1st Edition

Searching for the New France

Edited By James F. Hollifield, George Ross Copyright 1991
    346 Pages
    by Routledge

    346 Pages
    by Routledge

    The face of today's France does not resemble its forebear of a quarter century ago; it is more like its European neighbors. Searching for the New France provides an in-depth, historical account of the changes that have swept France over the past three decades and explores the political challenges that confront the country today.

    An array of distinguished international scholars examine changes in French politics, society, and the economy. The compilation is both comprehensive and topical in its coverage, and is unique in the broad-based, historical, and interpretive nature of its essays. The study will be invaluable to a wide range of scholars and students in the social sciences

    Abbreviations, Preface, Introduction: Janus and Marianne, Chapter One: Governing the Economy in the Face of International Challenge: From National Developmentalism to National Crisis, Chapter Two: The Institutions of the Fifth Republic, Chapter Three: Towards a Centrist Democracy? The Fate of the French Right, Chapter Four: The French Left: A Tale of Three Beginnings, Chapter Five: Immigration and Modernization, Chapter Six: In Search of the Etat Providence, Chapter Seven: Trade Unions, Unemployment, and Regulation: 1962-1989, Chapter Eight: Educational Pluralism in the French Fifth Republic, Chapter Nine: Where Have All the Sartres Gone? The French Intelligentsia Born Again, Chapter Ten: The Foreign Policy of the Fifth Republic: Between the Nation and the World, Conclusion: Still Searching for the New France, Bibliography, Index, Contributors

    Biography

    James Hollifield is in the Department of Political Science, and George Ross is in the Department of Sociology at Brandeis University.