British Aircraft Industry and American-led Globalisation

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A01=Takeshi Sakade
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Airbus
Airbus Industrie
Author_Takeshi Sakade
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aviation industry collaboration
British Aircraft Industry
British defence industrial transformation
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Category=HBLW
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Cold War
Concorde
Concorde Project
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De Havilland
De Havilland Comet
Decline
defence technology policy
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Developmental Costs
Douglas DC-8
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Eurofighter
European Airbus
European Technological Community
Hawker Siddeley
high technology industries
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International Monetary Fund
jet
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military aerospace sector
NATO Crisis
NATO's Integrate Command Structure
NATO’s Integrate Command Structure
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postwar manufacturing decline
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RB211-535 Engine
Rolls Royce
Rolls Royce Engine
Sandys White Paper
Sea Harriers
softlaunch
Suez
transatlantic industrial relations
UK Co-operation
UK's Defence Industrial Base
UK's Withdrawal
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UK’s Withdrawal
West Germany
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Wide Bodied Airliners

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367651213
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Sakade challenges the narrative that the focus of British manufacturing went "from Empire to Europe" and argues rather that, following the Second World War, the key relationship was in fact trans-Atlantic.

There is a commonly accepted belief that, during the twentieth century, British manufacturing declined irreparably, that Britain lost its industrial hegemony. But this is too simplistic. In fact, in the decades after 1945, Britain staked out a new role for itself as a key participant in a US-led process of globalisation. Far from becoming merely a European player, the UK actually managed to preserve a key share in a global market, and the British defence industry was, to a large extent, successfully rehabilitated. Sakade returns to the original scholarly parameters of the decline controversy, and especially questions around post-war decline in the fields of high technology and the national defence industrial base. Using the case of the strategically critical military and civil aircraft industry, he argues that British industry remained relatively robust.

A valuable read for historians of British aviation and more widely of 20th century British Industry.

Takeshi Sakade is Associate Professor in Graduate School of Economics at Kyoto University, Japan.

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