Synopses & Reviews
This book breaks new ground by connecting two central problems faced by the Federal Republic of Germany prior to reunification in 1990, both of them rooted in the Second World War. Domestically, the country had to integrate eight million expellees forced out of their homes in Central and Eastern Europe as a result of the lost war. Externally, it had to re-establish relations with Eastern Europe, despite the burdens of the Nazi past, the expulsions, and the ongoing East-West struggle in the Cold War.
Review
"Ahonen's conclusions are convincingly argued, and his book on the whole offers a clear and compelling narrative of the development of expellee organizations and their influence on policy up to 1969, covering the period after 1969 in a brief concluding chapter....Ahonen's work will be essential reading for all students and scholars of postwar West German politics and diplomacy."--American Historical Review
Review
"Ahonen's conclusions are convincingly argued, and his book on the whole offers a clear and compelling narrative of the development of expellee organizations and their influence on policy up to 1969, covering the period after 1969 in a brief concluding chapter....Ahonen's work will be essential reading for all students and scholars of postwar West German politics and diplomacy."--American Historical Review
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I. Establishing the Pattern 1949-1955
1. From the Expulsions to the Rise of the Expellee Organizations
2. The Programmes and Strategies of the Expellee Organizations
3. The Responses and Policies of the Main Parties
4. Adenauer's Foreign Policy and the Expellees
Part II. the Pattern in Practice 1949-1966
5. Ostpolitik Options and Expellee Influence 1955-1959
6. Ostpolitik Options and Expellee Influence 1959-1966
Part III. The Collapse of the Pattern 1966-1969
7. The Grand Coalition as the Turning-Point 1966-1969
8. From the New Ostpolitik to Reunification 1969-1970
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index