Description

Book Synopsis

From its inception, the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) provoked controversy. Today it is widely regarded as having contributed to the end of the Cold War. Bringing together new and innovative research on the CSCE, this volume explores questions key to understanding the Cold War: What role did diplomats play in shaping the 1975 Helsinki Final Act? How did that agreement and the CSCE more broadly shape societies in Europe and North America? And how did the CSCE and activists inspired by the Helsinki Final Act influence the end of the Cold War?



Trade Review

“The authors add to the significant literature available on the Cold War, its history, and explanations for how it ended. In the contested debate over the CSCE’s contribution, these authors add evidence to the side arguing its significant role in ending the Cold War…This is a fundamental book for historians, diplomats, and political scientists who would like a reference of how international organizations come out of diplomatic negotiations and seemingly temporary gatherings.” • Canadian Slavonic Papers

“The volume is of the highest importance, which manages to encompass some of the most significant positions and strategies, compared to the respective political context, which explains very well the evolution and political context of today.” • Journal of Global Politics & Current Diplomacy

“The various chapters in this book provide useful additional insight on the CSCE and especially the human dimension of the process, including some issues that have not really been significantly studied to date and new data from archives on a number of issues.” • H-Net

“The contributions, without exception based on sound sources, some of them of extraordinary originality and very inspirational for research, make the reading of them for everybody interested in the KSZE and East-West détente very rewarding.” • Sehepunkte

“This excellent volume stands at the forefront of scholarship in the field and will certainly make an important contribution to our understanding of the complex developments that led to the end of the Cold War.” • Aryo Makko, Stockholm University and Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study

“The essays in this volume illuminate just what the Helsinki process entailed and help explain the multidimensional ways in which it facilitated the end of the Cold War—everything from building bridges between groups to keeping dialogue going when the Cold War refroze in the early 1980s and connecting lower-level politics to high politics.” • Jaclyn Stanke, Campbell University

“Bold in ambition and scope, this collection highlights transnational history at its finest. It covers an impressive amount of terrain, allowing for a more layered and nuanced understanding of the CSCE.” • Garret Martin, American University



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Chronology of CSCE Meetings

Introduction
Nicolas Badalassi and Sarah B. Snyder

PART I: DIPLOMATS, DIPLOMACIES AND THE MAKING OF THE CSCE

Chapter 1. The Human Dimension of the CSCE, 1975–1990
Andrei Zagorski

Chapter 2. Executors or Creative Deal-Makers?: The Role of the Diplomats in the Making of the Helsinki CSCE
Martin D. Brown and Angela Romano

Chapter 3. From Talleyrand to Sakharov: French Diplomacy in Search of a ‘Helsinki Effect’
Nicolas Badalassi

Chapter 4. ‘Human Rights, Peace and Security Are Inseparable’: Max Kampelman and the Helsinki Process
Stephan Kieninger

PART II: THE TRANSNATIONAL PROMOTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE ROLE OF DISSIDENCE

Chapter 5. The Committee of Concerned Scientists and the Helsinki Final Act: ‘Refusenik’ Scientists, Détente and Human Rights
Elisabetta Vezzosi

Chapter 6. Seeing the Value of the Helsinki Accords: Human Rights, Peace and Transnational Debates about Détente, 1981–1988
Christian P. Peterson

Chapter 7. The Importance of the Helsinki Process for the Opposition in Central and Eastern Europe and the Western Peace Movements in the 1980s
Jacek Czaputowicz

Chapter 8. The Limits of Repression: Soviet-Bloc Security Services vs. Transnational Helsinki Networks, 1976–1986
Douglas Selvage

Chapter 9. Helsinki at Home: NGOs, the Helsinki Final Act and Politics in the United States, 1975–1985
Carl J. Bon Tempo

PART III: THE POLITICS OF THE CSCE IN EUROPE

Chapter 10. European Détente and the CSCE: Austria and the East-Central European Theatre in the 1970s and 1980s
Maximilian Graf

Chapter 11. Saving Détente: The Federal Republic of Germany and the CSCE in the 1980s
Matthias Peter

Chapter 12. Transformation by Linkage?: Arms Control, Human Rights and the Rift between Moscow and East Berlin in the Late 1980s
Oliver Bange

Chapter 13. CSCE: Albania the Outsider in European Political Life
Hamit Kaba

Conclusion
Nicolas Badalassi and Sarah B. Snyder

Index

The CSCE and the End of the Cold War: Diplomacy,

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/07/2020
      ISBN13: 9781789208498, 978-1789208498
      ISBN10: 1789208491

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      From its inception, the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) provoked controversy. Today it is widely regarded as having contributed to the end of the Cold War. Bringing together new and innovative research on the CSCE, this volume explores questions key to understanding the Cold War: What role did diplomats play in shaping the 1975 Helsinki Final Act? How did that agreement and the CSCE more broadly shape societies in Europe and North America? And how did the CSCE and activists inspired by the Helsinki Final Act influence the end of the Cold War?



