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Project

Transnational Activism and the End of the Cold War

The collapse of state socialism in Central and Eastern Europe and the end of the Cold War not only dramatically transformed post- communist Europe, these events also affected societies which had been at the Western side of the Iron Curtain, and reshaped Europe as a whole. This project seeks to assess the impact of 1989 and the ‘opening of the East’ on transnational civil society in Western Europe by examining East-West contacts from the vantage point of international social movements and NGOs. It aims to analyze how these actors related to and were affected by the unforeseen changes in the ‘other Europe’, and how they aimed to ‘modernize’ and ‘develop’ the region. To do so, it examines organizations, ideologies, and activities, as well as different spaces of transnational contact, of three key fields of social mobilization – labour, environment, and development cooperation – between 1988 and 1997. It also aims to analyze how these East-West movements surpassed European borders and related to campaigns with an orientation towards the postcolonial Third World. In this way, this project contributes in a substantial and innovative way to critical approaches towards the history of the Cold War, European integration, development aid, and ‘alternative globalizations’, and historicizes the development of transnational civil society in the 1990s.

Date:1 Oct 2021 →  Today
Keywords:Cold War, Transnational Activism, Global Civil Society, First, Second and Third World
Disciplines:Modern and contemporary history, European history
Project type:PhD project