1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910813699503321

Autore

Heinlein Frank <1969->

Titolo

British government policy and decolonisation, 1945-1963 : scrutinising the official mind / / Frank Heinlein ; with a foreword by Robert Holland

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Abingdon : , : Routledge, , 2002

ISBN

1-135-28441-5

1-315-03902-8

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (352 p.)

Collana

Cass series--British foreign and colonial policy series, , 1467-5013

Disciplina

325/.341/009045

Soggetti

Decolonization - Great Britain - Colonies - History - 20th century

Imperialism - Government policy - Great Britain - History - 20th century

Great Britain Colonies History 20th century

Commonwealth countries History 20th century

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Revised version of author's PhD thesis at the European University Institute in Florence, 1999.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Foreword; Series Editor's Preface; Preface; List of Abbreviations; 1. Introduction; Notes; 2. The Empire-Commonwealth under the Attlee Governments; The Informal Empire - The Middle East and Other Overseas Commitments; 'Cutting a Dash in the World' - Attlee Vs Bevin and the chiefs of staff (1945-47); 'What We Have We Hold': The Last Years of the Labour Government (1948-51); Conclusion; The Formal Empire; Colonial Policy; Labour's 'New Approach'; Marching to the 'Third British Empire': the Development of Colonial Resources

The Legacy of War: South Asia'Coming Out with Honour': India; 'Scuttling without Having the Guts to Admit It': Burma; An Exemplary Transfer of Power: Ceylon; 'Normal' Colonies; Malaya; The Gold Coast; The Last White Dominion: Settler Colonies in East and Central Africa; Imperial Residue: Smaller Territories; Conclusion; The Commonwealth; Empire by Proxy? The Commonwealth under Labour; The Admission of South-Asian Members; India; Burma and Ceylon; Conclusion; Notes; 3. The Empire-Commonwealth under Churchill and Eden; The Informal Empire



'A Luxury We Can No Longer Afford?' Imperialism in the Early 1950s'We Must Cut Our Coat According to Our Cloth': First Attempts at a Policy Review; 'Piracy' on the Nile: Britain and the Suez Crisis; Conclusion; The Formal Empire; 'Riding the Tide': Colonial Policy under the Tories; From Restoration to Acceleration; Explaining the Strange Death of Conservative Colonialism; 'Normal' Colonies; Malaya; The Gold Coast; East and Central Africa; Smaller Territories; Conclusion; The Commonwealth; The Commonwealth in the Early 1950s; The Admission of African Members; The Sudan and the Gold Coast

The Debate about New European Members and Plan GPlan G and the Commonwealth; A French Dominion?; Maitland and the 'Expanding Commonwealth'; Conclusion; Notes; 4. The Empire-Commonwealth under the First Macmillan Government; The Informal Empire; Macmillan as Prime Minister: A New Approach?; The Middle Eastern Review; The General Policy Review; The Future Policy Report; Conclusion; The Formal Empire; The Colonial Policy Review; 'Normal' Colonies; East and Central Africa: Business as Usual or Preparation for Major Changes?; Pressing for Change: the FO

Still in Search of Multi-Racialism: the CO and the CRO'The Next Ten Years in Africa'; Macmillan and Africa in 1959; Smaller Territories; Conclusion; The Commonwealth; The Commonwealth in the Late 1950s; The Idea of 'Statehood' and Cyprus's Admission as a Full Member; Conclusion; Notes; 5. The Empire-Commonwealth under the Second Macmillan Government; The Informal Empire; The Debate in the Early 1960s; 1963: Planning for the Next Decade; Yet Another Review? The Oversea Co-ordinating Committee; The Debate About New Aircraft Carriers

Outlook: The Wilson Government and the Commitments East of Suez

Sommario/riassunto

This book is an in-depth study of the importnace of the Empire-Commonwealth in the two decades after WWII for Britain's self-image as a great power.  By studying a wide range of debates on general and specific imperial problems, the book highlights the ""official mind"" of decolonization - and of late imperialism.