Who Makes British Foreign Policy?Open University Press, 1976 - 132 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 15
Página 46
... limits set by the activities of the formal office holders . NOTES TO CHAPTER 6 I Frankel 1975 pp255-6 . 2 Frankel op . cit . pp262-3 . 3 Attlee 1954 p169 . 4 Boardman and Groom 1973 p198 . 5 Strange 1971 pp2-3 . 6 Ibid p321 . 7 Ibid ...
... limits set by the activities of the formal office holders . NOTES TO CHAPTER 6 I Frankel 1975 pp255-6 . 2 Frankel op . cit . pp262-3 . 3 Attlee 1954 p169 . 4 Boardman and Groom 1973 p198 . 5 Strange 1971 pp2-3 . 6 Ibid p321 . 7 Ibid ...
Página 61
... limits on the freedom to initiate new policies or to respond to changing circum- stances . This may have been an especially limiting factor in Britain's case as her world role has changed so sharply . Large organizations have standard ...
... limits on the freedom to initiate new policies or to respond to changing circum- stances . This may have been an especially limiting factor in Britain's case as her world role has changed so sharply . Large organizations have standard ...
Página 92
... limits within which policy is shaped . Holsti accepted , however , that government leaders not only respond to public opinion , but set out to inform and mould it . The relationship in democratic societies is a complex one in which ...
... limits within which policy is shaped . Holsti accepted , however , that government leaders not only respond to public opinion , but set out to inform and mould it . The relationship in democratic societies is a complex one in which ...
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
THE FORMAL OFFICE HOLDER PERSPECTIVE | 7 |
The formal office holdersCabinet | 22 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 3 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
accept Anthony Eden assumptions Attlee Beloff Bevin Britain British foreign policy British Government British politics Cabinet civil servants civil service co-ordinating committees Community complex concerned consensus constraints crisis Crossman debate decisions defence policy departmental negotiated order departments domestic economic Edward Heath Emanuel Shinwell emphasis Ernest Bevin European example executive foreign affairs Foreign Office foreign policy issues Foreign Secretary formal office holders George Brown Gordon Walker government activity government's handled Harold Harold Wilson Heath Ibid important influence initiative James Callaghan journalists judgement Labour Party leaders Lord Mackintosh Macmillan mass media membership ment ministers and civil Ministry of Defence newspapers NOTES TO CHAPTER Parliament parliamentary particular play pluralist perspective policy makers political parties pressure groups Prime Minister priorities public opinion question range recognized relations relationships responsibility Rhodesia role sectoral process Selwyn Lloyd senior situation Suez tion views Waltz Wilson wrote