communist and Post-communist Studies, 50/3 (2017), 169–81.Google Scholar
Stokes, Gale, ‘Purposes of the Past’, in Tismaneanu, Vladimir and Iacob, Bogdan C. (eds.), The End and the Beginning: The Revolutions of 1989 and the Resurgence of History (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2012), 3554.Google Scholar
Stokes, Gale, The Walls Came Tumbling Down: The Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Stola, Dariusz, ‘Opening a Non-exit State: The Passport Policy of Communist Poland, 1949–1980’, East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 29/1 (2015), 96119.Google Scholar
Stoner, Kathryn and McFaul, Michael (eds.), Transitions to Democracy: A Comparative Perspective (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Storkmann, Klaus, Geheime Solidarität: Militärbeziehungen und Militärhilfen der DDR in die ‘Dritte Welt’ (Berlin: Christoph Links, 2012).Google Scholar
Stout, Jeffrey, ‘Between Secularism and Theocracy. King, Michnik and the American Culture Wars’, in Kosicki, Piotr and Kunakhovich, Kyrill (eds.), The Legacy of 1989: Continuity and Discontinuity in a Quarter-Century of Global Revolution (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Strauß, Franz-Josef, Die Erinnerungen (Berlin: Siedler, 1989).Google Scholar
Suarez, John, ‘Cuban Dissidents on the Passing of Vaclav Havel’, Notes from the Cuban Exile Quarter, 18 December 2011, http://cubanexilequarter.blogspot.com/2011/12/cuban-dissidents-on-passing-of-vaclav.html.Google Scholar
Suárez-Navaz, Liliana, ‘Introduction’, in Rebordering the Mediterranean. Boundaries and Citizenship in Southern Europe (Oxford: Berghahn Books 2004), 120.Google Scholar
Suba, Aron, ‘Betting on the Eastern Model: The Cooperation between Hungary and China Is More about Politics Than Economics’, 11 April 2018, http://visegradinsight.eu/betting-on-the-Eastern-model/.Google Scholar
Sussman, Gerald and Krader, Sascha, ‘Template Revolutions: Marketing US Regime Change in Eastern Europe’, Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture, 5/3 (2008), 91112.Google Scholar
Szabó, Miklós, ‘Egy tilalommal kevesebb, vagy egy elvtelenséggel több?’, Beszélő 2/2 (1990), http://beszelo.c3.hu/print/2868.Google Scholar
Szacki, Jerzy, Liberalism after Communism (Budapest: Central European University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Szakács, Eszter, ‘Propaganda, Mon Amour. An Arab “World” through Hungarian Publications (1957–1989)’, Mezosfera, May 2018, http://mezosfera.org/propaganda-mon-amour/.Google Scholar
Szalontai, Balász, ‘From Battlefield into Marketplace. The End of the Cold War in Indochina 1985–1989’, in Kalinovsky, Artemy and Radchenko, Sergey (eds.), The End of the Cold War and the Third World. New Perspectives on Regional Conflict (New York: Routledge 2011), 155–72.Google Scholar
Szalontai, Balász, ‘The Path to the Establishment of Hungarian-South Korean Diplomatic Relations: The Soviet Bloc and the Republic of Korea, 1964–1987’, Cold War International History Project Bulletin, 14/15 (2010), 87103.Google Scholar
Szczerek, Ziemowit, ‘New Separatisms: Or What Could Happen if the West Disappeared from Eastern Europe?’, New Eastern Europe 3/4 (2018), http://neweasterneurope.eu/2018/04/26/new-separatisms-happen-west-disappeared-eastern-europe/.Google Scholar
Szelényi, Iván, ‘Eastern Europe in an Epoch of Transition: Toward a Socialist Mixed Economy?’, in Nee, Victor and Stark, David (eds.), Remaking the Economic Institutions of Socialism: China and Eastern Europe (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1989), 208–32.Google Scholar
Szűcs, Jenő, ‘The Three Historical Regions of Europe: An Outline’, Acta Historica Academiae Scientiarum Hungariae, 29 (1983), 131–84.Google Scholar
Szulc, Lukasz, Transnational Homosexuals in Communist Poland. Cross-Border Flows in Gay and Lesbian Magazines (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018).Google Scholar
