Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

From Vienna to Chicago and Back
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 412

From Vienna to Chicago and Back

Spanning both the history of the modern West and his own five-decade journey as a historian, Gerald Stourzh’s sweeping new essay collection covers the same breadth of topics that has characterized his career—from Benjamin Franklin to Gustav Mahler, from Alexis de Tocqueville to Charles Beard, from the notion of constitution in seventeenth-century England to the concept of neutrality in twentieth-century Austria. This storied career brought him in the 1950s from the University of Vienna to the University of Chicago—of which he draws a brilliant picture—and later took him to Berlin and eventually back to Austria. One of the few prominent scholars equally at home with U.S. history and t...

Modern Isonomy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 180

Modern Isonomy

  • Categories: Law

"In Modern Isonomy distinguished political theorist Gerald Stourzh develops the idea of "isonomy" or a system of equal rights for all, as an alternative to the concept of "democracy." The ideal for Stourzh is a state, and indeed a world, in which individual rights, including the right to participate in politics equally, are clearly defined, and possessed by all, as the core of a real democratic system. Stourzh begins with ancient Greek thought contrasting isonomy--which is associated with the rule of the many--with oligarchies and monarchies, pursuing the implications of these different forms for the rights accorded to individuals. He moves on through history to discuss the American experime...

Austria 1867-1955
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1148

Austria 1867-1955

Austria 1867-1955 connects the political history of German-speaking provinces of the Habsburg Empire before 1914 (Vienna and the Alpine Lands) with the history of the Austrian Republic that emerged in 1918. John W. Boyer presents the case of modern Austria as a fascinating example of democratic nation-building. The construction of an Austrian political nation began in 1867 under Habsburg Imperial auspices, with the German-speaking bourgeois Liberals defining the concept of a political people (Volk) and giving that Volk a constitution and a liberal legal and parliamentary order to protect their rights against the Crown. The decades that followed saw the administrative and judicial institution...

Proceedings, American Philosophical Society (vol. 100, no. 4)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276
The Machiavellian Moment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 666

The Machiavellian Moment

Originally published in 1975, The Machiavellian Moment remains a landmark of historical and political thought. Celebrated historian J.G.A. Pocock looks at the consequences for modern historical and social consciousness arising from the ideal of the classical republic revived by Machiavelli and other thinkers of Renaissance Italy. Pocock shows that Machiavelli's prime emphasis was on the moment in which the republic confronts the problem of its own instability in time, which Pocock calls the "Machiavellian moment." After examining this problem in the works of Machiavelli, Guicciardini, and Giannotti, Pocock turns to the revival of republican ideology in Puritan England and in Revolutionary and Federalist America. He argues that the American Revolution can be considered the last great act of civic humanism of the Renaissance and he relates the origins of modern historicism to the clash between civic, Christian, and commercial values in eighteenth-century thought. This Princeton Classics edition of The Machiavellian Moment features a new introduction by Richard Whatmore.

Reconsidering Constitutional Formation II Decisive Constitutional Normativity
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 425

Reconsidering Constitutional Formation II Decisive Constitutional Normativity

  • Categories: Law
  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2018-05-25
  • -
  • Publisher: Springer

This second volume of ReConFort, published open access, addresses the decisive role of constitutional normativity, and focuses on discourses concerning the legal role of constitutional norms. Taken together with ReConFort I (National Sovereignty), it calls for an innovative reassessment of constitutional history drawing on key categories to convey the legal nature of the constitution itself (national sovereignty, precedence, justiciability of power, judiciary as constituted power). In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, constitutional normativity began to complete the legal fixation of the entire political order. This juridification in one constitutional text resulted in a conceptual dif...

Historische Debatten und Kontroversen im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert
  • Language: de
  • Pages: 296

Historische Debatten und Kontroversen im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert

Historische Debatten und Kontroversen uber Phanomene der menschlichen Vergangenheit haben die Geschichtswissenschaft seit ihren Anfangen begleitet und sind in vielen Fallen auch in einer breiteren Offentlichkeit auf Resonanz gestoaen. Bei der systematisch-vergleichenden Betrachtung dieser Diskurse fallt auf, dass sie einerseits zum Motor konstruktiven Erkenntnisfortschritts, andererseits zum Instrument fur das Erreichen gegenwartiger, haufig politischer Ziele werden konnten. Insbesondere wenn Konstruktion, Variation oder Destruktion eines oder mehrerer grundsatzlicher gesellschaftlicher Mythen in der Debatte mitschwingen, sind umfangreiche Verwerfungen zu erwarten. Zusammenfassend lasst sich immer wieder feststellen, dass die polemische Intensitat einer Kontroverse sich zum wissenschaftlichen Erkenntniswert umgekehrt proportional verhalt, da nur die Einhaltung diskursiver Regeln im Sinne der Prinzipien von afair playo die Bedingungen fur konstruktive und produktive Auseinandersetzungen schafft. (Franz Steiner 2002)

Christian Democracy and the Fall of Communism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 361

Christian Democracy and the Fall of Communism

Debates on the role of Christian Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe too often remain strongly tied to national historiographies. With the edited collection the contributing authors aim to reconstruct Christian Democracy’s role in the fall of Communism from a bird's-eye perspective by covering the entire region and by taking “third-way” options in the broader political imaginary of late-Cold War Europe into account. The book’s twelve chapters present the most recent insights on this topic and connect scholarship on the Iron Curtain’s collapse with scholarship on political Catholicism. Christian Democracy and the Fall of Communism offers the reader a two-fold perspective. The fi...

Austrian Historical Memory and National Identity
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 412

Austrian Historical Memory and National Identity

When the Hapsburg monarchy disintegrated after World War I, Austria was not considered to be a viable entity. In a vacuum of national identity the hapless country drifted toward a larger Germany. After World War II, Austrian elites constructed a new identity based on being a "victim" of Nazi Germany. Cold war Austria, however, envisioned herself as a neutral "island of the blessed" between and separate from both superpower blocs. Now, with her membership in the European Union secured, Austria is reconstructing her painful historical memory and national identity. In 1996 she celebrates her 1000-year anniversary. In this volume of Contemporary Austrian Studies, Franz Mathis and Brigitte Mazohl...

European Union Enlargement
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 275

European Union Enlargement

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2004-08-02
  • -
  • Publisher: Routledge

European Union Enlargement provides a comparative analysis of the post-war European policies of those states that joined the European Union between 1973 and 1995. The volume draws upon new empirical research in order to investigate the policies that these 'newcomer' states have had towards Europe since 1945, with an emphasis on their experience of membership and its possible Europeanising effect. A final comparative chapter draws the national European policies of the 'newcomers' together and outlines what they have brought to the EU. The book also tests integration theories against the available evidence, demonstrating their limited explanatory value and the economic, political and cultural specificity of different national paths towards EU integration.