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Foreign Economic Relations - United States, Balkan States - History
Testing the Peripheries by Linda Killen β€” book cover

Testing the Peripheries

by Linda Killen
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Overview

Testing the Peripheries, the first book to deal with the U.S.-Yugoslav interwar relations, discusses private business contacts as well as government-to-government involvement, and places Yugoslavia in a comparative context, particularly vis-a-vis war debts and the Hoover Moratorium. Killer's use of Yugoslav archival sources gives her a perspective not available from American sources alone. Testing the Peripheries provides a needed perspective both of U.S. economic influences on small, peripheral economies; and, most immediately, on economic relations between the U.S. and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.

About the Author, Linda Killen

Linda Killen is professor and acting chair in the department of history at Radford University.

East European Monographs

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Editorials

Booknews

An examination of US-Yugoslavian economic relations from the creation of Yugoslavia on December 1, 1918 through the German invasion on April 6, 1941--with a view to determining what in those interwar relations might be applicable to present day relations between the West and post-1989 Eastern Europe. Distributed by Columbia U. Press. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
March 23, 1994
Publisher
Boulder, Colo. : East European Monographs ; 1994.
Pages
234
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780880332798

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