The Baltic States and the End of the Soviet EmpirePoints at the absence of "politics" in the Soviet system as a main cause of its self-destruction, by analyzing in loose game-theoretic framework the struggle between Moscow and the Baltic states during the Soviet Empire's last years. |
Contents
Under new management | 24 |
A Baltic background | 49 |
Transforming the Soviet Union | 69 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Baltic States and the End of the Soviet Empire Kristian Gerner,Stefan Hedlund Limited preview - 2018 |
The Baltic States and the End of the Soviet Empire Kristian Gerner,Stefan Hedlund No preview available - 2018 |
The Baltic States and the End of the Soviet Empire KRISTIAN. HEDLUND GERNER (STEFAN.),Stefan Hedlund No preview available - 2019 |
Common terms and phrases
Aleksandr Yakovlev all-union argued August autonomy Baltic Area Baltic player Baltic republics Balts Boris Boris Yeltsin Brazauskas cent Communist Party conflict Congress of People's conservative coup CPSU created crucial declaration democratic demonstrations Dreifelds Dzintra economic economists elections Estonians and Latvians ethnic forces foreign Free Europe Research German Girnius glasnost hardliners Ibid ideology Ignats important independence issue Izvestiya OSTK June Latvia leaders leadership Literaturnaya Gazeta Lithuanian major March market economy Mikhail Gorbachev military Minister Molotov-Ribbentrop pact Moscow nationalist Novyi October official organization parliaments People's Deputies perestroika phosphorite Poland political popular front population Pravda problems programme question radical Radio Free Europe referendum reform Riga Russian Sajudis Saulius secret protocols side social sovereignty Soviet economy Soviet president Soviet republics Soviet system Soviet Union Stalin strategy Supreme Soviet Tallinn threat three Baltic republics Trapans USSR Vilnius West Western Yakovlev Yeltsin