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COMMONWEALTH RELATIONS OFFICE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   164659


Long shadow of colonial cartography: Britain and the Sino-Indian war of 1962 / McGarr, Paul M   Journal Article
McGarr, Paul M Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines British responses to the Sino-Indian border war of 1962. It illustrates how, in the years leading up to the war, Britain’s colonial legacy in the Indian subcontinent saw it drawn reluctantly into a territorial dispute between Asia’s two largest and most powerful nations. It analyses disagreements in Whitehall between the Foreign Office and Commonwealth Relations Office over the relative strength of India and China’s border claims, and assesses how these debates reshaped British regional policy. It argues that the border war was instrumental in transforming Britain’s post-colonial relationship with South Asia. Continuing to filter relations with India through an imperial prism proved unsatisfactory, what followed was a more pragmatic Indo-British association.
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2
ID:   092169


On reading the morris papers: 1959 revisited / Lee, John Michael   Journal Article
Lee, John Michael Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract The private papers of Sir Philip Morris reveal how he prepared himself for the chairmanship of the 1959 Oxford Conference on Commonwealth Education with briefing from the Commonwealth Relations Office, what he brought to the meeting from his own experience, and what he learnt from the chair. British ministers and officials as hosts of the conference were ambivalent about its outcome. They could not disentangle the prospect of educational co-operation across the Commonwealth from all that was being done to set up a system for giving development assistance to the new states created by decolonisation.
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