What constitutes an authoritarian or single-party state?

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WEEKLY PLANNER Week Topic Substantive concepts 1 Overview power authoritarianis m crisis 2 Emergence of authoritarian states Prescribed content What constitutes an authoritarian or single-party state? Introduction to authoritarian states that will be studied in this course and some commonalities: Hitler - Germany Mao - China Stalin - USSR Mussolini - Italy Castro - Cuba Franco - Spain Conditions in which authoritarian states emerged: impact of war; weakness of political system Post-WWI treaties: Versailles and reparations: - impact on Germany political, economic, social Reparations - extent to which they crippled Germany. Diplomacy between Germany and other nations during 1920s -1933 France (border tensions); Britain; USA (Dawes/Young Plans) legacy of Paris peace treaties Weimar Germany Historical thinking ideas, questions and meta-concepts Historical perspectives Cause and consequence The new order in 20th c. politics - Overy, 2007, p. 71 onwards. - why did the 20th century see the rise of so many authoritarian states? - were there common characteristics amongst these authoritarian leaders and states? Historiography (perspectives): Students read and discuss a series of different historians perspectives on the reparations payments that emerged from the Paris Peace Treaties. - were the reparations actually that demanding on the German economy? - were the reparations an unreasonable burden, or was the economy just handled badly by the Weimar government? Resources:

- Successes and failures structural weaknesses of government and constitution (proportional representation; presidential powers; Article 48) Golden years Grand Coalition failure to adapt to economic crises - Great Depression, reparations, hyperinflation, Ruhr crisis 3 Conditions in which authoritarian states emerged: economic factors; social divisions German society under Weimar 1919-1933 - Other economic factors- examination of different social classes and destabilising events German revolution 1918-19 Bavarian Soviet Republic 1919 Kapp Putsch 1920 White Terror 1920-22 Munich Beer Hall Putsch 1923 the SA/ Brownshirts Emergence of extremist groups - left and right wing - Spartacus League (uprising 1919); communists - SPD and KPD - Freikorps; conservative elite; DAP/NSDAP Princeton article; Huff Post article (legacy) http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sylvie-g oulard/greece-wwii-reparations-germa ny_b_6652232.html Other articles as provided by teacher Establishing historical significance Historiography surrounding Hitler s rise: - A. J. P. Taylor and William Shirer linked the rise of Nazism to the aggressive nature of the new German state forged by war in 1871. - Karl Bracher emphasised the circumstances of Europe in the 1920s and 1930s. - Marxist historians associate the rise of Nazism with capitalists attempts to resist communism. - Alan Bullock and Ian Kershaw have emphasised the personality of Hitler. (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 72)

Fear of communism Rise of nationalism stabbed in the back myth Historical determinism Hitler a product of Germany s militaristic history; Germans never developed a democratic tradition because they preferred strong, authoritarian government which Hitler continued- Taylor. (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 72) 4 Methods used to establish authoritarian states: the role of leaders; ideology; persuasion and coercion; the use of force; propaganda Hitler and development of NSDAP 1920s - Mein Kampf and prison - ideology (25 point program) - nationalism, racialism, anti-semitism and volksgemeinschaft - Führerprinzip (will of the leader) - lebensraum - membership and appeal/recruitment - Brownshirts /SA and use of violence - increased party discipline and campaigning - SS - November Criminals - Marches, uniforms, speeches - economic crises and parliamentary chaos - July 1932 elections Evaluating the evolution of the NSDAP (Nazi party) throughout the 1920s to early 1930s - why the change from violence and revolution to the attainment of power through legal means (standing for Reichstag elections)

5 Consolidation and maintenance of power Use of legal methods; use of force; charismatic leadership; dissemination of propaganda Election results Reichstag fire and emergency decree Chancellorship and Enabling Act Gleichschaltung coordination process Banning of other political parties Banning of trade unions Concordant with Church Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service April 1933 Compulsory Nazi professional leagues and organisations (ie. for teachers) Law to ensure the Unity of Party and State (one-party state legally established) Dec 1933 Night of the Long Knives June 1934 Appeal of Hitler - oratory skills and charisma Populist appeal Hindenburg s death Propaganda machine - Goebbels and Ministry for Popular Enlightenment and Propaganda Repression New laws against Jews and minorities Swift economic measures Hitler Youth and BDM (girls) Use of SS and Secret Police (Gestapo) Forced membership of Nazi party Education policies Use primary sources as evidence Find out more about those who voted for the Nazi Party in 1930 32. Research the level of support for the Nazis, explaining which aspects of Nazism each group found attractive and arrange your points under the following headings: working class; lower middle class (shopkeepers and office workers); upper middle class (businessmen, bankers and professionals); the élite (aristocracy, army offi cers, members of government); Protestants/Catholics; northern Germans/southern Germans; others (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 72). Was Hitler s rise to power inevitable in the context of Germany in 1918 33? How effectively did Hitler consolidate his power between March 1933 and August 1934? (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 89) Why did Hitler rely primarily on the law to help consolidate his power? (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 90)

