翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Socialist Studies (1983)
・ Socialist Studies (1989)
・ Socialist Studies (2005)
・ Socialist Studies Bulletin
・ Socialist Sunday Schools
・ Socialist Teachers
・ Socialist Thought and Practice
・ Socialist thought in Imperial Japan
・ Socialist Trade and Labor Alliance
・ Socialist Trade Union Centre
・ Socialist Ukraine
・ Socialist Union
・ Socialist Union (UK)
・ Socialist Union of America
・ Socialist Union of Catalonia
Socialist Union of Central-Eastern Europe
・ Socialist Union of Mauritanian Muslims
・ Socialist Union of Popular Forces
・ Socialist Union Party
・ Socialist Unionists
・ Socialist Unity
・ Socialist Unity (Italy)
・ Socialist Unity (UK)
・ Socialist Unity (United States)
・ Socialist Unity Centre of India (Communist)
・ Socialist Unity League (Mexico)
・ Socialist Unity Network
・ Socialist Unity Party
・ Socialist Unity Party (Finland)
・ Socialist Unity Party (Turkey)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Socialist Union of Central-Eastern Europe : ウィキペディア英語版
Socialist Union of Central-Eastern Europe

The Socialist Union of Central-Eastern Europe (abbreviated 'S.U.C.E.E') was coalition of émigré social democratic parties from Eastern Europe during the Cold War years. SUCEE had its headquarters in London.〔Socialist International (1951- ), and Asian Socialist Conference. ''Yearbook of the International Socialist Labour Movement''. Volume II 1960-1961 London: Lincolns-Prager Interniitonal Yearbook Publishing Co., Ltd, 1961. p. 39〕 The 1959 Hamburg conference of SUCEE proclaimed as the goals of the organization to struggle for national independence, multiparty democracy, the right to organize trade unions, and against 'Russification' of any kind.〔 The organization published the bulletin ''Labour's Call from Behind the Iron Curtain''.〔Socialist International (1951- ), and Asian Socialist Conference. ''Yearbook of the International Socialist Labour Movement''. Volume I 1956-1957 London: Lincolns-Prager International Yearbook Publishing Co., Ltd, 1957. pp. 92-93〕
==Founding==
SUCEE was founded after an initiative of the International Socialist Commission to appeal to the Polish, Czechoslovakian, Hungarian, Yugoslav and Bulgarian socialist parties to form a common centre for coordination of their work in exile. These five parties met in London July 4–5, 1949 and founded SUCEE as a joint organization.〔 A SUCEE conference held in Paris later the same year decided to invite the Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian and Ukrainian exiled socialist parties to join as members.〔
The 1951 founding congress of the Socialist International in Frankfurt defined the relationship between the International and SUCEE. SUCEE became an associated organization of the Socialist International, and SUCEE was allowed to send four consultative delegates to the meetings of the General Council of the Socialist International. However, the member parties of SUCEE were also allowed to obtain individual memberships in the International.〔
The SUCEE conference held in Frankfurt in 1951 decided to invite the Romanian socialists to become a member of the organization.〔 The 1954 Amsterdam conference of SUCEE, noting the discourse on peaceful co-existence, declared that seeking peace would not mean any interruption in the "political and ideological offensive" against communism and "Soviet domination". Nor would any appreciation of peaceful co-existence indicate an acceptance of the division of Europe on behalf of the Eastern European socialists in exile.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Socialist Union of Central-Eastern Europe」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.