Szulecki, Kacper, ‘Heretical Geopolitics of Central Europe. Dissidents Intellectuals and an Alternative European Order’, Geoforum, 65 (2015), 2536.Google Scholar
Szulecki, Kacper, ‘Hijacked Ideas Human Rights, Peace, and Environmentalism in Czechoslovak and Polish Dissident Discourses’, East European Politics and Societies, 25/2 (2011), 272–95.Google Scholar
Szwedand, Anna and Zielińska, Katarzyna, ‘A War on Gender? The Roman Catholic Church’s Discourse on Gender in Poland’, in Ramet, Sabrina and Borowik, Irena (eds.), Religion, Politics, and Values in Poland: Continuity and Change since 1989 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), 113–36.Google Scholar
Tareke, Gebru, The Ethiopian Revolution (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Taubman, William and Savranskaya, Svetlana, ‘If a Wall Fell in Berlin and Moscow Hardly Noticed, Would It Still Make a Noise?’, in Engel, Jeffrey (ed.), The Fall of the Berlin Wall: The Revolutionary Legacy of 1989 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 6992.Google Scholar
Taylor, Ian, ‘South Africa’s Transition to Democracy and the “Change Industry”: A Case Study of IDASA’, Politikon: South African Journal of Political Studies, 29/1 (2002), 3148.Google Scholar
Taylor, Karin and Grandits, Hannes, ‘Tourism and the Making of Socialist Yugoslavia’, in Taylor, Karin and Grandits, Hannes (eds.), Yugoslavia’s Sunny Side: A History of Tourism in Socialism (1950s–1980s) (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2010), 132.Google Scholar
Ther, Philipp, Die neue Ordnung auf dem alten Kontinent. Eine Geschichte des neoliberalen Europa (Berlin: Suhrkamp, 2014).Google Scholar
Ther, Philipp, Europe since 1989: A History (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Thompson, Mark, A Paper House: The Ending of Yugoslavia (London: Vintage, 1992).Google Scholar
Tismaneanu, Vladimir, The Devil in History: Communism, Fascism, and Some Lessons of the Twentieth Century (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Tismaneanu, Vladimir, Fantasies of Salvation: Democracy, Nationalism and Myth in Post-communist Europe (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Tismaneanu, Vladimir, ‘On Neo-conservatorism’, 25 September 2009, https://tismaneanu.wordpress.com/2009/09/25/.Google Scholar
Tismaneanu, Vladimir, Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Tismaneanu, Vladimir and Clawson, Patrick, Uprooting Leninism, Cultivating Liberty (Lanham, MD: Foreign Policy Research Institute, 1992).Google Scholar
Tismaneanu, Vladimir and Shapiro, Judith, Debates on the Future of Communism (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1991).Google Scholar
Tőkés, Rudolf, A harmadik magyar köztársaság születése (Budapest: L’Harmattan, 2015).Google Scholar
Tokić, Mate Nikola, ‘The End of “Historical-Ideological Bedazzlement”: Cold War Politics and Émigré Croatian Separatist Violence, 1950–1980’, Social Science History, 36/3 (2012), 421–45.Google Scholar
Tokić, Mate Nikola, ‘Landscapes of Conflict: Unity and Disunity in Post–Second World War Croatian Émigré Separatism’, Journal European Review of History: Revue européenne d’histoire, 16/5 (2009), 739–53.Google Scholar
Tolz, Vera, ‘Conflicting “Homeland Myths” and Nation-State Building in Postcommunist Russia’, Slavic Review, 57/2 (1998), 267–94.Google Scholar
Toplak, Cirila, ‘Evropska Ideja v Slovenski Politični Misli’, Teorija in Praksa, 39 (2002), 579–87.Google Scholar
Török, Adam and Györffy, Agnes, ‘Ungarn in der Vorreiterrolle’, in Günther, Jutta and Jajeśniak-Quast, Dagmara (eds.), Willkommene Investoren oder nationaler Ausverkauf? Ausländische Direktinvestitionen in Ostmitteleuropa im 20. Jahrhundert (Berlin: Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, 2006), 253–74.Google Scholar
