This article explores British decolonisation through the lens of the first meeting of Britain’s Heads of Missions (Ambassadors and High Commissioners) in East and Central Africa in May 1965. The meeting gives a unique insight into the thoughts and ambitions of a select group of senior diplomats as they offered their ideas of what policy should be and assessed Britain’s historical and contemporary relationship with Africa. Mid-1965 was a moment when multiple, if limited, options were available as the British government sought to reconfigure relationships and preserve influence in former colonies. The meeting is significant in a number of ways. Firstly, the meeting was an expression of power relations between different government departments ...
Defence date: 28 November 2014Examining Board: Prof. Federico Romero, EUI, Supervisor; Prof. Dir...
The aim of this thesis is to use the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland to examine the way in whic...
British Foreign Policy in sub-Saharan Africa since 1957 25 mars 2011 Paris Lieu : Université Paris D...
This article explores British decolonisation through the lens of the first meeting of Britain’s Head...
This article outlines the formation, ideology and activities of the West African National Secretaria...
This article discusses the establishment of a British Council presence in South Africa through the a...
In the late 1940s and 1950s, much of Whitehall and the British media’s rhetoric concerning the rate ...
A study of relations at the United Nations and in the fields of economics, defence, and atomic devel...
The slow collapse of the European colonial empires after 1945 provides one of the great turning poin...
Britain’s history as a nation and a great power cannot be dissociated from the concept of imperialis...
This article explores how postwar British development in Africa was generated, transferred, and appl...
There is now a considerable literature and developing body of research analysing Britain’s Africa po...
A major result of the Second World War was a radically new world constellation. In 1945, Soviet Rus...
This article examines the response of the British government to the revolution in Zanzibar in Januar...
This article examines how the British government has responded to Zimbabwe's ongoing crisis. This ca...
Defence date: 28 November 2014Examining Board: Prof. Federico Romero, EUI, Supervisor; Prof. Dir...
The aim of this thesis is to use the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland to examine the way in whic...
British Foreign Policy in sub-Saharan Africa since 1957 25 mars 2011 Paris Lieu : Université Paris D...
This article explores British decolonisation through the lens of the first meeting of Britain’s Head...
This article outlines the formation, ideology and activities of the West African National Secretaria...
This article discusses the establishment of a British Council presence in South Africa through the a...
In the late 1940s and 1950s, much of Whitehall and the British media’s rhetoric concerning the rate ...
A study of relations at the United Nations and in the fields of economics, defence, and atomic devel...
The slow collapse of the European colonial empires after 1945 provides one of the great turning poin...
Britain’s history as a nation and a great power cannot be dissociated from the concept of imperialis...
This article explores how postwar British development in Africa was generated, transferred, and appl...
There is now a considerable literature and developing body of research analysing Britain’s Africa po...
A major result of the Second World War was a radically new world constellation. In 1945, Soviet Rus...
This article examines the response of the British government to the revolution in Zanzibar in Januar...
This article examines how the British government has responded to Zimbabwe's ongoing crisis. This ca...
Defence date: 28 November 2014Examining Board: Prof. Federico Romero, EUI, Supervisor; Prof. Dir...
The aim of this thesis is to use the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland to examine the way in whic...
British Foreign Policy in sub-Saharan Africa since 1957 25 mars 2011 Paris Lieu : Université Paris D...