
Der Konflikt um Alleinvertretung und Anerkennung in der UNO
Die deutsch-deutschen Beziehungen zu den Vereinten Nationen von 1949 bis 1973
Authors
Parameters
Categories
More about the book
The central theme of this volume is the historical analysis of relations between the two German states and the United Nations up until the admission of East and West Germany to the UN in 1973. This triangular relationship has hitherto only been of marginal interest in research, and the few studies that exist cover either the period from 1973 or, simply because of the lack of archive material, examine the development from an individual state perspective. The present study breaks new ground in this respect. For the first time, extensive use is made of archive material of the East German foreign ministry and the records of the UN archive in New York. It also shows, moreover, that at least at the pre-diplomatic level a symbolic form of competition for exclusive representation and acknowledgement between the two Germany's developed. Until the admission of both states in 1973, the UNO was an independent arena in the inner-German conflict.
Book purchase
Der Konflikt um Alleinvertretung und Anerkennung in der UNO, Mathias Stein
- Language
- Released
- 2011
Payment methods
- Title
- Der Konflikt um Alleinvertretung und Anerkennung in der UNO
- Subtitle
- Die deutsch-deutschen Beziehungen zu den Vereinten Nationen von 1949 bis 1973
- Language
- German
- Authors
- Mathias Stein
- Publisher
- V & R Unipress
- Released
- 2011
- ISBN10
- 3899718658
- ISBN13
- 9783899718652
- Category
- University and college textbooks
- Description
- The central theme of this volume is the historical analysis of relations between the two German states and the United Nations up until the admission of East and West Germany to the UN in 1973. This triangular relationship has hitherto only been of marginal interest in research, and the few studies that exist cover either the period from 1973 or, simply because of the lack of archive material, examine the development from an individual state perspective. The present study breaks new ground in this respect. For the first time, extensive use is made of archive material of the East German foreign ministry and the records of the UN archive in New York. It also shows, moreover, that at least at the pre-diplomatic level a symbolic form of competition for exclusive representation and acknowledgement between the two Germany's developed. Until the admission of both states in 1973, the UNO was an independent arena in the inner-German conflict.