Description
""A major contribution to the early history of the Federal Republic. . . . Provides the first systematic account of one of the most important chapters of postwar West German social welfare policy.""--American Historical Review
""This cogently written and organized work analyzes the social, economic, and political integration of organized veterans into the Federal Republic of Germany during the decade following World War II.""--German Studies Review
""[An] important monograph that evaluates a wide range of archival materials and, in an extensive conclusion, offers many thoughtful comparisons concerning the situation of German ex-soldiers and their families after the two World Wars.""--Journal of Modern History
""Meticulously researched and ably written. . . . It deserves serious attention.""--Central European History
""The first full-scale study of veterans' politics in Germany after World War II. In analyzing how German soldiers' organizations behaved in the postwar milieu, Diehl provides an invaluable case study in the political culture of the young Federal Republic. His book is thoroughly grounded in archival research, intelligently conceptualized, and very gracefully written.""--David C. Large, Montana State University
About the Author
James M. Diehl, associate professor of history at Indiana University, is author of Paramilitary Politics in Weimar Germany.
Book Information
ISBN 9780807857304
Author James M. Diehl
Format Paperback
Page Count 360
Imprint The University of North Carolina Press
Publisher The University of North Carolina Press
Weight(grams) 333g