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The World Since 1945: A Brief History (2nd Edition)
 
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The World Since 1945: A Brief History (2nd Edition) (Paperback)

by Daniel R. Brower (Author)
1.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description
This brief book stresses the profound global transformation that has occurred since 1945 as a result of the collapse of the remaining great colonial empires, and the emergence of nation-states throughout the world. Its thematic emphasis makes clear as well the importance of the Cold War in influencing the process by which these nation-states sought to create new ideals and new institutions—to insure order and justice within their boundaries, and find places within the international community. The book also links the new nation-states in the Middle East, Asia, and Africa, with the ethnic conflicts, local wars, and terrorist movements that became increasingly prevalent toward the end of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. For a world-historical perspective on contemporary civilization.

From the Back Cover

Tracing global events from the last years of the Second World War until the Iraq war of 2003, this brief but comprehensive volume on contemporary world history argues that the most profound transformation of global relations in this period has been the fall of the last colonial empires and the triumph of nation-states. The World Since 1945 offers its readers a basic chronology of the major events that have marked the history of the last half-century. Author Daniel Brower begins with a succinct discussion of the Second World War's revolutionary impact on the course of global affairs, emphasizing the disappearance of Western colonial empires and the beginning of the Cold War conflict between the Soviet Union and the United States. He concludes with an analysis of the rise of Islamic terrorism and the international crisis leading to the U.S. war in Iraq 2003. The narrative account emphasizes three major factors that have shaped the key events in this extraordinary half-century:

  • The instability of nation-states caused by ethnic conflicts, poverty, and the rise of dictators
  • The changes in global balance of power from Cold War to U.S. hegemony
  • The economic fortunes of capitalism and communism

Brower argues that powerful forces of nationalism and social revolution, propelled by the turmoil following the end of the Second World War, quickly destroyed all colonial empires. He stresses the efforts at nation-building that followed these events and points to the widespread emergence of ethnic conflicts within and between these new states.

In each chapter thematic and biographical sections focus attention on the most important features of this history. Updated to incorporate recent events, the book discusses the efforts in the 1990s of international organizations and major states to implement new policies for peace and global security, and explains the factors behind the upsurge of local wars and terrorism, culminating in the 2001 Al Oaeda attack on the U.S. and the Afghan and Iraq wars.



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Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Prentice Hall; 2 edition (April 25, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0131897055
  • ISBN-13: 978-0131897052
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.8 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 1.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #485,905 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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6 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars there are really much better books for sale, May 30, 2004
By Nick Welman (Eindhoven, NBr Netherlands) - See all my reviews
Brower's book - I am sad to say - doesn't do much else than putting the sequence of events after WW II in chronologic order.
There is hardly anything that we'd call "analysis". Let me give you four examples.

Page 230 (about international trade): "Western governments [...] encouraged developing states to integrate their countries in the global economy, especially by lowering the tariffs on imports from [...] the developed world." But Brower doesn't ever mention the policy of developed countries to protect their markets from imports from e.g. Third World farmers. See also: D. Bosscher et al., 2002.

Page 255 (about Somalia): "The nomadic peoples there [of Somalia] had proven unable to create a stable government [...]. It had become a failed state. [...] Nongovernmental organizations attempted to help the starving peoples, but were powerless to prevent the wardlord-led militia from stealing their supplies [...]."

If we have to believe Michael Maren's first hand witness report of Somalia ("The Road to Hell" ISBN 0743227867) the Western NGO's and the corrupt Somali government shared at least some common interests (!) and the NGO's in general might have been more concerned about 'staying in business' than to relief the needs of the Somali people, and thus might bear co-responsability for the Somali disaster.

Page 23 (about nuking Japan): "The concern of American military experts that without the use of the bomb the war might endure for months, bringing with it enormous US casualties, was well founded."

The reasons why Truman decided to use the bomb are still (!) subject to debate. Nowhere in his book Brower mentions that Japan (especially the zaibatsu) "might" have been on the brink of surrender and that the bomb "might" have been used (also) to show the American muscles to the USSR. See: T.E. Vadney, The World since 1945.

Page 231 (about the 1991 Gulf War): "It ended with a the triumph of a coalition of United Nations forces led by the United States [...]."

Vadney has pointed out that during the First Gulf War de UN did not even have a token command! It is quite debatable to call something a "UN coalition" when the UN are not in control.

My conclusion is that "Brower's world" since 1945 is a politically correct one that wouldn't upset any current or future US administration. But it doesn't lead to deeper understanding. Nor reflection. Nor learning.

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