2020
DOI: 10.31235/osf.io/4uh6z
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National Identity and British Foreign Policy

Abstract: Britain’s tenaciously global foreign policy after 1945 was never simply a function of the nation’s ruling class acting on the basis of elite obsessions or after some sort of bipartisan consensus. Rather, this policy developed from mainstream, gradually evolving ideas about “us,” “them,” and “Others” generated within a broader British and, more specifically, English society.

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