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Journal articles on the topic 'Post-war legacy'

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1

MITTER, RANA, and AARON WILLIAM MOORE. "China in World War II, 1937–1945: Experience, Memory, and Legacy." Modern Asian Studies 45, no. 2 (2011): 225–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x10000387.

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AbstractChina's long war against Japan from 1937 to 1945 has remained in the shadows of historiography until recently, both in China and abroad. In recent years, the opening of archives and a widening of the opportunity to discuss the more controversial aspects of the wartime period in China itself have restored World War II in China (‘the War of Resistance to Japan’) to a much more central place in historical interpretation. Among the areas that this issue covers are the new socio-political history of the war that seeks to restore rationality to the policies of the Guomindang (Nationalist) pa
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2

Wang, Hongou. "Ambition in Richard Wagner and His Legacy." Journal of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences 42 (December 13, 2024): 873–77. https://doi.org/10.54097/hbs3mh59.

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Wagner’s music, political pursuit, and his value have been commonly discussed together. It becomes a question of what was Wagner influenced by and what was the effect of it. The focus of this paper will be mainly on Richard Wagner, the Third Reinch, and Wagner’s Bayreuth Festival. The topic of this paper will be discussing how some of Wagner’s most influential childhood experience influenced his future pursuit in different field and how did his work mostly influence the later generations. This paper will be researching on Wagner’s family’s influence on Wagner, how he was encouraged to build Ba
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Zieliński, Miłosz J. "Kant's Future: Debates about the Identity of Kaliningrad Oblast." Slavic Review 77, no. 4 (2018): 937–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/slr.2018.291.

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This article addresses the role that the legacy of the pre- and post-WWII past has played in ongoing identity debates among the inhabitants of Kaliningrad oblast of the Russian Federation. Since 1991, interest in preserving this legacy has been on the rise, influencing the inhabitants’ feeling of regional distinctiveness in numerous ways. While the pre-war legacy is important for a considerable number of Kaliningraders, others believe that it threatens the Russian and Soviet mien of the Oblast, both in cultural and political terms. They favor taking greater care of Soviet-era buildings, monume
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Newman, Edward, and Niklas Keller. "Criminal Legacies of War Economies." Journal of Peacebuilding & Development 3, no. 3 (2007): 49–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15423166.2007.830805478914.

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Many contemporary civil wars are characterised by a political economy of violence – a ‘war economy’ – whose actors are highly motivated by profit. Examining cases of Afghanistan and Bosnia-Herzegovina, this article draws attention to a different but related notion: criminal economic activities which characterise the political economy of violence during civil war develop a self-serving momentum and continue, after ‘resolution’ of the political conflict, to do great harm. The article explores the impact of illegal money-making – a legacy of the ‘war economy’ – on societies in post-conflict trans
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Černauskienė, Aušra. "Preservation Scenarios for Post-War Concrete Architecture: The Case of Lithuania." Architecture and Urban Planning 19, no. 1 (2023): 217–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/aup-2023-0020.

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Abstract Post-war concrete architecture is a valuable part of the 20th-century heritage spread worldwide with specific preservation challenges. This paper analyses three possible preservation scenarios: conservation, comprehensive upgrade, and adaptive reuse based on a broad legacy of post-war concrete architecture in Lithuania and the sustainability aspect. Even though several significant concrete objects are listed, they are protected very formally, and no comprehensive preservation is applied.
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Van Gorp, Angelo. "«Like Air Bricks on Earth»: Notes on Developing a Research Agenda Regarding the Post-War Legacy of New Education." Espacio, Tiempo y Educación 7, no. 1 (2020): 7–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.14516/ete.297.

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This article presents the building blocks of a new research agenda through which the author aims to fill a gap in the existing scholarship on the history of new education in Belgium and its international links. In particular, the War years and the decades immediately following the Second World War remain un(der)explored. Since the author has only just begun to tackle this research agenda, the article presents preliminary thoughts, questions, and a critical reflection on issues related to developing such an agenda. It does this in a programmed way. The article is built on a review of the resear
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Mastny, V. "Diplomacy and the Legacy of the Cold War: Post-11 September." Cold War History 2, no. 3 (2002): 15–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/713999959.

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8

McKellar, Erin. "The Blitz and its Legacy: wartime destruction to post-war reconstruction." Planning Perspectives 29, no. 2 (2014): 258–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02665433.2014.885792.

