A cardinal point of our world strategy: the Foreign Office and the normalization of relations with Japan, 1952-63

Best, A.ORCID logo (2013). A cardinal point of our world strategy: the Foreign Office and the normalization of relations with Japan, 1952-63. In Young, J. W., Pedaliu, E. G. H. & Kandiah, M. D. (Eds.), Britain in Global Politics: From Churchill to Blair (Security, Conflict and Cooperation in the Contemporary World) (pp. 100-118). Palgrave Macmillan.
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This collection of essays focuses Britain's role in global affairs since the Second World War. The essays cover a broad field, from relations with Japan and China, through European and African developments, to defence planning in Whitehall. They include also political, economic, defence, ideological and religious dimensions and, even, 'futurology'. The essays in the collection offer fresh insights and new interpretations of the way in which a weakened Britain conducted its foreign policy in order to protect its interests and retain influence in international affairs. The book presents readers with wide-ranging perspectives on Britain and the World in the Cold War and post-Cold War eras, based on the latest available evidence. This collection of essays, along with the accompanying volume covering the period from Gladstone to Churchill, is published in memory of Saki Dockrill.

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