ABSTRACT

In the early twentieth century brutal nation-states such as Mussolini’s Italy, Stalin’s Russia and Hitler’s Germany came to the fore and the twin evils of dictatorship and war ensured the rapid destruction of liberal democracy, market economics and the international order. In contrast, the latter half was concerned with re-thinking and re-shaping these core values which still guide political life after the millennium.

Harold James analyses the failures and achievements of the twentieth century.

The demands of the post-war period, namely the place of Europe in a wider international order are also examined. Features include:

    Boxed Case Studies
    Maps
    Plates
    Figures
    Short Biographies
    Chronologies
    Statistical Appendix

James lucidly argues that European societies today are dominated by the trend to converge around the principles of democracy, market economics and international integration. He shows that the stability brought by the gradual unwinding of the nation-state and the end of left-right politics have created a Europe ‘reborn’.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter |19 pages

Chronology

chapter 2|32 pages

] 2. War and Peace: Lenin and Wilson

chapter 3|24 pages

The 1920s: Precarious Democracy

chapter 4|43 pages

Europe and the World of the Depression

chapter 6|42 pages

The Second World War

chapter 9|22 pages

A Golden Age: the 1960s

chapter 10|24 pages

] 10. The Limits to Growthmanship: the 1970s

chapter 11|20 pages

Right Step: the 1980s