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List of contents
Topical Essays; Fascism and Austrofascism; Economic Development and Economic Policies in the Ständestaat Era; How Far Was Vienna From Chicago in the 1930s? The Economists and the Depression 1; The League of Nations and Interwar Austria; Economic Performance and Micro-Economic Development in Austria, 1929-1938; Engelbert Dollfuss and Austrian Agriculture; A Chancellorial Dictatorship with a "Corporative" Pretext: the Austrian Constitution Between 1934 and 1938; The Foreign Policy of the Schuschnigg Government 1934-1938; Non-Topical Essay; Right-Wing Movements in the European Union; Forum; Commissioning History; The Austrian Historical Commission; The Austrian Reconciliation Fund; The Austrian Life Insurance Sector and the Nazi Regime; Private Commissions; The "Myth" of Kaprun; Review Essays; New Literature on Nazi Austria and the Holocaust; The Waldheim Matter; Studies in Nazi Business History in the Ostmark during World War II; Book Reviews; Otto Klambauer, Der Kalte Krieg in Österreich: Vom Dritten Mann zum Fall des Eisernen Vorhangs (Vienna: Ueberreuter, 2000); Stephen E. Ambrose, The Wild Blue. The Men and Boys Who Flew the B-24s over Germany (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001); Peter Thaler, The Ambivalence of Identity: The Austrian Experience of Nation-Building in a Modern Society , Central European Studies, edited by Charles W. Ingrao (West Lafayette: Purdue University Press, 2001); Peter Berger, Im Schatten der Diktatur. Die Finanzdiplomatie des Vertreters des Völkerbundes in Österreich, Meinoud Marinus Rost van Tonningen, 1931-1936 (Vienna: Böhlau, 2000); Annual Review; Austria 2001
About the author
Anton Pelinka
Summary
The years of Chancellors Dollfuss and Schuschnigg's authoritarian governments (1933/34-1938) have been denounced as "Austrofascism" from the left, or defended as a Christian corporate state ("Stondestaat") from the right