Travin, Dmitrij, ‘Avtoritarnyj tormoz dlja “krasnogo kolesa”’, Zvezda, 6 (1994), 125–35.Google Scholar
Trencsényi, Balázs, ‘From Goulash-Communism to Goulash-Authoritarianism?’, Tr@nsit Online, 2013, www.iwm.at/transit/transit-online/from-goulash-communism-to-goulash-authoritarianism/.Google Scholar
Trencsényi, Balázs, Janowski, Maciej, Baár, Monika, Falina, Maria, and Kopeček, Michal, ‘Introduction’, in Trencsényi, Janowski, Baár, Falina, and Kopeček, A History of Modern Political Thought in East Central Europe. Volume I: Negotiating Modernity in the ‘Long Nineteenth Century’ (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), 114.Google Scholar
Trencsényi, Balázs, Janowski, Maciej, Baár, Monika, Falina, Maria, and Kopeček, Michal, Political Thought in East Central Europe. Volume II: Negotiating Modernity in the ‘Short Twentieth Century’ and Beyond Part II: 1968–2018 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Trifunovska, Snežana, Yugoslavia through Documents: From Its Creation to Its Dissolution (Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff, 1994).Google Scholar
Trutowski, Dominik, ‘Poland and Spain “Entangled”. Political Learning in Transitions to Democracy’ (paper presented at ‘Entangled Transitions: Between Eastern and Southern Europe 1960s–2014’, University of Leuven, 2014).Google Scholar
Tshiyembe, Mwayila, ‘L’autopsie de l’échec de la transition démocratique en Afrique à la lumière de la théorie desconjonctures politiques fluids’, Présence Africaine, 157 (1998), 7199.Google Scholar
Tsygankov, Andrei, ‘Finding a Civilisational Idea: “West”, “Eurasia”, and “Euro-East”, in Russia’s Foreign Policy’, Geopolitics, 12/3 (2007), 375–99.Google Scholar
Tubilewicz, Czeslaw, ‘Chinese Press Coverage of Political and Economic Restructuring of East Central Europe’, Asian Survey, 37/10 (1997), 927–43.Google Scholar
Tubilewicz, Czeslaw, ‘1989 in Sino-East Central European Relations Revisited’, in Columbus, Frank (ed.), Central and Eastern Europe in Transition (Commack, NY: Nova Science, 2001), 2148.Google Scholar
Tucker, Aviezer, ‘Restoration and Convergence: Russia and China since 1989’, in Lawson, George, Armbruster, Chris, and Cox, Michael (eds.), The Global 1989. Continuity and Change in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 157–78.Google Scholar
Tudor, Despina, ‘Ana Blandiana: “Epoca noastră seamănă izbitor cu cea de la finalul Imperiului Roman”’, 24 March 2016, Revista 22, https://revista22.ro/70252912/ana-blandiana-epoca-noastr-seamn-izbitor-cu-cea-de-la-finalul-imperiului-roman.html.Google Scholar
Tudoran, Dorin, ‘Farmecul discret al democrației’, Agora, 1/2 (1988), 118.Google Scholar
Turcsanyi, Richard, ‘Is the Czech Republic China’s New “Bridge to Europe”?’, The Diplomat, 12 September 2015, http://thediplomat.com/2015/09/is-the-czech-republic-chinas-new-bridge-to-europe/.Google Scholar
Tyler, Imogen, ‘The Hieroglyphics of the Border: Racial Stigma in Neoliberal Europe’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 41/10 (2018), 17831801.Google Scholar
Uhl, Petr, ‘The Alternative Community as Revolutionary Avant-Garde’, in Havel, Václav et al., The Power of the Powerless: Citizens against the State in Central-Eastern Europe (London: Routledge, 2015), 188–97.Google Scholar
Umland, Andreas, ‘Post-Soviet Neo-Eurasianism, the Putin System, and the Contemporary European Extreme Right’, Perspectives on Politics, 15/2 (2017), 465–76.Google Scholar
‘The Unification Treaty between the FRG and the GDR (Berlin, 31 August 1990)’, Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l’Europe (CVCE), www.cvce.eu/content/publication/1997/10/13/2c391661-db4e-42e5-84f7-bd86108c0b9c/publishable_en.pdf.Google Scholar
Ustav Socijalističke Federativne Republike Jugoslavije – Stručno objašnjenje/The Constitution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia – Expert Interpretation (Belgrade: Institute for Political Studies, 1975).Google Scholar
