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British Labour Seeks a Foreign Policy, 1900-1940 (Hardcover, New)
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British Labour Seeks a Foreign Policy, 1900-1940 (Hardcover, New)
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Since World War II, the British Labour Party has played a central
role in dealing with complex international issues. Achieving real
power in parliament for the first time, Labour governments have
acted responsibly, and are usually in accord with the views of a
substantial majority of the British people. Such was not always the
case. In "British Labour Seeks a Foreign Policy," 1900-1940, Henry
R. Winkler synthesizes twenty years' study of the subject to offer
the first full-scale treatment of the Labour Party's evolution in
foreign affairs. The Labour Party came into existence at the
beginning of the twentieth century to deal with the domestic
problems of the working class, and it showed relatively little
interest in foreign policy issues. In the aftermath of World War I,
however, small groups of moderates made the case against the bitter
rejection of the Versailles Treaty by many in the Labour Party and
the trade union movement. Most of these argued that the League of
Nations could be used to remedy some of the deficiencies of the
settlement and that such a League must have the sanction of force
if it was to be effective. During the 1930s, the failures of the
League--in the Far East, Abyssinia, Spain, and Central
Europe--compelled some of its advocates to conclude that, League or
no League, the threat from Nazi Germany mandated support for a
program of preparedness and rearmament even under the aegis of a
hated National Government. The result, by 1937, was the final
formal abandonment of many of the radical illusions of the twenties
and thirties, as Labour reluctantly but formally assumed a posture
that enabled it to share in the governance of wartime Britain and
to take a key role in dealing with the international issues that
emerged in the aftermath of the Second World War. This volume
contains valuable lessons on the responsibilities of political
parties as well as the pros and cons of specific policies. It is
essential reading for understanding Britain's later stands as its
leaders tried to adjust to Britain's diminished power in the
post-World War II world.
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