This book offers an interesting and challenging insight into the evolution of British-German relations within the context of European integration in the last half of the 20th century. It is one of the first substantial and interdisciplinary attempts to analyze the volatile British-German relationship since World War II. It argues that although British-German relations were difficult throughout the post-World War II period, since the change of government in 1997 in Britain and 1998 in Germany, both countries have developed a much more constructive policy towards each other.
I. Introduction 1. Uneasy Allies or Genuine Partners? Britain, Germany and European Integration,K. Larres II. The Cold War Relationship 2. British-West German Relations, 1945-1972,A. Deighton 3. British-West German Relations, 1972-1989,J. Smith and G. Edwards 4. Britain and the GDR: Political and Economic Relations, 1949-1989,K. Larres 5. Britain and German Unification, 1989/90,[L.Kettenacker, GHI London] III. The Post-Cold War Relationship: Politics and Security since 1990 6. The Transition to the Post-Cold War World: Britain, Germany and the Deepening of Europe:The Role of Domestic Norms and Institutions,J. Buller and C. Jeffery 7. The Eastern Enlargement of the EU,J. Pinder 8. The American Dimension: Britain, Germany, and the Reinforcement of US Hegemony in Europe in the 1990s,V. Ingimundarson 9. NATO or WEU? The Security Policy Framework since 1990,E. Kirchner IV. The Post-Cold War Relationship: The Economic and Social Dimension since 1990 10. Industrial and Commercial Cultures in Britain and Germany: Rivalry or Reconcilability?,J. Leaman 11. European Union Social Policy: German and British Perspectives on Industrial Democracy,E. Meehan 12. The Creation of the Single Market aló: