Program for upcoming conference on "The Blockade in the Era of the Two World Wars" is now available
Full program
In both world
wars, blockades constituted a key means of warfare, which impacted profoundly
on the living conditions of European and non-European populations, on world
trade, on major strategic decisions (like unrestricted submarine warfare), on
neutrality, on technology and science, on war economies and resource
management, and on overall policy decisions. The experience of blockade in the
First World War in particular informed trade and economic policies, military
preparations, diplomatic negotiations, international law, and mentalities for
the next three decades. Blockade became a defining feature of modern warfare
itself.
This 2-day
conference debates the developments, effects and legacies of blockade in
20th-century warfare, principally the two world wars. The conference brings
together scholars working on a wide variety of topics and employing different
methodological approaches to showcase and debate current research trends. It
focuses on questions of economic, diplomatic, legal, and military history as
well as social and cultural history. The intention of this conference is to
review the current state of scholarship and stake out the ground for new
research. In all, it interrogates the significance of the blockades for the era
of the two world wars, paying special attention to how the 'first blockade'
affected and shaped the 'second blockade'.
Full program