Max Kohnstamm: A European's Life and Work
Released: Nov 20, 2011
Publisher: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft Mbh & Co
Format: Paperback, 186 pages
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Description:
Max Kohnstamm (1914-2010) was a pioneer of post-war European unification. As Jean Monnet's right-hand man, Kohnstamm was closely involved in the establishment and design of the European Union (EU) as we know it today. He devoted himself to a solid European and international community of law, aimed at effectively banning unilateral power aspirations and interstate violence. As a survivor of Hitler's 'Nacht und Nebel,' the young Dutch diplomat and former secretary to Queen Wilhelmina found himself both impressed and greatly inspired by Monnet's campaign for supranationally organizing the States of Europe as an alternative for war. Kohnstamm acted as secretary-general of the 'first European government': the High Authority of the European Coal and Steel Community. In 1956, he left office to assist Monnet and the latter's Action Committee for the United States of Europe. The two men constituted a team that exerted far-reaching influence behind the scenes of European and global diplomacy. In 1974, Kohnstamm became the first president of the European University Institute in Florence. In later years, he played a remarkable role in Jacques Delors' policy drive for completing the EU's Common Market. This book documents the life and work of Max Kohnstamm, who was an extraordinary political visionary. (Series: Veroffentlichungen der Historiker-Verbindungsgruppe bei der Kommission der EG - Vol. 13)
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