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Netherlands and European Integration, 1950 to Present [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 334 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Feb-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9463728139
  • ISBN-13: 9789463728133
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  • Cena: 147,05 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 334 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Feb-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9463728139
  • ISBN-13: 9789463728133
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
On 9 May 1950, France launched a revolutionary plan for supranational cooperation in Western Europe. The Netherlands was taken completely by surprise. In the decades that followed, European integration moved forward at an unprecedented pace, taking the Netherlands with it. Geography and the post-war world seemed to leave the country no other choice. European integration forced and is still forcing the Netherlands on a far-reaching journey to the continent. For the Netherlands, European integration represents a difficult journey to a new old world that often seems far off. How has that journey progressed so far? Why did the Netherlands join the common European market and currency from the very beginning? Was this course inevitable? And where has it brought the country? Using new, international source material, The Netherlands and European Integration, 1950 to Present digs deeply into the history of the Netherlands in Europe a subject that is today more topical than ever.
Preface 7(6)
Prologue: Dinner in Laeken (1989) 13(28)
Kohl's great leap forward
17(5)
The surgeons of French realpolitik
22(5)
Exploiting Franco-German reconciliation
27(8)
The Netherlands between the Anglo-Saxons and the Teutons
35(3)
Journey to the continent
38(3)
1 American concepts: Building Europe (1947-1949)
41(10)
Eternal division
51(6)
2 Magical realism (1949-1951)
57(2)
Putting the country's mental stability to the test
59(4)
The Germany memorandum
63(4)
Atlantis and bloc formation within the Western bloc
67(8)
The Netherlands taken by surprise
75(9)
Manufacturing a tranquillizer
84(5)
3 The Beyen Plan (1951-1954)
89(1)
The letter from `the Ten'
90(7)
Red versus Catholic
97(2)
From Europe
99(5)
A game for insiders
104(3)
4 Around Cologne cathedral (1954-1957)
107(2)
Adenauer's Abendland
109(4)
Coordination through Europe's back channels
113(6)
With the Benelux to Sicily
119(4)
Rebirth as a market
123(4)
The latest trend
127(6)
The Treaties of Rome i
133(8)
5 A Europe of conspiracies (1957-1968) 13g Faust in Paris
141(5)
Rhetoric and intrigue
146(12)
Market expansion by a gentleman farmer
158(7)
Silence is golden
165(4)
6 At home in the Basel biotope (1968-1974)
169(1)
American dreams
170(6)
An alternative loan circuit
176(6)
Holtrop's logic
182(5)
Masters of the interim stage
187(10)
7 Sturm und Drang (1974-1982)
197(4)
Late conversion
201(5)
The monetary trilemma
206(3)
Failure for Duisenberg
209(9)
The stick of free movement of capital
218(7)
8 The hand of French-German friendship (1982-1989)
225(1)
A community united by blood
226(10)
Celebrating success and earning money
236(7)
Work in progress
243(7)
The Delors Report
250(7)
9 After Strasbourg: A different party than expected (1989-1992)
257(2)
Piet's work of art
259(7)
The consequences
266(5)
10 European realities: Defining Europe after the Cold War
271(4)
The direction of integration
275(5)
The 1990s and after
280(5)
The tragedy of Maastricht and Amsterdam
285(7)
A rediscovery
292(5)
Epilogue: The call of Calypso 297(16)
Abbreviations 313(2)
Acknowledgements 315(2)
Sources and references 317(12)
Index 329(1)
Index of names 329(2)
Index of subjects 331
Mathieu Segers (1976) is Professor of Contemporary European History and European Integration at Maastricht University.