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9

Gathii, James Thuo. "War's Legacy in International Investment Law." International Community Law Review 11, no. 4 (2009): 353–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187197409x12525781476088.

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AbstractThis article discusses the role war has played in shaping the rules of international investment law from the late nineteenth century. At the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century, the move towards institutions, such as arbitration forums, and rules as an alternative to the use of force gave new impetus to the growth of international commercial law and related institutions. These rules and institutions represented the hope that the use of force would be eclipsed as States moved forward towards more cooperative, consensual and non-coercive mechanisms of
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10

Chanyshev, Rustem Narimovich, and Olga Robertovna Fayzullina. "The formation of post-war us foreign policy." Laplage em Revista 6, Extra-A (2020): 123–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.24115/s2446-622020206extra-a569p.123-128.

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George Frost Kennan (1904-2005) is a famous American diplomat and historian, the author of the “Long telegram” and the doctrine of “containment”. He is an active participant in the formulation of the Truman Doctrine and the development of the Marshall Plan. He was one of the originators of political “realism”, a dominant school of thought in international relations theory. George Kennan is one of the key figures in the history of the Cold War and Soviet-American geopolitical rivalry. The conceptual, theoretically justified “containment” offered by Kennan has become a US postwar foreign policy
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Johnstone, Ian. "Louis Sohn’s Legacy." European Journal of International Law 31, no. 2 (2020): 583–600. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ejil/chaa046.

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Abstract Louis Sohn was an émigré scholar who fled Poland for the USA in 1939, two weeks before the Nazis invaded. His most widely known work is World Peace through World Law, co-written with Grenville Clark, a vision for a reconstructed United Nations. Writing at a time when political realism was ascendant in the USA, Sohn was labeled an ‘idealist’. Yet a strain of pragmatism also runs through his scholarship, leading many to praise him as one of the architects of modern international law. As a scholar-practitioner with a mission to help build the post-World War II international order, little
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LEE, SABINE. "A Forgotten Legacy of the Second World War: GI children in post-war Britain and Germany." Contemporary European History 20, no. 2 (2011): 157–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s096077731100004x.

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AbstractWhether in war, occupation or peacekeeping, whenever foreign soldiers are in contact with the local population, and in particular with local women, some of these contacts are intimate. Between 1942 and 1945, US soldiers fathered more than 22,000 children in Britain, and during the first decade of post-war US presence in West Germany more than 37,000 children were fathered by American occupation soldiers. Many of these children were raised in their mothers’ families, not knowing about their biological roots and often suffering stigmatisation and discrimination. The question of how these
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13

Welch, David. "Citizenship and Politics: The Legacy of Wilton Park for Post-War Reconstruction." Contemporary European History 6, no. 2 (1997): 209–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0960777300004537.

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Writing in 1965 in Britain Looks to Germany, Donald Cameron Watt concluded:Perhaps the biggest successes scored by the Education Branch lay in the programme of exchange visits at all levels, in the discovery and encouragement of a new generation of teachers in Germany.…and most imaginatively of all in the opening up of the Wilton Park Centre to which leaders of opinion in Germany came for short residential courses on British democratic practice. Politicians, journalists, teachers, academics, trades unionists mingle together in these courses, and so valuable did the centre appear to German opin
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Iorga, Alina. "1989: “Refolutions”, “Rebirths” and the Crisis of Utopias." Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Studia Europaea 68, no. 1 (2023): 217–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.24193/subbeuropaea.2023.1.07.

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"Having been seen, at first, as the foundation of a “rebirth”, both European and global, the “refolutions” of 1989 left a highly controversial legacy which is still subject of political memory clashes and a source of “cultural bipolarities”, but also of disillusionment and polarizations within multiple mnemonic communities. These contradictions, anchored in the ”traumatogenic changes” of the democratic transitions that engendered, at the end of the 90s, post-socialist nostalgia, are also related to a crisis of utopian thinking which characterized the moment 1989 itself and became a main featur
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Johnson, James Elton. "Henrietta Crawford: Radical Black Evangelist in Post-Civil War New Jersey." New Jersey Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 7, no. 1 (2021): 70–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.14713/njs.v7i1.225.

