Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic in World Politics

By (author) Ladislav Cabada, Šárka Waisová

Hardback - £94.00

Publication date:

16 December 2011

Length of book:

242 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

240x163mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780739167335

The book focuses on the description and analysis of the historical formation of the Czechoslovak and Czech positions in the international system during the course of the 20th century. The first part of the book presents a brief outline of the history of Czechoslovak foreign policy between the First World War and the end of the Cold War. The authors focus on the key periods and turning points in the role of the small Central European state in the international system as well as on the significant actors formulating Czechoslovak foreign policy from the inside and influencing it from the outside. The second, analytical part of the book focuses on the key issues connected to the change of the position of Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic after 1993 in world politics, and on the formulation of Czech foreign policy priorities and strategies in the globalized world after the end of bipolar confrontation. The authors analytically investigate the activities of the Czech Republic in (Central) European regional integration processes and the integration of the state in the global system of development cooperation. A great deal of attention is paid to the key political actors of the Czech foreign policy discussion and their impact on the formulation of foreign policy goals. Special attention is paid to the dilemmas of Czech foreign policy: the hesitation between the role of a small state and a medium power and also the span of Czech foreign policy between Atlanticism, anti-Americanism and Europeanization.
Political scientists Cabada and Waisová have authored a book that centers on forces, events, and issues long addressed by scholars: Austrian imperial rule over the Czechs up to WW I; the interwar period marked by growing political instability in then independent Czechoslovakia against the backdrop of fascism menacing Europe; Nazi Germany's absorption of the Czech lands and its domination of nominally independent Slovakia; Soviet hegemony in Eastern and Central Europe (including the reconstituted Czechoslovakia) from the end of WW II until the dissolution of the Soviet empire and the Soviet Union itself, marking the end of the Cold War; and the post-Cold War period to the present, with the Czechs and Slovaks split apart once again and their two sovereignties incorporated into the EU and NATO. This anguishing history has shaped Czech perspectives and actions in the international sphere. Czech foreign policy continues to evoke the principal lesson drawn from Jaroslav Ha^Dvsek's great novel The Good Soldier Schweik: be compliant, not overtly rebellious in the face of insurmountable external pressures and threats. The book will appeal mostly to specialists on Czech and central European affairs. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate and professional collections.