Vachudova, Milada Anna, ‘Eastern Europe as Gatekeeper: The Immigration and Asylum Policies of an Enlarging European Union’, in Andreas, Peter and Snyder, Timothy (eds.), The Wall around the West: State Borders and Immigration Controls in North America and Europe (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000), 153–71.Google Scholar
Valenta, Marko and Ramet, Sabrina (eds.), The Bosnian Diaspora: Integration in Transnational Communities (Farnham: Ashgate, 2011).Google Scholar
Valiavicharska, Zhivka, ‘How the Concept of Totalitarianism Appeared in Late Socialist Bulgaria: The Birth and Life of Zheliu Zhelev’s Book Fascism’, Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History, 15/2 (2014), 303–34.Google Scholar
Vámos, Péter, ‘A Hungarian Model for China? Sino-Hungarian Relations in the Era of Economic Reforms, 1979–89’, Cold War History, 3/18 (2018), 361–78.Google Scholar
Vámos, Péter, ‘The Tiananmen Square “Incident” in China and the East Central European Revolutions’, in Mueller, Wolfgang, Gehler, Michael, and Suppan, Arnold (eds.), The Revolutions of 1989: A Handbook (Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 2015), 93111.Google Scholar
Vangeli, Anastas, ‘China’s Engagement with the Sixteen Countries of Central, East and Southeast Europe under the Belt and Road Initiative’, China and World Economy, 25/5 (2017), 101–24.Google Scholar
Vangeli, Anastas, ‘Global China and Symbolic Power: The Case of 16 + 1 Cooperation’, Journal of Contemporary China, 27/113 (2018), 674–87.Google Scholar
van Vuuren, Hennie, Apartheid, Guns and Money – A Tale of Profit (Johannesburg: Jacana Media, 2017).Google Scholar
van Zuijdewijn, Jeanine de Roy, and Bakker, Edwin, ‘Returning Western Foreign Fighters: The Case of Afghanistan, Bosnia and Somalia’ (International Centre for Counter-Terrorism – The Hague Background Note, June 2014), www.icct.nl/download/file/ICCT-De-Roy-van-Zuijdewijn-Bakker-Returning-Western-Foreign-Fighters-June-2014.pdf.Google Scholar
Varas, Augusto (ed.), Soviet–Latin American Relations in the 1980s (Boulder, CO: Westview, 1987).Google Scholar
Velikonja, Mitja, EUROSIS – A Critique of the New Eurocentrism (Ljubljana: Peace Institute, 2005).Google Scholar
Vetlesen, Arne Johan, Evil and Human Agency: Understanding Collective Evildoing (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Vezenkov, Alexander and Marinov, Tchavdar, ‘The Concept of National Revival in Balkan Historiographies’, in Daskalov, Roumen and Vezenkov, Alexander (eds.), Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume Three: Shared Pasts, Disputed Legacies (Leiden: Brill, 2015), 406–62.Google Scholar
Vianu, Ion, ‘O interpretare a României de azi’, Agora, 1/2 (1988), 6378.Google Scholar
Vicherat Mattar, Daniela, ‘Did Walls Really Come Down?’, in Silberman, Marc, Till, Karen E., and Ward, Janet (eds.), Walls, Borders, Boundaries: Spatial and Cultural Practices in Europe (New York: Berghahn Books, 2012), 7794.Google Scholar
‘The Vietnamese Communities in Central and Eastern Europe’, special issue of Central and Eastern European Migration Review, 4/1 (2015), www.ceemr.uw.edu.pl/sites/default/files/CEEMR_Vol_4_No_1.pdf.Google Scholar
Vladisavljević, Nebojša, Serbia’s Antibureaucratic Revolution: Milošević, the Fall of Communism and Nationalist Mobilisation (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008).Google Scholar
Vojvodić, Mirjana (ed.), Not in My Name (Niš: Center for Civic Initiative, 2008).Google Scholar
Vu, Tuong, Vietnam’s Communist Revolution. The Power and Limits of Ideology (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Vujačić, Veljko, Nationalism, Myth, and the State in Russia and Serbia: Antecedents of the Dissolution of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Walter, Christian, von Ungern-Sternberg, Antje, and Abushov, Kavus (eds.), Self-Determination and Secession in International Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Wang, Hui, China’s New Order. Society, Politics, and Economy in Transition (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Wang, Hui, ‘Dangdai Zhongguo de Sixiang Zhuangkuang yu Xiandaixing Wenti’, Tianya 5 (1997), 133–50.Google Scholar
