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BRITAIN AND THE COMMONWEALTH (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   112080


Britain and Europe / Wall, Stephen   Journal Article
Wall, Stephen Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Britain decided to join the European Community because its postwar, postimperial policies had failed and successive Governments saw no viable alternative. After ten years of being denied entry by De Gaulle, Britain joined on disadvantageous terms and with the British political parties, and the British people, deeply divided. Accession did not resolve the underlying issues and Britain's first year of membership saw an unprecedented oil crisis, bad relations between Britain and the United States and the demise of the British government led by Edward Heath. The underlying issues which had not been resolved in the accession negotiations were reopened by Harold Wilson and later by Margaret Thatcher. Some of them remain unresolved in British politics to this day.
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2
ID:   148969


What Bill slim did next: reopening of the imperial defence college / Stewart, Andrew   Journal Article
Stewart, Andrew Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In April 1946, the first post-war course of the Imperial Defence College (IDC) got underway with General Bill Slim as the new commandant. The college had been established during the interwar years to provide an opportunity for senior military officers and civil servants from Britain and the Commonwealth to gain a better understanding of higher strategy and how it was conducted. Andrew Stewart examines Slim’s role in the reopening of the IDC as Britain re-thought its role in international politics. He shows that the students at the college would spend much of their time studying what is now referred to as ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ power, and over the eight months of the course they gained a much better understanding of the influence Britain wielded in the world.
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