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After the horrors of the First World War a dialogue began between European statesmen seeking some form of European integration as a way of achieving lasting peace. During the inter-war period this idea started to attract support in Britain even though Britain''s strategic and economic interests remained focused outside Europe. This book explores Britain''s relations with the continent between 1918 and 1945, focussing on diplomatic and military responses to the major crises and examining attitudes to the idea of Europe in the broader context of relations with the Empire, Commonwealth and the USA.>
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Peter Catterall is Reader in History at the University of Westminster, UK. In addition, he teaches on democracy and public policy for the Hansard Society. He is also chair of the George Lansbury Memorial Trust. He has published widely on 20th-century British history and his most recent work is Labour and the Politics of Alcohol: The Decline of a Cause (2014).Dr Kate Utting is Deputy Dean of Academic Studies of the Defence Studies Department at the Joint Services Command and Staff College, Defence Academy of the United Kingdom and Senior Lecturer in Defence Studies at King’s College London, UK.