Ward, Stuart, ‘The European Provenance of Decolonization’, Past and Present 230/1 (2016), 227–60.Google Scholar
Way, Lucan, ‘The Real Causes of the Coloured Revolutions’, Journal of Democracy, 19/3 (July 2008), 5569.Google Scholar
Wciślik, Piotr, ‘Political Languages of Anti-solidarity: Mirosław Dzielski and the Differentia Specifica of Polish Neo-liberalism’, in Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on the History of Concepts, Bilbao, 29–31 August 2013, 170–176, http://dx.doi.org/10.1387/conf.hcg2013.2.Google Scholar
Weapons of the Islamic State (London: Conflict and Armed Research, 2017), www.conflictarm.com/reports/weapons-of-the-islamic-state/.Google Scholar
Wedel, Janine, Collision and Collusion: The Strange Case of Western Aid to Eastern Europe 1989–1998 (New York: St. Martin’s, 1998).Google Scholar
West, Richard, Tito and the Rise and Fall of Yugoslavia (London: Faber and Faber, 2009).Google Scholar
Westad, Odd Arne, ‘Conclusion’, in Lawson, George et al. (eds.), The Global 1989. Continuity and Change in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 271–80.Google Scholar
Whitaker, Reg, ‘Security and Intelligence in the Post–Cold War World’, Socialist Register, 28 (1992), 111–30.Google Scholar
Wilczynski, Jozef, The Multinationals and East-West Relations: Towards Transideological Collaboration (Boulder, CO: Westview, 1976).Google Scholar
Wilson, Jeanne, ‘The Eurasian Economic Union and China’s Silk Road: Implications for the Russian–Chinese Relationship’, European Politics and Society, 17/Supplement 1, ‘The Eurasian Project in Global Perspective’ (2016), 113–32.Google Scholar
Wilson, Jeanne, ‘“The Polish Lesson”: China and Poland 1980–1990’, Studies in Comparative Communism, 23/3–4 (1990), 259–79.Google Scholar
Wintle, Michael, ‘Islam as Europe’s “Other” in the Long Term: Some Discontinuities’, History, 101/344 (2016), 4261.Google Scholar
Woever, O., ‘Conflicts of Vision, Visions of Conflict’, in Woever, O., Lemaitre, P., and Tromer, E. (eds.), European Polyphony: Perspectives beyond East-West Confrontation (London: Macmillan 1989), 186224.Google Scholar
Wood, William B., ‘Geographic Aspects of Genocide: A Comparison of Bosnia and Rwanda’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 26/1 (2001), 5775.Google Scholar
Woodward, Susan, Balkan Tragedy. Chaos and Dissolution after the Cold War (Washington, DC: Brookings Institute, 1995).Google Scholar
Woodward, Susan, ‘The Political Economy of Ethno-Nationalism in Yugoslavia’, Socialist Register, 39 (2003), 7392.Google Scholar
Wuestenhagen, Jana, ‘Communist Europeanism: A Case Study of the GDR’, in Gosewinkel, Dieter (ed.), Anti-liberal Europe. A Neglected Story of Europeanisation (Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2015), 157–78.Google Scholar
Wunschik, Tobias, Knastware für den Klassenfeind. Häftlingsarbeit in der DDR, der Ost-West Handel und die Staatssicherheit 1970–1989 (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2014).Google Scholar
Yang, Zhong, ‘The Fallen Wall and Its Aftermath: Impact of Regime Change upon Foreign Policy Behaviour in Six East European Countries’, East European Quarterly, 28/2 (1994), 235–57.Google Scholar
Yinghui, Meng, Political Belief and the Soviet Revolution (Beijing: China Social Sciences Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Yordanov, Radoslav, The Soviet Union and the Horn of Africa during the Cold War (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2016).Google Scholar
