Review by Choice Review
Readers may ask why the topic of reconciliation is not accorded greater attention within international relations. Feldman (Johns Hopkins Univ.) examines German postwar foreign policy and correctly identifies reconciliation as its guiding principle. Examining Germany's evolving postwar relations with Israel, France, Poland, and the Czech Republic, the author brings a distinctly historical perspective to a question that she nevertheless couches in political terms, namely, what factors have been key to Germany's approach. The book weaves together four factors--how history is leveraged, the role of national leaders, the centrality of government and non-government institutions, and finally the overall international context--and presents an in-depth analysis based upon a wealth of secondary sources. Eschewing the generation of a rigorous causal model, the book still succeeds in distilling which elements were necessary for reconciliation to occur. The highly contextualized findings render the book particularly valuable from a historical perspective, yet Feldman also cleverly seeks to extend its insights to comparable unresolved situations in East Asia; indeed, the book could also offer important lessons for internal conflicts involving ethnic violence and civil war. Summing Up: Recommended. All readership levels. A. A. Caviedes SUNY Fredonia
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review