Description
About the Author
Michael Cotey Morgan is assistant professor of history at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Reviews
"Winner of the Edgar S. Furniss Book Award, Mershon Center for International Security Studies"
"[Morgan's] account of the negotiations is hugely interesting."---Benjamin Nathans, Times Literary Supplement
"Fascinating."---Andrew Preston, London Review of Books
"Morgan . . . makes a convincing case that in terms of importance, Helsinki was on a par with Westphalia, Vienna, and Versailles. Highly recommended." * Choice *
"A fine story of intrigue and manipulation worthy of the best writers. . . . An authoritative book that should be widely read." * Queensland Reviewers Collective *
"Morgan has done a brilliant job. . . . The Final Act, a volume in the Princeton series 'America in the World,' is an essential read for anyone interested in the Cold War." * StrategyPage *
"The most richly documented account of the negotiations."---Andrew Moravcsik, Foreign Affairs
"A must read for policymakers."---Jesse McIntyre III, Military Review
"Morgan's skillful synthesis of his manifold research findings and the cultural-historical analysis of the negotiations make the book extremely worth reading." * H-Soz-Kult *
"Fascinating."---David Skok, The Logic
"The Final Act debunks the many myths and simplifications about the Helsinki agreement that have surrounded it ever since 1975 and is an extremely valuable contribution to the current reevaluation of the late Cold War . . . . [Morgan] has succeeded in creating an effortless narrative of a complicated international diplomatic process while highlighting its far-reaching importance . . . . It is hard to imagine a more balanced account. This book is sure to become the standard work of reference for research focusing on topics as varied as human rights, trade relations, activist groups and international diplomacy in the 1970s and 1980s."---Rosa Magnusdottir, The Slavonic and East European Review
"[The Final Act] reveal[s] much about a game-changer in history. The research is exhaustive and fascinating."---Jordan Luber, New Eastern Europe
"Michael Cotey Morgan's book greatly enriches the literature on international relations in the 1945-1991 period." * French Institute of International Relations *
"The Helsinki Final Act, signed by 35 European and North American leaders in 1975, represented the signatories' vision for a cooperative relationship between the two sides of the Cold War. This history explores the document's origins and provisions, claiming that the act's legacy was to establish the principles that would undermine the Soviet bloc and ultimately define the post-Cold War era." * Survival *
"An instant classic. . . . Morgan expertly balances sweeping assessments with fine-grained analysis, keeping multiple actors in play with the skill of a professional juggler. He writes with verve, wit, and a keen eye for detail. . . . Ultimately, what the book offers is far more than a history of the CSCE. It provides a compelling and engrossing portrait of the Cold War in Europe in the pivotal decade of the 1970s. The Conference, Morgan makes clear, was a microcosm in which the forces shaping international relations were distilled, clarified, and partly reconfigured. The Final Act should be read and admired by anyone interested in the Cold War, the 1970s, the history of postwar Europe, or how to write compelling international history."---Barbara Keys, Diplomatic History
"Michael Cotey Morgan offers something new and exciting. The Final Act tells a detailed, rich, and engaging history of the Helsinki Accords that makes clear that the human rights provisions enshrined in the agreement were only one of many aspects that ultimately transformed the Cold War. . . . Perhaps The Final Act's greatest strength is its clarity. Morgan manages to strike a perfect balance, covering a wide array of interrelated topics and bringing together a rich set of international sources without overwhelming the reader. It is a feat deserving of praise in any work of history, made all the more challenging by the sheer complexity of the negotiations about which he writes."---Susan Colbourn, Political Science Quarterly
"Deeply researched and beautifully written. . . . [Morgan's] book does a great service by reclaiming an important subject with skill and panache, an accomplishment made all the more significant by the fact that we are in the throes of a 'new Cold War'."---Herman T. Salton, International Affairs
"Michael Cotey Morgan's richly sourced, judiciously argued, and perfectly balanced treatment of the 1975 Helsinki Final Act is an outstanding contribution to [the] literature that deserves a wide readership among historians of the Cold War, members of the public, as well as contemporary policymakers."---James Cameron, H-Diplo
"The Final Act is international history at its boldest. . . . Morgan's authoritative work will serve as a new touchstone for debates about how soft power and normative influences catalyzed the revolutionary convulsions from which a new world order would arise after 1989."---Jonathan Hunt, H-Diplo
"Masterful."---Cindy Ewing, International Journal
"A landmark. . . . Indispensable"---Nicolas Badalassi, Slavic Review
"Expect to see this book in print for five or six decades-it is that good."---Nicholas Evan Sarantakes, Naval War College Review
Book Information
ISBN 9780691176062
Author Michael Cotey Morgan
Format Hardback
Page Count 424
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publisher Princeton University Press