Librairie Blanche

British Decolonisation (1919-1984)

par Mélanie Torrent

The politics of power, liberation and influence

Crédits & contributions

EAN
  • ÉditeurPUF
  • Parution17 décembre 2012
  • CollectionCNED

Prix TTC

25,00

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Du statut de Westminster à la révolte des Mau Mau, de la partition de l’Inde à la « seconde colonisation en Afrique », des grèves dans les Caraïbes aux compromis dans le Pacifique, cet ouvrage examine les spécificités de la décolonisation britannique dans le monde du XXe siècle. The end of the European empires undoubtedly stands as the major transformation of the twentieth-century world. Most mo-mentous, perhaps, was that of the British empire, which had combined the largest area of direct rule with the greatest sphere of informal power. Reflecting on the vivid controversies about the nature, causes, pace and extent of British decolonisation, this study analyses the long history of the end of the British empire, from the Treaty of Versailles to the Sino-British Treaty for the handover of Hong Kong. Beyond the high tide of independences, late ends of empire and remaining colonial outposts are crucial to understand the dynamics of British decolonisation, as are the early transformations of the white Commonwealth and the multiple forms of anti-colonial protest across the interwar empire. The history of British decolonisation is one of crossroads and encounters—theoretical, historical and geographical. It is about individual men and women across societies, international relations and transnational networks, structural changes and constraints, negotiations, repression and armed conflicts, and the (re)definition of the nation in the domestic and international spheres. From India to Belize, Vanuatu to Zimbabwe, Malaya to Britain itself, the study of decolonisation demonstrates the achievements, limits and ambiguities of colonial liberation in the twentieth century.