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Perestroyka and the European Community: A Tale of Rapid Change
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 July 2009
Extract
When the long-frozen societies in Eastern Europe started to come back to life last year they did so with a speed that quite bewildered the average western observer. So much was, and is, happening that it was almost impossible to follow all the important events. This maelstrom of internal developments was soon reflected in an equally rapid breaking up of long-frozen international structures on the European continent.
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- Copyright © Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law 1990
References
1. The term ‘Eastern Europe’ is used to indicate Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, the GDR, Hungary, Poland, Romania and the USSR.
2. CMEA: Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (Comecon).
3. O.J. 1983, L 346.
4. O.J. 1980, L 352.
5. O.J. 1988, L 157.
6. O.J. 1988, L 327.
7. O.J. 1989, L 88.
8. O.J. 1989, L 339.
9. Signed on May 8,1990; not yet published.
10. O.J. 1990, L 68.
11. Agreement signed on May 8, 1990; not yet published.
12. Agreement initialed on June 9, 1990; not yet signed or published.
13. O.J. 1990, L 69.
14. Reg. 3381/89/EEC, O.J. 1989, L 326.
15. Reg. 3691/89/EEC, O.J. 1989, L 362.
16. PHARE: PolognelHongrie, Aide a la Restructwation Economique.