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Representing Black feminisms of the so-called, “First Wave era of American feminism,” forgotten icon Henrietta Crawford impacted Black political representation in southern New Jersey during the post-Civil War decades. As a noted evangelist, universal suffragist, Black community organizer, Civil Rights activist, homemaker, and intergenerational caregiver for minor dependents, Crawford crafted an intersectional legacy worthy of commemorative re-remembrance. Collectively, scattered bits and pieces of information recorded over the past eighty years in newspapers and in recent scholarly accounts of
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16

Patnaik, Prabhat. "The Legacy of Ashok Mitra." Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy: A triannual Journal of Agrarian South Network and CARES 7, no. 3 (2018): 381–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2277976018803800.

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Ashok Mitra, the renowned Indian economist, passed away on 1 May 2018. Mitra was a keen analyst of the relationship between economics and politics, which he understood as being inextricably enmeshed, with the latter having a degree of relative autonomy. It followed, for Mitra, that class struggle ‘in society at large’ underlay ‘every aspect’ of economic life, including the determination of economic variables. He focused his analytical sights on distributional dynamics, specifically on the relative shares of the different classes in national income and the role of the State. He took issue with,
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Brown, Laura A. "Planning for Legacy in the Post-War Era of the Olympic Winter Games." International Journal of the History of Sport 37, no. 13 (2020): 1348–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2020.1854739.

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18

Cortazzi, Sir Hugh. "Book Review: Showa Japan: The Post-War Golden Age and Its Troubled Legacy." Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics 22, no. 3 (2010): 285–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02601079x10002200307.

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19

Tribe, Rachel, and Harriet Calvert. "Moving forward together? Legacy issues and well‐being in post war Sri Lanka." International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care 7, no. 3 (2011): 131–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/17479891111196159.

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20

KRYSTKOWSKI, Tomasz. "POST-WAR ATTEMPTS TO BUILD A MODERN METROPOLIS AND THE PROBLEM OF LODZ HISTORICAL HERITAGE." International Journal of Conservation Science 16, Special Issue (2025): 655–76. https://doi.org/10.36868/ijcs.2025.si.21.

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Large parts of Lodz underwent a significant transformation from 1945 to 1989. This largely concerned the city’s downtown area. Quarters of historic buildings were replaced with new buildings, constituting parts of the new center. The ambition of both the new authorities and the city's inhabitants was to create a representative area corresponding to the importance of the dynamically developing capital of the region. The article presents the views of residents – both professionals (architects, planners) and “ordinary” ones – regarding the city's historical legacy against the background of their
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21

Mihaylova, Aneta. "Haunting Images of the Past: WWII Monuments in Post-Communist Bulgaria." ARHIVELE TOTALITARISMULUI 32, no. 1-2 (2024): 213–29. https://doi.org/10.61232/at.2024.1-2.14.

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The pivotal role of the Bulgarian Communist Party in the anti-fascist resistance movement and of the Soviet Union in liberating Bulgaria from fascism were the two central pillars of the narrative of the history and memory of Second World War in communist Bulgaria. The end of communism marked the beginning of a new reading of the past and an increased public interest in topics and personalities, whose historical evaluation had been caught in the grip of the established ideological canon for decades. The reassessment of Bulgarian national history also referred to the period of the Second World W
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22

Cathcart, Adam, and Patricia Nash. "“To Serve Revenge for the Dead”: Chinese Communist Responses to Japanese War Crimes in the PRC Foreign Ministry Archive, 1949–1956." China Quarterly 200 (December 2009): 1053–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741009990622.

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AbstractUsing newly available documents from the PRC Foreign Ministry Archive, this article traces the evolving legacies of the War of Resistance in the first seven years of the People's Republic. Analysis is offered of PRC campaigns against Japanese bacteriological war crimes, criticisms of American dealings with Japanese war criminals, and the 1956 trial of Japanese at Shenyang. Throughout, behind-the-scenes tensions with the Soviet Union and internal bureaucratic struggles over the Japanese legacy regarding these matters are revealed. The article thereby aims to shed light on how the War of
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23

Van Acker, Tomas. "Exploring the Legacies of Armed Rebellion in Burundi'sMaquis par Excellence." Africa Spectrum 51, no. 2 (2016): 15–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000203971605100202.

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This contribution explores the legacies of armed rebellion in post-war Burundi, where two of the main political parties, the ruling CNDD-FDD and the FNL, are former rebel movements. It aims to add a micro-political perspective to the discussion on the transformation of rebel groups into political parties, and bring some nuance to the normative underpinnings of this debate. Based on observations of the role of local leaders with an FNL past, and of retrospective popular appreciation for wartime governance by the FNL in its stronghold of Bujumbura Rural, the paper argues that beyond the symptoms
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24

SPRIGGE, MARTHA. "Tape Work and Memory Work in Post-War Germany." Twentieth-Century Music 14, no. 1 (2017): 49–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1478572217000056.

