openPR Logo
Press release

Development policy during the Cold War

10-18-2016 11:43 AM CET | Science & Education

Press release from: FWF - Austrian Science Fund

/ PR Agency: PR&D
In a project supported by the Austrian Science Fund FWF, historians from the University of Vienna explored the everyday life of development-aid staff at the time of the East-West confrontation, thereby making an essential contribution to the global history of development policy.

About 30 East German (GDR) engineers, 200 Cuban mechanics and 4000 local workers were involved in building the Mugher cement factory in Ethiopia. Constructed in 1980 and largely still in service today, the factory was just one of many development policy projects launched by the GDR in the countries of the South. This long term involvement of the GDR in Ethiopia was enshrined in the "Treaty on Friendship and Cooperation" between the two countries.

"The fact that the Soviet Union and the GDR were strongly active in development policy between 1960 and 1990 and thereby globalised the European socialist system is often forgotten", notes Berthold Unfried from the University of Vienna. The historian is currently working on development policy seen from a global perspective. With his colleague Eric Burton, principal investigator Unfried compared development activities by the two competing world systems using the examples of the GDR and West Germany (FRG) in the FWF-funded project on "seconded experts". These two countries conducted numerous programmes in Africa, Latin America and Asia in order to advance education there and promote their respective models of society.

People on the move
Through painstaking archival and field work in Germany, Tanzania, Ethiopia and Cuba over the last three years, the two scholars from the Department of Economic and Social History reconstructed the dimensions of global exchanges during the Cold War. In the two African countries, both the FRG and the GDR were engaged. Cuba, for its part, was an important hub between the European socialist system and the countries of the South. The researchers focused their investigations on the people who were travelling the world because of their involvement in the development activities. Tens of thousands of people were concerned by this mobility, and the direction was not only from the North to the South, but there were also experts, skilled workers and students from the South, who went to the East or West to be trained and to work there. "Within the respective systems, a huge rotation of people produced a migration movement, albeit a temporary one", explains Unfried.

Importance of local partners
In the process, the historians also conducted about 150 interviews with experts despatched by East and West and with their local "counterparts". Little had been known about the latter, in particular. "Their statements were often diplomatic. There was a certain imperative to be polite, even when it comes to recollections", Unfried found. One outcome that struck the historian from the University of Vienna was the remarkably strong impact the African and Latin American countries had on the way the cooperation was organized. The East-West conflict provided some leeway for these actors, such as Tanzania, who were inclined to shift between the two blocs in order to generate resources and further their own interests. "Particularly at the individual level, the relationships were not as one-sided as one might think", says the expert. In addition, activities obeyed the maxim of no conflict with the local government. Both the FRG and the GDR showed a somewhat pragmatic attitude in this regard. If problems arose, as was repeatedly noted in the GDR staff files, there was little support to be had from their authorities for the people in the field. "There was more likely to be admonishment for the GDR expert than for a local expert", notes Berthold Unfried. The seconded workers usually had to cope on their own with everyday problems arising in the field collectives.

Mutual interests
Development work was, and still is, a complex issue. In both political systems, networks of mutual interest emerged. The GDR, for instance, developed economic and trade relations as an alternative model to what they called the exploitative West, where trade relations were not considered as being part of the development sector. Modelled on Soviet practices, the GDR opted for barter trade in order to avoid foreign exchange issues. Coffee was bartered in exchange for agricultural machinery, sugar or coal for the deployment of experts. Evidently, the experience of living in other countries also left its mark on the seconded staff. One question relates to whether the experts travelling the world on their missions embraced a cosmopolitan lifestyle, as could be expected from a transnational group. "That was certainly not the case for everyone. Many lived in enclaves, as though they were still back home in the GDR, the FRG or Cuba", comments Unfried. In sum total, however, the historian thinks that one could consider the deployment of development staff as a contribution to internationalisation, a phenomenon that later became known as globalisation. At the outset of FRG development policy efforts in the 1960s, international exchanges were also explicitly seen as one way of overcoming the aftermath of the Nazi era.

In both systems, however, the wording adopted was keyed to cooperation among equal partners, as expressed in the West from the 1970s by the term "development cooperation", and in the GDR under the label of "international solidarity" or "socialist aid".

FWF Austrian Science Fund

The Austrian Science Fund (FWF) is Austria's central funding organization for basic research.

The purpose of the FWF is to support the ongoing development of Austrian science and basic research at a high international level. In this way, the FWF makes a significant contribution to cultural development, to the advancement of our knowledge-based society, and thus to the creation of value and wealth in Austria.

Scientific Contact
Univ.-Doz. Dr. Berthold Unfried
Department of Economic and
Social History
University Vienna
Universitätsring 1, 1010 Vienna
T +43 /0/ 14277-41352
M +43 /0/ 676/6908468
E berthold.unfried@univie.ac.at
W http://www.univie.ac.at/en

Austrian Science Fund FWF
Marc Seumenicht
Haus der Forschung
Sensengasse 1
1090 Vienna
T +43 / 1 / 505 67 40 - 8111
E marc.seumenicht@fwf.ac.at
W http://www.fwf.ac.at/en

Distribution
PR&D – Public Relations
for Research & Education
Mariannengasse 8
1090 Vienna
T +43 / 1 / 505 70 44
E contact@prd.at
W http://www.prd.at/en

This release was published on openPR.

