1st Edition
Rethinking European Social Democracy and Socialism The History of the Centre-Left in Northern and Southern Europe in the Late 20th Century
Introduction: North and South in European and Global Social Democracy
Alan Granadino, Stefan Nygård and Peter Stadius
1. The Socialist International as a Transnational Political Actor, 1950–1970
Kristian Steinnes
2. From Democratic Socialism to Neoliberalisation: Political and Ideological Evolution of Nordic Social Democrats and Portuguese Socialists After the Economic Crisis of the 1970s
Sami Outinen, Ilkka Kärrylä and Alan Granadino
3. Put (Southern) Europe to work: The Nordic Turn of European Socialists in the Early 1990s
Mathieu Fulla
4. Social Democracy, Globalisation and the Ambiguities of "Europeanisation": Revisiting the Southern European Crises of the 1970s
Michele di Donato
5. Logics of Influence: European Social Democrats and the Iberian Transition to Democracy
Stine Bonsaksen
6. Radicalism and Reformism in Post-war Italian Socialism: A Comparative View
Paolo Borioni
7. Cultural Affinity and Small State Solidarity: Sweden and Global North–South Relations in the 1970s
Andreas Mørkved Hellenes and Carl Marklund
8. Looking South: The Role of Portuguese Democratisation in the Socialist International’s Initiatives Towards Latin America in the 1970s
Ana Monica Fonseca
9. Contribution to the Critique of "Social Democracy in One Country": The Case of Sweden
Olle Törnquist
10. Defining Progress in Post-war Mediterranean: Communist Movements and their Influence in Algeria and Egypt after 1945
Rinna Kullaa
Epilogue: North-South and Social Democratic Transformations in Europe and Beyond
Bernd Rother
Biography
Alan Granadino is Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Faculty of Social Sciences at Tampere University, Finland.
Stefan Nygård is Senior Researcher in the Department of Philosophy, History and Art Studies at the University of Helsinki, Finland.
Peter Stadius is Professor in Nordic Studies and Director of the Centre for Nordic Studies, CENS, University of Helsinki, Finland.