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ABSTRACTSonic traces of the Third Reich have held significant memorial power in post-war Germany. This article traces three works that sample one of the most well-known recordings from the Nazi period: Joseph Goebbels's declaration of Total War, delivered on 18 February 1943, and broadcast on newsreel and radio the following week. In both message and material, this recording epitomizes Friedrich Kittler's claim that tape is a military technology. The works examined span different memory debates in post-war Germany: Bernd Alois Zimmermann realized Requiem für einen jungen Dichter (1967–9) as We
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Stępniewski, Tomasz. "Russia-Ukraine war: independence, identity, and security." Rocznik Instytutu Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej 20, no. 2 (2022): 7–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.36874/riesw.2022.2.1.

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The aim of this short paper is to show that the relations between Ukraine and Russia are extremely complex as they are built on a shared history, religion, language, and culture and they should not, therefore, be gauged by Western standards. Evaluating the current situation from a broader perspective, the fact that Ukraine plays a significant role in Russia’s foreign policy needs to be emphasized. Ukraine is considered the key post-Soviet state, a significant “near abroad” country, whose position, potential, and geopolitical location are vital for the balance of power in both Eastern Europe an
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Fallaw, Ben W. "Cárdenas and the Caste War that Wasn’t: State Power and Indigenismo in Post-Revolutionary Yucatán." Americas 53, no. 4 (1997): 551–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1008148.

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The Caste War that devastated Yucatán in the middle of the nineteenth century cast a long shadow across ethnic relations and politics in the state decades after its effective end. During the Mexican Revolution and the subsequent period of national reconstruction, revolutionary politicians invoked the Caste War as a precursor to the Revolution and as justification for post-Revolutionary projects, in particular indigenismo. The state’s indigenist policy advocated, in the words of Alan Knight, the “emancipation and integration of Mexico’s exploited Indian groups.” To this end, it offered indigeno
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Allison, Michael E. "The Legacy of Violence on Post-Civil War Elections: The Case of El Salvador." Studies in Comparative International Development 45, no. 1 (2010): 104–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12116-009-9056-x.

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LeMahieu, Michael. "Post-54: Reconstructing Civil War Memory in American Literature after Brown." American Literary History 33, no. 3 (2021): 635–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajab059.

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Abstract From a cultural fad of Confederate flags to a spate of schools named after Confederate generals, the 1954 Brown v. Board decision revived the memory of the US Civil War. In their collective effort of “massive resistance,” white southerners considered themselves carrying on the legacy of their Confederate ancestors, rebelling against the federal government and insisting upon states’ rights. In response to this revival, many mid-century writers revised Civil War memory. Ralph Ellison, for example, considered the Brown decision as yet another battle in an ongoing Civil War. The works of
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Gorlov, V. N., and S. N. Artemov. "PROBLEMS OF WORKING YOUTH IN MOSCOW REGION SOCIETY IN THE POST-WAR YEARS." History: facts and symbols, no. 2 (June 8, 2022): 7–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.24888/2410-4205-2022-31-2-7-18.

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The article is devoted to the influence of workers' dormitories on Soviet youth, to show Soviet dormitories of working youth as a characteristic legacy of the Soviet era, as a dwelling through which the process of managing young workers was carried out. On the basis of the conducted re-search, the contradiction between the housing needs of Soviet citizens and the extremely difficult housing conditions of young workers in the post-war years is shown, the relationship of production processes with the solution of workers' housing issues is shown. The problems of the social policy of the Soviet st
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DALE, ROBERT. "Divided we Stand: Cities, Social Unity and Post-War Reconstruction in Soviet Russia, 1945–1953." Contemporary European History 24, no. 4 (2015): 493–516. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0960777315000302.

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AbstractThis article explores the divisions created by the Great Patriotic War, its aftermath and the reconstruction of Russian cities in the late 1940s and early 1950s. It examines the conflicts created by rebuilding housing, infrastructure, restoring communities and allocating resources in cities where war's painful legacy continued to be felt. The war's impact varied enormously between cities on the frontlines and in the rear. Contrary to official propaganda rebuilding was a protracted process, which created divisions rather than unity.
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Gromyko, Alexey. "Was the Alternative to the Cold War Possible? (To 75 anniversary of Great Victory and the creation of the UN). Article two." Contemporary Europe 99, no. 6 (2020): 5–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.15211/soveurope620200514.

