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  1. In the history of Czechoslovakia, normalization (Czech: normalizace, Slovak: normalizácia) is a name commonly given to the period following the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968 and up to the glasnost era of liberalization that began in the Soviet Union and its neighboring nations in 1987.

  2. After the invasion, Czechoslovakia entered a period known as normalization (Czech: normalizace, Slovak: normalizácia), in which new leaders attempted to restore the political and economic values that had prevailed before Dubček gained control of the KSČ.

  3. Examines European communism in Czechoslovakia from the Prague Spring in 1968 to the Velvet Revolution of 1989. Draws from archival material inaccessible before 1990. Explores Czechoslovakia's relations with several East European countries (USSR, GDR, Poland and Yugoslavia)

  4. 1968 and Beyond: From the Prague Spring to “Normalization”. by Gina M. Peirce, Assistant Director Center for Russian and East European Studies University of Pittsburgh. Following the Communist Party’s forcible seizure of power in Czechoslovakia in 1948, the country was ruled by a highly repressive regime under the leadership of President ...

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  5. Matthew Stibbe & Kevin McDermott. 230 Accesses. Abstract. The era of 'normalisation' following the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968 is conventionally perceived as a return to hard-line communist policies aimed at totally reversing the reforms of the Prague Spring.

  6. 1. Nov. 2022 · This chapter deals with the specific features of Slovak development in the 1970s and 1980s. The normalisation regime had the same objectives in both the Czech lands and Slovakia, but the tactics on how to reach them differed.