      Trade Review

      “The authors add to the significant literature available on the Cold War, its history, and explanations for how it ended. In the contested debate over the CSCE’s contribution, these authors add evidence to the side arguing its significant role in ending the Cold War…This is a fundamental book for historians, diplomats, and political scientists who would like a reference of how international organizations come out of diplomatic negotiations and seemingly temporary gatherings.” • Canadian Slavonic Papers

      “The volume is of the highest importance, which manages to encompass some of the most significant positions and strategies, compared to the respective political context, which explains very well the evolution and political context of today.” • Journal of Global Politics & Current Diplomacy

      “The various chapters in this book provide useful additional insight on the CSCE and especially the human dimension of the process, including some issues that have not really been significantly studied to date and new data from archives on a number of issues.” • H-Net

      “The contributions, without exception based on sound sources, some of them of extraordinary originality and very inspirational for research, make the reading of them for everybody interested in the KSZE and East-West détente very rewarding.” • Sehepunkte

      “This excellent volume stands at the forefront of scholarship in the field and will certainly make an important contribution to our understanding of the complex developments that led to the end of the Cold War.” • Aryo Makko, Stockholm University and Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study

      “The essays in this volume illuminate just what the Helsinki process entailed and help explain the multidimensional ways in which it facilitated the end of the Cold War—everything from building bridges between groups to keeping dialogue going when the Cold War refroze in the early 1980s and connecting lower-level politics to high politics.” • Jaclyn Stanke, Campbell University

      “Bold in ambition and scope, this collection highlights transnational history at its finest. It covers an impressive amount of terrain, allowing for a more layered and nuanced understanding of the CSCE.” • Garret Martin, American University



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements
      List of Abbreviations
      Chronology of CSCE Meetings

      Introduction
      Nicolas Badalassi and Sarah B. Snyder

      PART I: DIPLOMATS, DIPLOMACIES AND THE MAKING OF THE CSCE

      Chapter 1. The Human Dimension of the CSCE, 1975–1990
      Andrei Zagorski

      Chapter 2. Executors or Creative Deal-Makers?: The Role of the Diplomats in the Making of the Helsinki CSCE
      Martin D. Brown and Angela Romano

      Chapter 3. From Talleyrand to Sakharov: French Diplomacy in Search of a ‘Helsinki Effect’
      Nicolas Badalassi

      Chapter 4. ‘Human Rights, Peace and Security Are Inseparable’: Max Kampelman and the Helsinki Process
      Stephan Kieninger

      PART II: THE TRANSNATIONAL PROMOTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE ROLE OF DISSIDENCE

      Chapter 5. The Committee of Concerned Scientists and the Helsinki Final Act: ‘Refusenik’ Scientists, Détente and Human Rights
      Elisabetta Vezzosi

      Chapter 6. Seeing the Value of the Helsinki Accords: Human Rights, Peace and Transnational Debates about Détente, 1981–1988
      Christian P. Peterson

      Chapter 7. The Importance of the Helsinki Process for the Opposition in Central and Eastern Europe and the Western Peace Movements in the 1980s
      Jacek Czaputowicz

      Chapter 8. The Limits of Repression: Soviet-Bloc Security Services vs. Transnational Helsinki Networks, 1976–1986
      Douglas Selvage

      Chapter 9. Helsinki at Home: NGOs, the Helsinki Final Act and Politics in the United States, 1975–1985
      Carl J. Bon Tempo

      PART III: THE POLITICS OF THE CSCE IN EUROPE

      Chapter 10. European Détente and the CSCE: Austria and the East-Central European Theatre in the 1970s and 1980s
      Maximilian Graf

      Chapter 11. Saving Détente: The Federal Republic of Germany and the CSCE in the 1980s
      Matthias Peter

      Chapter 12. Transformation by Linkage?: Arms Control, Human Rights and the Rift between Moscow and East Berlin in the Late 1980s
      Oliver Bange

      Chapter 13. CSCE: Albania the Outsider in European Political Life
      Hamit Kaba

      Conclusion
      Nicolas Badalassi and Sarah B. Snyder

      Index

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