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The article continues the research of the “big three” strategic thinking, especially the USSR and the USA, during the Second World War, their contribution to the post-war settlement with the United Nations as a key element. Their approaches to new mechanisms of global governance were developing on parallel and overlapping courses. On the chronology of the Cold War, the author proposes to define its start as an extended period from 1945 until the end of the decade. This methodology avoids absolutization of intentions, separate events and statements. Instead it imbeds them in the process of poli
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Bakic, Dragan. "The Great War and the Kingdom of Yugoslavia the legacy of an enduring conflict." Balcanica, no. 49 (2018): 157–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/balc1849157b.

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The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, officially named Yugoslavia after 1929, came into being on the ruins of the Habsburg Empire in 1918 after the immense war efforts and sacrifices endured by Serbia. The experience of anti-Habsburg struggle both before and after 1914 and the memory of some of the most difficult moments in the Great War left a deep imprint on the minds of policy-makers in Belgrade. As they believed that many dangers faced in the war were likely to be revived in the future, the impact of these experiences was instrumental to their post-war foreign policy and military plan
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Gromyko, Alexey. "The Birth of the Post-War World: Planning and Realities (To 75 Anniversary of the Great Victory and the creation of the UNO. Article one)." Contemporary Europe, no. 98 (October 1, 2020): 19–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.15211/soveurope520201932.

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The article is dedicated to the 75-th anniversaries since the end of the Second World War and the creation of the United Nations. The author explores the evolution of key ideas, including the contribution of the Soviet diplomatic strategy, on the post-war world and interaction among the great powers. Special attention is drawn to the phenomenon of the ―Roosevelt course‖ and the atmosphere in the Soviet-American relations during the war. The main approaches of the allies’ diplomacy towards principles of post-war cooperation are analysed. It is shown that the emergence of the Cold War was not in
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Ross, Ryan. "Between Shell Shock and PTSD? ‘Accident Neurosis’ and Its Sequelae in Post-War Britain." Social History of Medicine 32, no. 3 (2018): 565–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkx118.

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Summary This article focuses on the concept of ‘accident neurosis’, popularised by neurologist Henry Miller in studies published in 1961. It aims to realise two goals. First, it introduces Miller’s concept of accident neurosis to the broader history of trauma—to a field, that is, more preoccupied with military traumata and clear-cut psychiatric aetiologies. Secondly, I use Miller’s studies, and the considerable legacy they created, to reflect on how historians of trauma construct historical narratives, asking whether there is sufficient appreciation of the ways in which events seem to leak int
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DRAGOSTINOVA, THEODORA. "On ‘Strategic Frontiers’: Debating the Borders of the Post-Second World War Balkans." Contemporary European History 27, no. 3 (2018): 387–411. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0960777318000243.

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This article examines debates between Bulgaria, Greece and Yugoslavia concerning the post-Second World War Balkan borders in preparation for the Paris Peace Conference of 1946. While for most of the twentieth century Greece and Yugoslavia were close allies united in their position against revisionist Bulgaria, after 1944 the communist affiliations of the new Bulgarian and Yugoslav governments determined the rapprochement between the latter two states. As various proposals for border revisions and the possibility of a Balkan Federation were discussed, the Balkans became a prime battlefield in t
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Lie, John. "Ruth Benedict's Legacy of Shame: Orientalism and Occidentalism in the Study of Japan." Asian Journal of Social Science 29, no. 2 (2001): 249–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853101x00064.

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AbstractRuth F. Benedict's The Chrysanthemum and the Sword (1946) remains perhaps the most influential English-language book on contemporary Japanese society and culture. The Chrysanthemum and the Sword has generated a large critical literature and has sold over 1.4 million copies in Japan. It would not be an exaggeration to state that Benedict's book framed both American and Japanese - and, by extension, global - perceptions of Japan since the end of World War II. In this paper, I explore why her work found such resonance among the Japanese themselves to the extent that The Chrysanthemum and
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Martin, James. "The Post-Marxist Gramsci." Global Discourse 9, no. 2 (2019): 305–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/204378919x15526540593561.

