Foreign Economic Relations - United States, Balkan States - History
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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.
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