Answer:
In Europe from the Balkans to the Urals, Reneo Lukic and Allen Lynch analyse the political processes that led to the disintegration of the Yugoslav, Soviet and Czechoslovak states and the international consequences that have flowed from these three collapses. The authors, who have delved deeply into primary and secondary sources in more than half a dozen European languages, look in particular at the role that 'federalism' played in the collapse of these once communist states. They conclude that the ethno-federal constitutional and administrative structure of these multinational states—that is, the fact that the various federal territories were defined in explicitly ethnic terms (the Ukrainian republic; the Slovak republic; the Slovenian, Croatian, and Serbian republics, etc.) played a catalytic role in propelling the disintegration of the Yugoslav, Soviet and Czechoslovak states along nationalist lines. The absence of democratic representation, or indeed of any substantial civic representation along non-national lines in these multinational states, meant that when communism collapsed the state would collapse with it.
Answer:
jobs insecurity, fluctuation in prices, terrorism, fluctuation in currency, capital flows
Answer:
The Nazis believed that the Aryan race was the superior race, and that it was destined to dominate all of Europe, and eventually the world.
The Aryan race was composed of Europeans of Germanic descent that inhabited not only Germany, but also Austria, The Netherlands, and Scandinavia.
They considered other "races" to be honorary aryans, like the Japanese or the Chinese. They also had a positive opinion on the British people.
They deemed all other races as inferior, and they had a particularly bad opinion about the Slavic Peoples of Eastern Europe and the Jewish People. This led them to believe that these races should be exterminated and they carried out this plan to a large extent, specially against the Jews, who perished by millions during the genocide known as the Holocaust.
There's more than 3 ;)
1. <span>Romantic Nationalism
2. </span><span>Ethnic Nationalism
3. </span><span>Cultural Nationalism
4. State Nationalism
5. </span><span>Religious Nationalism
6. </span><span>Diasporic Nationalism</span>