6 Nature, extent and treatment of opposition Types of opposition: Bishop Galen, Pastor Bonhoeffer; youth groups (ie. Swing movement; White Rose movement; Edelweiss Pirates; jazz fans); academics; minority groups; underground groups organised from abroad; Rote Kapelle; army members; intelligence agency resistance workers; some university students. Do the incidents of resistance and opposition mean that other Germans who followed Nazi laws were complicit in the crimes of the Nazi regime? Nature and extent of their opposition Treatment of opposition groups/individual: repression; secret police; arrest; concentration camps; execution. 7 The impact of the success and/or failure of foreign policy on the maintenance of power Lebensraum Nazi-Soviet Pact Involvement with Spanish Civil War Remilitarization of the Rhineland 1936 Anschluss with Austria 1938 Entry into Czechoslovakia 1938 Early victories that caused false sense of security Failure of Blitzkrieg - Germany ill-prepared for extended war Axis powers Why is the Spanish Civil War referred to as a dress rehearsal for WW2? Do you think this is accurate? What impact did the appeasement policy have on Hitler s ambitions? 8 Aims and results of Aims and impact of domestic economic, political, cultural and social policies Understanding the ethical dimension of historical

policies Economic: Law for the Protection of Retail Trade Four-Year Plan The New Plan Pursuit of self-sufficiency, or autarky guns and butter conflict anti-unemployment policies and projects; ie. DAF Wehrwirtschaft - defence economy to prepare for war, as opposed to real economic solutions to domestic problems Political: Civil Service Law Reich Food Estate etc. Nuremberg Laws Reichskristallnacht Euthanasia programme Final Solution control of teachers, students and changes to curriculum interpretation How successful were the Nazis in bringing about economic recovery in the years 1933-39? (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 99). Was there really an economic miracle, or was the economy not as bad as Hitler portrayed when he took office? (Historiography on coherent economy, or one that evolved from political whims) To what extent was Nazi economic policy driven by ideology? (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 99) What impact did rearmament have on the economy? Social: Concordant with Catholic Church; relationship between Nazis and the churches within Germany Lebensborn programme Hitler Youth Cultural: Culture used as propaganda tool

Reverted to traditional art forms (ie. Wagner; Strauss) Art and culture used for reinforcing Nazi ideology - blood and soil - anti-feminism - anti-semitism - order (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 108) Heavy censorship Burning of the books Annual Great German Art exhibition Reich Chamber of Culture Expulsion or exile of artists (and intelligentsia) Use of radio (for propaganda purposes) Popularisation of the arts: music festivals; Strength Through Joy program Reich Film Chamber - use of film 9 The impact of policies on women and minorities Women in Nazi Germany: - birth incentives - maternity benefits increased - discouragement of female labour (duty of women was as mothers and housewives) - generous marriage allowances Contradictions in policies towards women (changes that occurred as war was extended) Cause and consequence Take historical perspectives Minority groups: - Nazi criteria for Volksegenossen ( race comrade )

- Asocials: - habitual criminals - beggars/tramps/ work-shy - social deviants - juvenile delinquents - alcoholics - prostitutes - homosexuals - political prisoners - Biological outsiders: - those with hereditary illnesses (and other mental health issues) - gypsies - Jews Euthanasia Persecution Concentration camps Ghettos Other methods of exterminating minorities (ie. Einsatzgruppen) Final Solution 10 Authoritarian control and the extent to which it was achieved Identifying continuity and change Historiography on efficiency of Nazi regime: effectively run, or confused polycratic system? (Todd & Waller, 2011, p. 88) - cumulative radicalism (links to ideology of survival of the fittest - competition)

Structuralist (Hitler was weak dictator) v intentionalist historians (Hitler as powerful) Was there a cult of personality?