Permanent link to this press release:

Copy
Please set a link in the press area of your homepage to this press release on openPR. openPR disclaims liability for any content contained in this release.

You can edit or delete your press release Development policy during the Cold War here

News-ID: 373542 • Views:

More Releases from FWF - Austrian Science Fund

Exploring "emo-eating"
While fear and aggression tend to curb our appetite, sadness and frustration seem to stimulate it. A project funded by the Austrian Science Fund FWF looks into the connections between mood and overeating in healthy and bulimic individuals. We know how it feels to look forward to our favourite dish; we are familiar with the notions of comfort food and feeling butterflies in the stomach instead of hunger. In eating
Neurosciences: a stress test for men and women
Whilst it is true that women and men respond differently to stress, current neuroscientific research only partially confirms traditional gender stereotypes. Other factors heavily contribute to the stress response such as self-esteem, hormones and stress regulation, as has been demonstrated by a project funded by the Austrian Science Fund FWF. How people react to stress is subjective. Gender also plays a fundamental role. Scientific studies have shown that the stress
Researching the grammar of sign language
Like spoken language, sign language has a complex and differentiated structure. One just has to be able to discern and interpret it. With the support of the Austrian Science Fund FWF, a research team from Klagenfurt is working on the elements of a grammar of sign language. It is language that distinguishes Homo sapiens from animals. A complex system in which smaller units combine into larger units, into sentences, into statements.
Using mathematics to hunt for computer errors
Improving the security of computer software and hardware requires mathematical analytic methods. Thanks to research by a team of computer scientists led by Krishnendu Chatterjee in a project funded by the Austrian Science Fund FWF, these methods will work significantly faster in the future. Security gap in application discovered, update urgently recommended. Alerts like that can confront us every week. Often, a comprehensive update that addresses teething troubles is already

All 5 Releases


More Releases for GDR

G&S Acoustics Introduces GeoDesign & GeoDesign Ridge Acoustical Wall Panels
St. Louis – May 1st, 2019 — St. Louis-based G&S Acoustics, a leading manufacturer of acoustical, tackable and sound diffusing wall and ceiling products worldwide, has expanded its product line to include a creative new offering: GeoDesign (GD) and GeoDesign Ridge (GDR) acoustical wall panels. GeoDesign and GeoDesign Ridge panels are cut to standard geometric shapes — hexagon, trapezoid, rhombus and polygon — up to 4’ x 4’ across. They
Altenbourg exhibition allows intimate insight - Boycotted in the GDR – on disp …
Berlin, 21 February, 2012, (kk) – Gerhard Altenbourg counts among the most renowned artists of the second half of the 20th century. Even though his accomplishments are tremendous, he was officially boycotted by the GDR up until the early 1980s. Some 100 works, among them 30 woodcuts in colors, almost 40 lithographs, a dozen woodcuts as well as drawings and India ink works from between 1953 and 1989 are on
New guided tour Berlin Kreuzberg: From East-Station (Ostbahnhof) to the former b …
Tour guide Cliewe Juritza is offering a new tour through Berlin-Kreuzberg. The tour starts at Ostbahnhof (East-station) and follows the former Luisenstad canal to the former border crossing point Heinrich-Heine-Straße. This part of the town was named after the Prussian queen Luise – the Luisenstad was once a suburb of Berlin and today in the very centre of the city. After the erection of the Berlin Wall, the Luisenstadt became
Berlin Wall tour with former political prisoner
20 years ago the Berlin Wall came to and end. It came as a surprise to Cliewe Juritza. In 1984, he tried to leave the GDR and was arrested in the attempt. He was sentenced to 12 month in prison and was able to leave jail after 10 month – the Federal Republic of Germany had paid money for his release. He lived in West-Berlin when the Wall fell. Today
EXHUMATION
WILDE Gallery is pleased to announce the solo exhibition of Kenno Apatrida, his first with the gallery on Friday March 27th. Apatrida’s works were recently displayed at SCOPE New York Art Fair, gaining great report and attention with the American public. Kenno Apatrida, originally from South America has spend the last 18 years in Berlin as an involuntary resident, goes against the tide of contemporary thought by unleashing works of art
GEECL plans public issue by year-end
Great Eastern Energy Corporation Ltd (GEECL), a Y.K. Modi group company, plans to come out with a public issue in India during end-2008. GEECL is the only company so far to commercially produce coal-bed methane (CBM) from its Ranigunj block in West Bengal. The company’s GDRs are listed in the AIM (Alternative Investment Market) segment on the LSE. The company tapped foreign shores to finance its capital expenditure in CBM