Külpolitika - A Magyar Külügyi Intézet elméleti-politikai folyóirata - 1990 (17. évfolyam)

1990 / 1. szám - A tanulmányok angol nyelvű tartalmi kivonata

1. mutual collective security system, 2. the autarchist security of the great powers, 3 „satellite” linkage, 4 neut­rality, 5 military blocs. He gives an in- depth list of the negative features of the latter., He firmly remarks that the loosening of the blocs is a lengthier process wich has begun, and will speed up in the Europe of the 1990s, and which brings into a realistic close dis­tance the terms of a mutual security system that will come about in the future. He admonishes official policies which ignore this constellation, or which place it into perspective and de­lays national aspirations of indepen­dence. In surveying the identities of inte­rests that still maintain the two Euro­pean alliances or which have formed recently, he states that the immediate political aim of the Hungarian Repub­lic is not to pursue a vague status of neutrality, but rather to initiate a pro­cess of speeding up the division of blocs and to become growingly inde­pendent militarily and politically. Nóra Kollár Social democracy: democratic socialism. Adaptation — modernisation — expe­riences This topical essay attempts to give an answer to one of the central problems of democratic socialism, the chances of the ideas related to modernisation as­pirations and their practical implemen­tation in connection with four main issues. In the author’s concept, democ­ratic socialism appears in the 60s and 70s as a strategy of adaptation, renewal and modernisation, which is embodied by the sample document of democratic socialism as laid down in the Bad Go­desberg programme of the German So­cial Democratic Party. The expariments of social-democra­tic modernisation of the 80s and prepa­rations for the 90s essentially occurred on the basis of the elements of the Godesberg programme which still exert an influence on present-day life. European Social Democracy — neither the so-called „success parties” nor the ones in opposition — was unable to withdraw itself from the effects of the conservative-liberal theory and mainly practice, the domi­nant trend of the 80s. The basic cause for that should be sought in the chan­ge of the basic conditions of the imple­mentation of democratic socialism. While in the 60s and 70s the social- democratic national reform strategies (see Scandinavian countries, West Ger­many, etc) successfully unfolded under the umbrella of the Keynesian comp­romise, the basis of reference of the conventional reform policies began to change from the mid-seventies on. The solution could be a west European left-wing modernisation alternative on the Godesberg basis in favour of, and against which a number of factors exert an influence. Gyula Jordán The Chinese army and the reform pro­cess The reform process which began in China ten years ago did not leave un­touched the Chinese army that plays an outstanding role in the structure and operation of the whole system. The programme of „four modernisations” outlined the foreign and domestic po­licy basic principles which define the role, structure and directions of deve­lopment for the army. On the one hand, the essay surveys the general position of the army, the often contradictory effect of the individual reform moves, and the changes effected within the army, on- the other. The relationship between the army and the party and the state respectively, has a defining significance, which is considerably in­fluenced by the fact that these strive for a certain depoliticising and en­hancing of professionalism. Aside from the change in the role and structure of the army, the essay examines the moves entailing such essential effect, as the relative reduction of military spending within the budget, the imple­mented 1 million reduction of troop strength and the import of foreign mi­VI

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