ID | 105399 |
Title Proper | Britain and the commonwealth |
Other Title Information | confronting the past-imagining the future |
Language | ENG |
Author | Murphy, Philip |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This is an extended version of Philip Murphy's inaugural lecture as director of the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, delivered on 23 February 2011. It traces the relationship of the UK with the wider Commonwealth over 40 years, paying particular attention to the rhetoric of governments and opposition parties from Wilson and Heath to Cameron. It examines the reasons for the Commonwealth being relegated to a peripheral role in British foreign policy, especially European preoccupations and the issues of Rhodesia and South Africa. It argues that the Commonwealth remains of considerable practical and enormous symbolic importance to the UK. The British government should engage with the Commonwealth more than it has done in the recent past and the Commonwealth should be both open to and critical of its imperial past. |
`In' analytical Note | Round Table Vol. 100, No. 414; Jun 2011: p267-283 |
Journal Source | Round Table Vol. 100, No. 414; Jun 2011: p267-283 |
Key Words | Commonwealth ; British Government ; Commonwealth Effect ; Rhodesia ; South Africa |