The quest for security : sovereignty, race, and the defense of the British Empire, 1898-1931 /

"The British Empire entered the twentieth century in a state of crisis, with many in the legal establishment fearing that the British constitution could no longer cope with the complexity of imperial institutions. At the same time, the military establishment feared the empire was becoming impos...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tumblin, Jesse (Jesse Cole), 1987-
Published: Cambridge University Press,
Publisher Address: Cambridge, United Kingdom :
Publication Dates: 2022.
©2020
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Edition: First paperbackedition.
Subjects:
Summary: "The British Empire entered the twentieth century in a state of crisis, with many in the legal establishment fearing that the British constitution could no longer cope with the complexity of imperial institutions. At the same time, the military establishment feared the empire was becoming impossible to defend from multiplying threats. In this innovative study, Jesse Tumblin shows how Britain and its largest colonies, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, and South Africa, were swept up in a collective effort to secure the Empire in the early twentieth century. The hierarchy of colonial politics created powerful incentives for colonies to militarize before World War I, reshaping their constitutional and racial relationships toward a dream beyond colonial status. The colonial backstory of a century of war and violence shows how these dreams made "security" the dominating feature of contemporary politics"--
Item Description: Revision of author's thesis (doctoral)--Boston College, 2016, titled The widening gyre : security, sovereignty, and the naking of modern statehood in the British Empire, 1898-1931.
Carrier Form: ix, 304 pages : illustrations, form ; 23 cm
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 282-299) and index.
ISBN: 9781108712545
Index Number: DA16
CLC: K561.4
Call Number: K561.4/T925
Contents: Colonial federationism, security, and the South African War -- Lessons of South Africa : security and political culture in the British world, 1902-1906 -- Security, race, and Dominion status, 1907-1909 -- The collapse of consensus and control, 1910-1914 -- Race, conscription, and the meaning of sovereignty in war -- The sharp sickle : new realities of sovereignty in the British Empire, 1918-1926 -- Epilogue. The Statute of Westminster : a once and future sovereignty.