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Gramsci's ideas, particularly his formulation of cultural and ideological 'hegemony', have been a vital reference point in post-war Marxism and radical political thinking generally. Laclau and Mouffe's recasting of hegemony in a post-Marxist idiom continued a wider tendency to amplify a specific aspect of Gramsci's work, largely by neglecting consideration of his historical context or political and organisational commitments. By expanding hegemony into a radical theory of social constitution, I argue, Laclau and Mouffe drew upon Gramsci effectively to distance themselves from much of his legac
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38

Turner, Jonathan H. "The Mixed Legacy of the Chicago School of Sociology." Sociological Perspectives 31, no. 3 (1988): 325–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1389202.

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This article examines the legacy of the Chicago School of Sociology. Because the Chicago department so dominated sociology in the 1920s and 1930s, it created the mold or template on which new departments, or the expansion of older ones, were modeled in the 1930s and in the post-World War II period. The legacy of this situation is mixed: On the one hand, the Chicago department made sociology a legitimate discipline in a hostile academic environment, whereas, on the other hand, it helped create a discipline so diversified in substantive specialties, so atheoretical, and so concerned with narrow
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Matusiak, Agnieszka, Andrzej Polak, and Monika Wolting. "Freedom on the post-totalitarian horizon." Miscellanea Posttotalitariana Wratislaviensia 8 (July 22, 2021): 9–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.19195/2353-8546.8.1.

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The authors of this sketch are drawing a panorama of the potential interpretational aspects of understanding the category of freedom in the societies of the post-communist part of Europe. At the same time, they attempt to define the horizon for finding the answer to the identity-forming question that is key for this georegion, i.e. about the essence and the specificity of processes, phenomena and mechanisms of emancipation of culture and societies of post-totalitarian European countries from the legacy of World War II, and particularly its post-Yalta consequences which embedded the countries a
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Ward, Vanessa B. "A Post-War Japanese Intellectual Journal: Shisō no kagaku and Self-Publishing." East Asian Publishing and Society 6, no. 2 (2016): 130–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22106286-12341292.

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In 1996, the Institute for the Science of Thought decided to cease publication of its journal Shisō no kagaku (Science of thought). Launched in May 1946, the journal had not only survived the turbulent immediate postwar era, but also oversight by five different publishing companies within the space of less than twenty years. In 1962 the Institute broke away from commercial publishers, and established a new company especially to publish the journal. Self-publishing was prompted by the decision by the journal’s current publisher to cancel a forthcoming special issue on the ‘emperor system’. This
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Chang, Jun-Kab. "U.S. Foreign Security Policy in Early Post-Cold War Period: A Case Study of the Panama Invasion." Korea Association of World History and Culture 71 (June 30, 2024): 293–321. http://dx.doi.org/10.32961/jwhc.2024.06.71.293.

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The chief legacy derived from the Panama invasion was how it altered the American public’s perceptions of the military after the frustrating war in Vietnam. The ease of Panama helped pave the way for the Iraq War. One intervention elided into another in the post-Cold War period. Operation Just Cause was a catalyst for Washington’s new role not only as worldwide policeman, but as global armed social worker. The United States encountered sinister new authoritarian regimes in Pyongyang, Tehran, and other capitals, for which the Cold War really ended. But before that return of great-power rivalry,
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Salcedo, Carlos Darío Pasaje, Ana Lucia Solarte Portilla, and Alberto Vianey Trujillo Rodríguez. "Comprehensive Education in Post-Agreement Contexts in Nariña." Revista de Gestão Social e Ambiental 19, no. 4 (2025): e011923. https://doi.org/10.24857/rgsa.v19n4-057.

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Objective: The objective of this study is to analyze the concept of comprehensive education in the context of the Colombian post-conflict between the government and the FARC in rural contexts of Nariño. Theoretical Framework: The text is based on concepts such as comprehensive education, Colombian post-conflict, school coexistence and promoting a pedagogy of peace in rural areas. Method: The study is qualitative with a hermeneutic approach and ethnographic type of research and documentary analysis. Results and Discussion: The legacy of the armed conflict in rural areas of Colombia is a signifi
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Hubený, David. "Regional Office for Aid to the Victims of War in Prague (1919–1938)." Faces of War, no. 2 (December 31, 2024): 95–108. https://doi.org/10.18778/3071-7779.2024.2.06.

