Making of British Foreign Policy

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A01=David Vital
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Author_David Vital
Britain
Britain's External Relations
Britain's Reserves
Britain’s External Relations
Britain’s Reserves
British Foreign Policy
British foreign policy process
British Military Intervention
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Civil Service Instructors
Common Language
Commonwealth Office
Commonwealth Relations Office
constitutional analysis
Diplomatic Correspondents
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European Free Trade Area Partners
External Affairs
Follow
Foreign Office
foreign policy
Franco-British Cooperation
Full Cabinet
government
governmental institutions
Inside Story
international relations
Nuclear Disarmament
Overseas Policy Committee
Parliament
policy decision-making
policy-making
political
political science research
public opinion influence
Relative Crystallization
Secretary Of State
sociological
Telecommunications
United States
Vice Versa
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032125114
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How is foreign policy made? Who makes it? To what conscious and unconscious influences are policy-makers subject? What is distinctive about the immensely complex process as it unfolds in Britain? And what, therefore, is distinctive and characteristic about Britain’s foreign policy today? Who in Britain, has the decisive word? Why is the Foreign Office the king-pin of the system? Why does Parliament count for so little? Does public opinion count at all? Originally published in 1968, these are some of the questions which this book considers in the course of a tightly argued but very readable analysis. Some had been considered on their own elsewhere, but this study represented the first attempt by a contemporary political scientist to pull together, in brief compass, all the relevant threads – including the constitutional, the political, the institutional and the sociological. It is done, moreover, on the basis of a sharp assessment of the type of foreign policy problem that most notably confronted Britain at the time.

The author has been successively journalist, official of the Israel Government, and university lecturer in politics. Throughout, his special interests and activities have been in the sphere of international affairs and it was while teaching International Relations at the University of Sussex that he wrote this book. He combines the experience of one who has seen the policy being made from the inside with the theoretical insight of the political scientist; he assesses with a sympathetic but unemotional detachment the constraints on the formation of British foreign policy.

David Vital

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