Post-World War One Plebiscites and Their Legacies Exploring the Right of Self-Determination
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Budapest :
Central European University Press
2024.
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Edición: | 1st ed |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009814640106719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Front matter
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Introduction: Between Plebiscites, Difficult History, and Minority Rights
- Part One: The Right to Self-Determination and Plebiscites
- Chapter 1. Schleswig Safe for Democracy? A Comparative Perspective on Right-Sizing Referendums
- Chapter 2. Plebiscites and the Difficult Transition to Peace after the First World War
- Part Two: Plebiscites and Minority Rights in the Aftermath of the Paris Peace Conference
- Chapter 3. Where is Schleswig? Danish, German, and International Conceptions of the Schleswig Plebiscite
- Chapter 4. Principles and Politics: Flensburg and Klagenfurt in the Plebiscites of 1920
- Chapter 5. Visions of Legal and Substantive Citizenship and the League of Nations'Minority Treaties
- Part Three: Post-Plebiscitary Territories as Living Spaces between the Two World Wars
- Chapter 6. Fabricating a Border: The Sopron Plebiscite of 1921 and the Delineation of Burgenland
- Chapter 7. "Here at the Bleeding Eastern Border, One Could See the Injustice": July 11, 1920, in the Public Conscience and the Regierungspräsidium of Marienwerder until 1939
- Chapter 8. A Gendered View on the Plebiscitary and Post-plebiscitary Carinthian Slovene Minority: Roles and Realities of Women
- Part Four: The Post-World War I Plebiscites in the Longue Durée
- Chapter 9. Plebiscites, Minorities, and the Right of National Self-determination-Some Lessons from 1920
- Chapter 10. Militarized Plebiscite? The Legacy of the 1920 Carinthian Plebiscite
- Chapter 11. About Sèvres, Lausanne, the Widow Molla Sali, and the Ineffectual Attempt of Greece to Circumvent the Principles of the FrameworkConvention for the Protection of National Minorities.
- Concluding Chapter: "Why Not Hold a Plebiscite like in Schleswig?" The Significance of Plebiscites in Solving Nationality and Border Conflictsin Europe since World War I
- List of Contributors
- Index
- Back cover.