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66 Terms
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United Nations
Organization designed to maintain international peace and security to encourage cooperative solutions to international problems
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Great power veto
Each permanent member of the Security Council (in the UN) was granted this ability: US, USSR, GB, France, and China
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Cold War
The widening, diplomatic, geopolitical and ideological clash of interests so called because the antagonisms and rivalries (although intense) always stopped short of open/direct military hostilities between the US and the USSR
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"Containment"
The idea/strategy employed by US and other allies to stop the advancement of Soviet interests
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"Iron curtain"
Coined by Churchill in reference to the satellite states "from Stettin in the Baltic to Theiste in the Adriatic" and separating east and west Germany
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Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Adopted mainly because of Eleanor Roosevelt's persuasion, but not truly implemented by the UN
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Truman Doctrine
March 1947: a broad national policy to contain communism anywhere set out by the US government
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Berlin Blockade
In retaliation to the new Deutsche Mark in Western Germany; sharp challenge and test of will; led to a veerryyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy famous airlift
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Cominform
Reestablishment of the Old Communist International (Comintern), which had been abandoned as a wartime gesture in 1943, renamed the Communist Information Bureau
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NATO
Created for joint defense of Western Europe (organized military efforts of allies)
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Council for Mutual Economic Aid
A way that the USSR formalized its economic ties in 1949
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Warsaw Pact
Coordinated the existing network of military alliances with the USSR in 1955
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European Recovery Program
(Marshall Plan) coordinated American aid with each country's needs and with joint European priorities to maximize the benefits
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OEEC
Worked closely with Americans: identified projects, coordinated planning and allocated the funds used
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Mixed economies
Mainly in Western Europe: government had some control of the economy but the private sector was still the majority of the market share
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Countercyclical meeasures
Western European governments increased government spending at sight of decline in the business cycle
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Thirty glorious years
1948-1974; Western European economics grew at unprecedented and uninterrupted rates
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Wirtschaftswunder
"Economic miracle" for west Germany due to the currency reform of 1948, Marshall Plan and the economic opportunities opened up by the Korean War
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"Guest workers"
Immigrants to Western Europe who for so to full open positions in the workforce
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Welfare state
Grew after WWII, gave high priority to social objectives; networks of social services to help cope with the instability of competitive capitalism and business cycle
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Bretton Woods
An international conference of 44 countries; participants pledged to reduce trade barriers and work for stable currencies in the postwar world
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GATT
General agreement in tariffs and trade; consolidated the piecemeal arrangements made by the US in regards to reducing tariffs into a broader agreement; became the foundation for a postwar global commercial system
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International Monetary Fund
Provided loans to governments to manage temporary balance of payments difficulties and to help reduce the need for currency devaluation
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Jean Monnet
Visionary and practical/thoughtful French administrator who helped reorganize the post-war French economy; recognized that the first steps to European unity needed to develop along modest economic lines and begin with specific objectives; designed a plan that led to the European Coal and Steel Community
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Council of Europe
1949: delegates representing the parliaments of 10 countries met and established this with the hope that it would evolve into a legislative body for a federated Europe; gained much support and membership but confined itself to the humanitarian, social and cultural issues
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European Coal and Steel Community
1952; six Western European countries placed their coal and steel industries under a form of supranational authority eliminated import duties and quotas, placed production under common High Authority with decision-making powers
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Treaty of Rome
Signed March 25, 1957, creating the Common Market/European Economic community
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Common Market
Large free trade area/customs union with the goal of moving to full economic and political integration
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European Community
All 3 "communities" consolidated
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"Eurodollars"
Western Europe's accumulation of large dollar reserves during the "dollar glut"
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Gold-dollar standard
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1958-1971: each major currency had par value in $ and in good; dollars were accepted as equivalent to gold itself
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Beveridge Report
(1942) government report prepared by British economist William Henry Beveridge that proposed to guarantee "full employment in a free society" and social security for all "from the cradle to the grave"
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Clement Attlee
Prime minister in Britain form 1945-1951 with the Labour party
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MRP
Movement Républicain Populaire: a progressive Catholic Party like the Christian Democrats elsewhere
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Pierre Mendes-France
Led a brief reform ministry in 1954-1955 in France
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Monnet Plan
Economic plan that enlarged and modernized France's economic base and paved the way for expansion; flexible form of government planning in which government, management and labor played mutually reinforcing roles
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Charles de Gaulle
First president of the Fifth Republic of France
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Nuremberg trials
Allies held these war crimes/crimes against humanity trials on Nazis following the end of WWII
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Konrad Adenauer
Became chancellor of Germany in 1949
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Christian Democrats
Sought to infuse politics with moral idealism and ethical purpose, appealed to more than just Christians
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Social Democrats
Abandoned their traditional Marxist ideology at a meeting in 1959 and broadened appeal to middle class and youngins
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"Social market economy"
West Germany: government encouraged private industry and capitalist, competitive economy
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Doctor's plot
Officially announced in early 1953, a score of Jewish doctors were arrested for plotting to poison Stalin and other Kremlin leaders; released after Stalin died
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De-Stalinization
political reform in the Soviet Union that took place after the death of long-time leader Joseph Stalin in 1953
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Crimes of the Stalin era
revealed to the Soviet people by Khrushchev in an attempt to de-Stalinize the nation
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The "thaw"
A greater measure of cultural and intellectual freedom encouraged by Krushchev
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Boris Pasternak
Forbidden in 1958 to accept a Nobel Peace Prize for his novel "Dr. Zhivago" because it stressed individual freedom and implicitly condemned the oppressiveness of the USSR
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Solzhenitsyn
In 1962 was permitted to publish his book "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich", a depiction of human suffering in the forced labor camps
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KGB
Previously the NKVD; secret political police force with unbridled power under Stalin, but restricted under other leaders
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Tito
The independent-minded Communist leader of Yugoslavia
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Gomulka
Communist leader of Poland who relaxed Communist controls in Poland and was able to resist Soviet punishment
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Imre Nagy
Inspired by Gomulka's success and tried to do the same in Hungary but was forcefully removed by the Soviets
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"Third World"
The developing countries of Asia, Africa and Latin AMerica
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OPEC
Formed in 1960 by the oil-exporting countries of Middle East, Africa and Latin America to curb the monopoly concessions enjoyed by foreign companies and to assume a larger share of authority over production and prices
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"Stagflation"
Combination of stagnation and inflation that created unprecedented problems for governments
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Keynesian theory
Gained a wide following in Europe after 1945 and called for government spending and deficit financing in times of economic trouble to buoy demand and keep employment stable; measures became questionable during the recession of 1974
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welfare state
Created in many countries (shown by the doubling of GNP spent on social measures)
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"Trickle down" theory
Stated that, by increasing production rather than consumer demand, the results would just spread down to benefit everyone, with a safety net in place for the disadvantaged
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MArgaret Thatcher
British Conserrvative Parrty LEader who became prime minister in 1979; gained international prominence by leading a campaign against the welfare state
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Falkland Islands
Thatcher inspired old patriotic feelings by dispatching a small armada of 8,000 here to stop an attempted takeover in 1982
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Francois Mitterand
The first socialist president of the Fifth Republic; revitalized the Socialist Party and reached to many who chafed at the social insensitiveness of the Gaullists and Conservatives
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Helmet Kohl
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"Cohabitation"
Entered the political language to signify a popularly elected president of one party governing with a prime minister who represented the opposing parliamentary majority