Zaccaria, Benedetto, ‘Learning from Yugoslavia? Western Europe and the Myth of Self-Management (1968–1975)’, in Christian, Michel, Kott, Sandrine, and Matejka, Ondrej (eds.), Planning in Cold War Europe: Competition, Cooperation, Circulations (1950s–1970s) (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2018), 213–36.Google Scholar
Zaccaria, Benedetto, ‘Under the Shadow of the Soviet Union: The EEC, Yugoslavia and the Cold War in the Long 1970s’, in Rajak, Svetozar et al. (eds.), The Balkans in the Cold War (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), 239–59.Google Scholar
Žagar, Mitja, ‘The Collapse of the Yugoslav Federation and the Viability of Asymmetrical Federalism’, in Ortino, Sergio, Žagar, Mitja, and Mastny, Vojtech (eds.), The Changing Faces of Federalism: Institutional Reconfiguration in Europe from East to West (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2005), 107–33.Google Scholar
Záhořík, Jan, ‘Czechoslovakia and Congo/Zaire under Mobutu, 1965–1980’, Canadian Journal of History, 52/2 (2017), 290314.Google Scholar
Zahra, Tara, ‘Travel Agents on Trial: Policing Mobility in East Central Europe, 1889–1989’, Past & Present, 223/1 (2014), 161–93.Google Scholar
Zajmi, Gazmend, ‘Kosova’s Constitutional Position in the Former Yugoslavia’, in Duijzings, Ger, Janjić, Dušan, and Maliqi, Shkëlzen (eds.), Kosovo-Kosova: Confrontation or Coexistence (Nijmegen: Peace Research Centre and Political Cultural Centre, 1996), 95103.Google Scholar
Zakharov, Nikolay, Race and Racism in Russia (Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).Google Scholar
Zaroulia, Marilena, ‘“Sharing the Moment”: Europe, Affect, and Utopian Performatives in the Eurovision Song Contest’, in Fricker, Karen and Gluhovic, Milija (eds.), Performing the ‘New’ Europe. Studies in International Performance (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 3152.Google Scholar
Zarycki, Tomasz, ‘De-spatialisation and the Europeanisation of Late Communist Imaginary: The Intellectual Trajectory of Polish Geographer Antoni Kukliński’ (paper presented at Revolution from Within: Experts, Managers and Technocrats in the Long Transformation of 1989, Jena, June 2018).Google Scholar
Zantovsky, Michael, Havel: A Life (London: Atlantic Books, 2014).Google Scholar
Zhelyazkova, Antonina, ‘Islamisation in the Balkans as a Historiographical Problem: The Southeast-European Perspective’, in Adanir, Fikret and Faroqhi, Suraiya (eds.), The Ottomans and the Balkans. A Discussion of Historiography (Leiden: Brill, 2002), 223–66.Google Scholar
Zivanović, Maja, ‘New Zealand Mosque Gunman “Inspired by Balkan Nationalists”’, Balkan Insight, 15 March 2019, https://balkaninsight.com/2019/03/15/new-zealand-mosque-gunman-inspired-by-balkan-nationalists/.Google Scholar
Znoj, Milan, ‘Václav Havel, His Idea of Civil Society, and the Czech Liberal Tradition’, in Kopeček, Michal and Wciślik, Piotr (eds.), Thinking through Transition: Liberal Democracy, Authoritarian Pasts, and Intellectual History in East Central Europe after 1989 (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2015), 109–38.Google Scholar
Zubok, Vladislav, ‘Introduction’, in Babiracki, Patryk and Zimmer, Kenyon (eds.), Cold War Crossings: International Travel and Exchange across the Soviet Bloc (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2014), 113.Google Scholar
Zubok, Vladislav, ‘The Soviet Union and China in the 1980s: Reconciliation and Divorce’, Cold War History, 17/2 (2017), 121–41.Google Scholar
Zubok, Vladislav, Zhivago’s Children: The Last Russian Intelligentsia (Cambridge, MA: Belknap, 2009).Google Scholar
Żuk, Piotr, ‘Anti-military Protests and Campaigns against Nuclear Power Plants: The Peace Movement in the Shadow of the Warsaw Pact in Poland in the 1980s’, Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, 25/3 (2017), 367–74.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×