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Ireland and the League of Nations, 1919-1946: International Relations, Diplomacy and Politics: History S

Autor Michael J. Kennedy, M. Kennedy
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 dec 1995
From 1923 to 1946, Ireland was a committed, though critical, supporter of the League of Nations. Under Cumann Na Gaedheal and the foreign ministries of Fitzgerald and McGillgan, the state's policy was that of a radical. Ireland constantly sought to uphold the covenant and further the work of the League in the face of great power criticism. This was recognised with the Free State's Election to the League Council in 1930. Under Fianna Fail, de Valera built upon his predecessors' achievements and Ireland became a mature and influential League member. By the early mid-1930s, the Irish were involved in nearly all of the League's most important projects; and the great powers, such as Britain, recognised Ireland's role as one of the influential 'small states' in the League. The late 1930s saw the League decline after Italy's invasion of Abyssinia. Ireland still supported the League, but in a theoretical manner, as de Valera steered Ireland towards neutrality in the looming conflict. This book analyses Ireland's policy at the League in Geneva and the development of League policy in Dublin against the background of the turbulent inter-war years. It examines the personalities and issues behind policy and analyses their execution in Geneva. It draws on analysis of previously unseen material recently released from the Department of Foreign Affairs archives. This book is a fundamental reassessment of Irish foreign in the inter-war period.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780716525493
ISBN-10: 0716525496
Pagini: 285
Dimensiuni: 157 x 236 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: IRISH ACADEMIC PRESS
Seria History S


Textul de pe ultima copertă

This is the first extensive in-depth study of the role in Ireland in an international organisation. It is based on official records from the Department of External Affairs that have never previously been the basis of research, and primary material from European archives. Ireland's stance at the League of Nations, revealed as a central feature of inter-war Irish foreign policy, is traced through the Cumann na nGaedheal and Fianna Fail administrations. The development and execution of policy by crucial figures including Eamon de Valera, Patrick McGilligan and Joseph Walshe, is charted and assessed against the background of the most turbulent period of the twentieth century. The focus on the relationship between Irish diplomats in Geneva and Ireland's other diplomatic missions highlights the importance of the post of Permanent Representative to the League as a key to the inter-war Irish diplomatic network. The book fundamentally re-assesses the foreign policy formulation of Cumann na nGaedheal in the 1920s. The intricate nature of the young Free State's foreign policy is revealed in new detail, indicating a more international and less Anglo-Irish centred agenda.