Part I will study British foreign economic policy-making on three issues: British investments in China; controls on British exports to China; and controls on imports into Britain from China. The first two issues have been well covered by historians so are treated more briefly; the last one is given more space as it is based on new archival research. All three show how British governments reversed a policy, which sought, despite the emergence of a Communist China, to develop Sino-British economic relations. Part II will compare these policies with those towards Hong Kong. There is not the space here to discuss the policy-making process with regards to Hong Kong but I need to discuss the outcomes of policy-making towards the colony becau...
In this chapter Jonathan Howlett adopts perspectives and models from wider literatures on decolonisa...
The annual value of British trade with China is to be found in the reports of the British Board of T...
This thesis traces British reactions to the development of the Chinese revolutionary movement from i...
The thesis contributes to the broad body of literature which examines the role of Great Britain in t...
This thesis offers a diplomatic study of Britain's relations with the People's Republic of China und...
Originally published in 1962. This book is a study of relations between Britain and China. The first...
The purpose of this thesis is to explore the 'special relationship' between the United States and Gr...
The aim of the thesis is to examine British policies towards China and the Shantung question between...
This thesis examines the evolution of China's Hong Kong policy in the period 1949-84, and how China ...
Conference Theme: Spaces and Places Geopolitics in an Era of GlobalizationPanel SD47 - Post-WWII Dip...
Hong Kong has existed as a British crown colony since 1942, and its colonial political structures re...
On the 6th January 1950 Britain accorded de jure recognition to the newly formed People’s Republic o...
Public opinion in Britain influenced the government’s policy of retreat in response to Chinese nat...
The picture of Mao’s China in the 1950s is that of an isolated country only diplomatically and comme...
After reviewing the accord, the author asserts that the Hong Kong agreement does solve the Sino-Brit...
In this chapter Jonathan Howlett adopts perspectives and models from wider literatures on decolonisa...
The annual value of British trade with China is to be found in the reports of the British Board of T...
This thesis traces British reactions to the development of the Chinese revolutionary movement from i...
The thesis contributes to the broad body of literature which examines the role of Great Britain in t...
This thesis offers a diplomatic study of Britain's relations with the People's Republic of China und...
Originally published in 1962. This book is a study of relations between Britain and China. The first...
The purpose of this thesis is to explore the 'special relationship' between the United States and Gr...
The aim of the thesis is to examine British policies towards China and the Shantung question between...
This thesis examines the evolution of China's Hong Kong policy in the period 1949-84, and how China ...
Conference Theme: Spaces and Places Geopolitics in an Era of GlobalizationPanel SD47 - Post-WWII Dip...
Hong Kong has existed as a British crown colony since 1942, and its colonial political structures re...
On the 6th January 1950 Britain accorded de jure recognition to the newly formed People’s Republic o...
Public opinion in Britain influenced the government’s policy of retreat in response to Chinese nat...
The picture of Mao’s China in the 1950s is that of an isolated country only diplomatically and comme...
After reviewing the accord, the author asserts that the Hong Kong agreement does solve the Sino-Brit...
In this chapter Jonathan Howlett adopts perspectives and models from wider literatures on decolonisa...
The annual value of British trade with China is to be found in the reports of the British Board of T...
This thesis traces British reactions to the development of the Chinese revolutionary movement from i...