Breaking down bipolarity: Yugoslavia's foreign relations during the Cold War
In: Rethinking the Cold War 11
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Abbreviations -- Preface and Acknowledgments -- Socialist Yugoslavia: A Cold War Crossroads -- Soviet Perceptions and Evaluations of Yugoslav Domestic and Foreign Policy during the Years of the Soviet-Yugoslav Conflict -- A Cold War in the Neighbourhood: Yugoslav-Albanian Relations after World War II -- Coping with the Regional Cold War: The Yugoslav-Greek Connection, 1944–1980 -- Shaping Afro-Asia and Non-Alignment: The Sino-Yugoslav Struggle for Leadership in the Third World during the 1950s and 1960s -- In the Shadow of Transition: U.S.-Yugoslav Relations, 1966 to 1980 -- In the Aftermath of the Prague Spring: Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia 1969–1973 -- Austria and Yugoslavia in the Cold War, 1945–1991: From Postwar Cold War to Détente and Dissolution -- The Adriatic Section of the Iron Curtain: Italy, Yugoslavia, and the Question of Trieste during the Cold War -- The Path to Interregional Cooperation in Cold War Europe: The Alps-Adriatic Region -- In Search of Modus Vivendi: Yugoslavia and the Holy See 1963–1971 -- Cooperation despite Stark Scepticism: The European Economic Community and Socialist Yugoslavia in the 1970s -- A Failed Transition: Ante Marković, the European Commission, and the End of the Cold War (1989–1990) -- Yugoslavia in the Cold War: Afterword -- Notes on Contributors -- Name Index