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Lothian Philip Kerr and the Quest for World Order
David P. Billington, Jr.
ISBN: 0-313-32179-5
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-32179-5
264 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 5/30/2006
List Price: $129.95 (UK Sterling Price: £89.95)
Discount Price: $64.98 Sale Price for U.S. Customers Only. Save 50%. Ends 12/31/2009.
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • Billington's study, thoroughly informed by the Lothian papers, builds effectively on the wide corpus of recent scholarship, offering incisive judgements while mobilizing some new evidence on lingering controversies. In short, this is now the political biography to read on Lothian, whose career touched on many of Britian's central imperial and international engagements in the first half of the twentieth century.
    —The International History Review
    6/1/2007
Description: This is the story of Philip Kerr and a group of Oxford graduates that founded The Round Table (Journal of International Affairs) in 1910 and influenced British foreign policy over the following thirty years. As the principal thinker of the group, Kerr saw the need for a supra-national grouping and wanted to organize the British Empire into a federal superstate. The group also sought an Anglo-American alliance, and in 1939, joined a world federation movement that would help to inspire NATO after the war.

Important questions raised by this group remain relevant today. Can a supra-national community impose laws and regulations on its members without its governing institutions being more fully accountable to a community-wide electorate? Can hostile nationalism be tamed with such a union. Can it reasonably exclude the United States?
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
    Introduction
    Proving Grounds
    The Round Table Crusade, 1909-1914
    The First World War and After, 1914-1921
    Renewed Hopes, 1921-1930
    Appeasement, 1930-1939
    Ambassador, 1939-1940
About the Author: David P. Billington, Jr. received a doctoral degree in British/Commonwealth history from the University of Texas at Austin (1995). He is currently working to produce and disseminate scholarship that introduces modern engineering to liberal arts students and first-year engineers through examples of historically significant innovation.
LCC Class: DA574
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