Britain’s Loss of International Status and Its Diplomatic Struggle For the Empowerment of its Foreign Policy (1945-1990).
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
This academic research aims to examine the British diplomatic practices and manoeuvres
adopted from 1939 onwards, after Britain had lost its international position and status right after WWII. It also deals with the diplomatic action taken after 1979 to revive Britain’s lost
status through a rigorous diplomacy. To reach this objective, light is shed on the
characteristics of the decline and its causing factors, and a focus is made on the different
required diplomatic practices to recover the lost status. Throughout the whole research,
information and concepts are introduced thematically following a chronological order,
where events and facts are treated on the basis of a historical description supported with a
systemic evaluation and analysis. Practically speaking, the work offers a portrait about Britain’s high international status experienced up to WWII, the period during which it
could build the strongest and most unique Empire whose diplomacy was highly
acknowledged. But, right after the war, Britain entered a critical period characterized by a
serious decline in terms of its world position and diplomatic efficiency. Growing aware
about the alarming situation, far-reaching diplomatic efforts to empower foreign policy,
were successfully deployed between 1979 and 1990 by the British government under the
premiership of Margaret Thatcher
