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Cabinet Government and War, 1890–1940
John Ehrman's book explores how the government of Great Britain was transformed by the two world wars.
John Ehrman (Author)
9780521141222, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 25 March 2010
152 pages
20.3 x 12.7 x 0.9 cm, 0.17 kg
This book was originally published in 1958. John Ehrman shows that the nature and range of government in Great Britain was transformed by the two world wars. At the end of the nineteenth century the administrative system barely recognised the demands of war. In the two wars it had to be capable of mobilising the whole resources of the country and the Commonwealth, and this affected the scope of government in peace: almost every aspect of national life was subject to supervision. Yet this profound change did less in Britain than elsewhere to destroy the country's traditions and institutions. Mr Ehrman shows that the Cabinet Government retained its basic features and traditional strength. This book is based on the Lees Knowles Lectures given at Cambridge in 1957. Historians will find it gives important information about the conduct of the last war, against the constitutional background necessary for its understanding.
Preface
1. The origins of a system
2. The growth and test of the system, 1906–1915
3. The system extended and remodelled, 1916–1918
4. Consolidation, rearmament and the test of the Second World War, 1919–1940
Index.
Subject Areas: Politics & government [JP]
