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Planning Law:
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 William Webster, Robert Weatherley


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Corporate Insolvency Practice:
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 Mark Watson-Gandy


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A Federal History of the Habsburg Empire, 1815-1918


ISBN13: 9780198943600
To be Published: October 2026
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £35.00





The Habsburg Monarchy was a Europe in miniature. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it served as one of the world's most innovative laboratories for federal concepts, navigating an immense multiplicity of peoples, languages, and cultures. Based on extensive archival material and new sources, A Federal History of the Habsburg Empire, 1815-1918 provides a groundbreaking and new political history, exploring federalism not just as an abstract idea, but as a living practice of multi-level governance.

From the executive federalism of Metternich to the fin-de-siècle 'cooperative empire', the study examines how power was distributed across the Habsburg empire, its imperial halves Austria and Hungary, and its historic crown lands such as Bohemia, Austria, Tyrol, and Galicia. It illuminates a system where elites collaborated on new tasks—from education and public health to social security and infrastructure—bridging the gap between pre-modern traditions of governance and the challenges of modern times.

By analyzing unique federal models like 'non-territorial personal autonomy', which was implemented in diverse regions ranging from Moravia to the Bucovina and Bosnia-Herzegovina, Jana Osterkamp provides new answers to what held this complex polity together and why it ultimately fell apart. Habsburg federalism was always in tension, balancing imperial integration with claims for national self-determination. Serving as a prequel to modern Europe, this work reveals how federalism sought to secure a balance where diversity is not absorbed into unity.

The history of the Habsburg Monarchy teaches us that a sense of community and cohesion must be constantly recreated, even in today's Europe.

Subjects:
Legal History