Europe

Was the European student movement of the 1960s a global phenomenon?

Angeliki Mitropoulou • Jul 2 2011 • Essays

The anti-conformist student movement was indeed a global phenomenon, even though there are still some sociologists that support the idea that the protests were only movements of university students, and small minorities of young people that had little to do with higher education.

Inter-war airpower theory and World War II

Ross Hall • Jun 28 2011 • Essays

The development of air power in the realm of the military emerged almost at the same time as aviation itself due to the accelerating features of the First World War. With air power’s inception, it became possible to make strategic strikes against the enemy’s centre of gravity without the necessity of making contact in a traditional land or sea war.

Accounting for Hitler’s decision to invade the Soviet Union in 1941

Matthew Kinghorn • Jun 22 2011 • Essays

Within his work on Operation Barbarossa, Koch states that ‘the origins of the German invasion of Russia’ remain importantly ‘at the centre of historical debate’. A potential reason for this is the highly contentious roots of the decision to invade Russia in 1941; what exactly motivated Hitler to initiate an invasion that would inevitably result in Germany having to fight a war on two unsustainable fronts?

The Unique Character of the European Union

Oliver Blackley • Jun 22 2011 • Essays

The EU is a modern political phenomenon that has risen out of the social, historical and economic context of the 20th century. It is a political system which is unique in comparison to all others. Although it has traits that bear resemblance to the political systems of federal states as well as intergovernmental organisations, it remains one of a kind.

Is the EU reaching the limits of enlargement?

James Chisem • Jun 20 2011 • Essays

In recent years support for eastward enlargement has lost momentum in both public and policy realms – opening up a debate over the concept of Europe itself . The question of Turkish accession in particular, has proved to be a crystallising point for many of the fundamental issues concerning widening in the 21st century.

Accounting for Germany’s Foreign and Security Culture

IJ Benneyworth • Jun 7 2011 • Essays

Given Germany’s post-war situation, it moved towards a constitutionally enshrined antimilitarist, democratic and moralist stance, which helped make Germany a smaller geopolitical actor than its potential suggested, a situation it was not altogether unhappy with. Despite the former, it does have a genuine security culture which has adapted over time.

The Single European Currency as a catalyst for integration within the EU

IJ Benneyworth • May 31 2011 • Essays

The Euro, by design and recent accident, has been a catalyst to integration within the EU, but with the caveat that this integration is unevenly distributed. Even if there are disparities in broader levels of integration, the determination to avoid failure has unified the euro-area members and non-members alike.

Why is the Maastricht Treaty considered to be so significant?

Morgane Griveaud • May 29 2011 • Essays

The Maastricht Treaty did not only reform the structure of the European Community (EC) through the establishment of a political union, and strengthen economic integration with the creation of the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), but it also enabled the stabilisation of political tensions within Europe at the end of the Cold War, and integrated a unified Germany into the EU.

Why has a negotiated settlement been possible in Northern Ireland and not the Basque conflict?

IJ Benneyworth • May 23 2011 • Essays

A case can be made that a negotiated settlement has been possible in Northern Ireland due to an inclusive political strategy and acceptance of compromise, whereas the Basque situation has not been conductive to a settlement due to the government pursuing an exclusionary position towards ETA and radical nationalist political groups.

The criterion of society’s level of development

Andrey Alexakha • May 17 2011 • Essays

As a whole the situation in the Central Asian region is fraught with future social disturbances. They are inevitable in all countries, but the degree of violence will be different according to the achieved level of development. The bloodiest events are possible in Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan. In the latter country, a variant of the Libyan example is quite probable.

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