Spelling suggestions: "subject:"mannerheim"" "subject:"mannerheimin""
1 |
Carl Erik Mannerheim ämbetsmannen och statsmannen. I. Intill 1816, jämte inledande släkthistorik.Lesch, Bruno Lorenz Nicolaus, January 1924 (has links)
Akademisk avhandling--Helsingfors. / Bibliography: p. 435-438.
|
2 |
De-escalation amid a Total War? : An interpretivist-constructivist analysis of Finland's involvement (or lack thereof) in the Siege of Leningrad and Murmansk during the Continuation War 1941-1944Sallinen, Margarita January 2020 (has links)
At the beginning of the Continuation War in 1941, Finnish and German troops commenced a gradual escalation which resulted in swift successive victories against the Soviets. Yet, Finland´s Field Marshal Mannerheim unexpectedly turned his back on military rationality at Leningrad and Murmansk despite his knowledge of how vitally strategic the locations were to the Soviet war effort. Leningrad was encircled by German and Finnish forces and a successful siege was achievable, yet Mannerheim abruptly discontinued the offensive and chose to assume a stale war lasting until 1944. Likewise, Mannerheim withheld his troops from cutting off Murmansk Railway. These events beckon important inquiries regarding Mannerheim´s decision to de-escalate during successful offensives in a total war and presents a conundrum that few have to date examined holistically. As such, this thesis offers an alternative perspective to the current rational explanations of Finnish warfare in the Continuation War. This thesis discusses specific social processes of Finnish society that rationalist explanations overlook and applies the theory of constructivism to identify that normative factors can complement the prevailing rationalist explanations. This thesis further identifies how the social concepts of identity, shared culture and knowledge, and the norms of the Finnish people, and its leadership, contributed to Mannerheim’s decision to disregard military rationality and de-escalate. Lastly, this thesis determines that norms and ideas matter in war studies and future research should incorporate an interpretivist approach which contemplates social constructions and norms as alternative explanations in complex, multi-casual social phenomena like war.
|
3 |
Finský prezident jako aktér zahraniční politiky / Finnish president in the foreign policyRoháček, Martin January 2015 (has links)
Master thesis deals with Finnish presidents as the actors of foreign policy since 1919 and compares them. For this comparison is created the special model in which presidents are classified according to the analysed variables: influence on direction of foreign policy, influence on the key negotiations and presidential powers in foreign policy. Thesis also deals with the question if there is any correlation between a status of president and the situation where president is a member of a different party than a prime minister and a minister of foreign affairs. In the end thesis analyses if presidential powers correspond with his real influence. Special model also shows how much presidents used their presidential powers.
|
Page generated in 0.0235 seconds