Foreign Aid and State Building in Interwar Romania
In Quest of an Ideal
Series: Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe;
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26 754 Ft
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher Stanford University Press
- Date of Publication 10 December 2024
- ISBN 9781503636781
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages322 pages
- Size 229x152 mm
- Weight 533 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 8 halftones, 2 maps 619
Categories
Long description:
The decades following World War I were a period of political, social, and economic transformation for Central and Eastern Europe. This book considers the role of foreign aid in Romania between 1918 and 1940, offering a new history of the interrelation between state building and nongovernmental humanitarianism and philanthropy in the interwar period. Doina Anca Cretu argues that Romania was a laboratory for transnational intervention, as various state builders actively pursued, accessed, and often instrumentalized American assistance in order to accelerate reconstructive and modernizing projects after World War I.
At its core, this is a study of how local views, ambitions, and practical agendas framed trajectories of humanitarian and philanthropic endeavors in postimperial Central and Eastern Europe. Conversely, it is a reflection on the ways that architects and practitioners of foreign aid sought to transfer notions of democracy, civilization, and modernity within shifting local and national contexts in the aftermath of the war and after the collapse of European empires. At the intersection of the history of interwar Europe and international philanthropy and humanitarianism, this book's innovative and explicitly transnational approach provides a new framework for understanding the contours of European nationalism in the twentieth century.
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