HY432 Not available in 2009/10 From Cold Warriors to Peacemakers: the End of the Cold War Era, 1979-1997
This information is for the 2009/10 session.
Teacher responsible
Dr K Spohr Readman, E507.
Availability
For MA/MSc History of International Relations, MSc Theory and History of International Relations, MSc History of Nationalism, LSE-Columbia University Double Degree in International and World History and LSE-PKU Double Degree in MSc International Affairs.
Course content
Western (European) diplomacy in the 1980s to the mid-1990s examining tensions, rivalries and linkages not merely between the western and communist blocs, but also within them, as well as studying the events reflecting the shift from the Cold War to the post-Cold War world.
The aim is to address from a historical perspective the diplomacy of the end of the East-West conflict, German reunification, the Yugoslavian wars, European integration, and NATO enlargement. The domestic political bases of, and the political relations between, the leading figures (Gorbachev, Yeltsin, Reagan, Bush, Thatcher, Major, Mitterrand, Delors and Kohl) will be covered as well as the diplomacy of the period. Major topics will include Ostpolitik and the reunification of Germany; the collapse of the Soviet Union, the collapse of the Soviet Empire; the Rhodesian Settlement; the Falklands and Gulf Wars; America and her Western European partners; the Single European Act, the ERM and the Maastricht Treaty; the security arrangements of Russia and NATO after the fall of communism; Germany after reunification; Eastern Europe after communism; Russia and the former territories of the USSR; Italy after the fall of communism.
Teaching
22 two-hour weekly meetings arranged on a mixed lecture/seminar basis.
Formative coursework
Short class papers, engagement in role play, a number of discussions on Moodle, and four essays will be required, one of which will be a 4,000 word assessed essay in LT. There will be a one-hour timed essay in ST.
Indicative reading
A full bibliography will be provided at the first meeting of the class. Key books include: Margaret Thatcher, The Downing Street Years; EHH Green, Thatcher; Philip Zelicow & Condoleeza Rice, Germany Unified and Europe Transformed; Julius W Friend, The Long Presidency, France in the Mitterrand Years; Martin McCauley, Gorbachev; Hannes Adomeitm, Imperial Overstretch; Saki Dockrill, The End of the Cold War Era; George Bush & Brent Scowcroft, A World Transformed; Misha Glenny, The Balkans 1804-1999; Sean Kay, NATO and the Future of European Security;Kristina Spohr Readman, Germany and the Baltic Problem: The Development of a New Ostpolitik, 1989-2000.
Assessment
One three-hour formal examination in the ST for 75% of the final mark, and one assessed essay (delivered in LT) for the remaining 25% of the mark. ^
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