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The killings and mutilations brought about by World War I left a significant mark on society: missing husbands and fathers, surviving war veterans, widows and orphans. The newly formed Czechoslovakia had to deal with this tragic legacy and care for the 600,000 men, women, and children affected by the war. To do this, it was necessary to strengthen the relevant public administration apparatus, as the existing social security was not prepared for such a burden. The new state could not fail where the Habsburg monarchy had already failed, ceasing to perform its basic social and economic functions
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Brooke, Stephen. "Revisionists and Fundamentalists: the Labour Party and Economic Policy during the Second World War." Historical Journal 32, no. 1 (1989): 157–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x0001534x.

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‘Labour Comes of Age’, Kingsley Martin observed a few days after the party's electoral landslide of 1945. This might have been more precise if a chorus had added, sotto voce, ‘…And Comes Into an Inheritance’, for since the publication of Paul Addison's The road to 1945 (1975), the history of the Labour party during and after the war has been dominated by the notion of a political consensus forged during the Churchill coalition and left as a legacy to the Attlee government. According to Addison, it was the consensus of Keynes and Beveridge that shaped post-war politics rather than any distincti
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Ojo, M. Adeleye. "The Foreign Policy of Mauritania." A Current Bibliography on African Affairs 17, no. 4 (1985): 347–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001132558501700404.

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This article examines the foreign policy of Mauritania towards its North African states neighbors and other African states. The basis of Mauritania's foreign policy is decolonization, the liberation movement, apartheid, and minority regime. Additionally, policies towards the East, the West, the United States, and the United Nations are discussed. Post independence changes, Colonial legacy, the economy, and the Polisario guerrillas and the war will continue to be important factors in determining foreign policy in Mauritania.
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Manchester, Laurie. "The Legacy of the Cold War: Post-Colonial Identity among Former Russophone Residents of Harbin." Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 25, no. 2 (2024): 327–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/kri.2024.a928128.

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Temple, John Robert. "A Radical and Progressive Legacy: Labour’s Housing Record, 1945 to 1951." Labour History Review 87, no. 1 (2022): 65–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/lhr.2022.3.

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The housing record of the Labour governments of 1945 to 1951 has traditionally been described as both an underachievement and the welfare state failure of Labour and Aneurin Bevan. This judgement has been reached by way of a focus on quantitative performance indicators; that is, on the number of permanent houses constructed during the period. Given the acute housing shortage following the end of the Second World War and housing’s premier position on the list of priorities of the British public, such a judgement, made on quantitative terms alone, is not without foundation. Ernest Bevin’s stagge
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Frohlig, Florence pascale astrid. "Fessenheim—Nuclear Power Plant for Peace." Culture Unbound 12, no. 3 (2021): 569–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/cu.v12i3.1057.

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This paper explores the construction of a nuclear power facility at Fessenheim, Alsace, and its role in the remaking of French-German post-war relations and the consolidation of the post-war peacebuilding process. The siting and materiality of nuclear energy technology, I argue, was a key component of the top-down peace-building strategy that guided reconciliation processes at the national and regional levels. This study analyses archival documents, newspapers articles, interviews with Alsatian antinuclear activists and amateur films in order to reconstruct how the site for a joint nuclear pow
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FELDMAN, Hannah, and Kirsten SCHEID. "Whither the Spiritual? Rethinking Secularism’s Legacy in post-Ottoman Art." Regards, no. 28 (November 30, 2022): 15–28. https://doi.org/10.70898/regards.v0i28.780.

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This dossier seeks to pinpoint hazards emerging on the globally redrawn map of art and culture. It was conceived to expose and navigate the mines laid when the ostensibly methodologically secular discourse of art history turns to art made outside Euro-American cultural centers and thought to be out of sync with Euro-American modernity. As commonly approached, the pinnacle of that modernity indexes a period roughly coincident with what one of us has referred to as the “decades of decolonization” to avoid reaffirming the Eurocentrism inherent to terming the period ‘post-war’. Spatially, our map
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Gundle, Stephen. "The ‘civic religion’ of the Resistance in post-war Italy." Modern Italy 5, no. 2 (2000): 113–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/713685680.

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SummaryThe problem of the legitimacy or otherwise of the Resistance tradition in post-war Italy has been addressed in recent years mainly in terms of the role of the partisan struggle and its political legacy. This article aims to assess the tradition in terms of commemorative practices, rituals, artistic representations and monuments. It seeks to evaluate whether the Resistance gave rise to a civic religion that may be compared to those which existed in the Liberal period, based on the heroic struggles and figures of the Risorgimento, and the Fascist period, which drew on the feelings of loss
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