1: Introduction
Part 1: Making Peace and Managing Peace: 1919-1930
2: Who made British Policy and Grand Strategy?
3: Creating the New World Order, 1919-1921
4: Reconstructing the New World Order, 1921-1926
5: Managing the New World Order, 1926-1930
Part 2: The Crumbling of the New World Order, 1931-1936
6: The World Crisis and the National Government, 1931-1933
7: A new Grand Strategy: the Defence Requirements Committee,
1932-1935
8: 'I wish I saw a real policy emerging, but frankly I don't': The
Baldwin Government, 1935-1937
Part 3: The Ascendency of Chamberlain, 1937-1940
9: The Grand Strategy of Fortress Britain, May 1937-September
1938
10: 'And I sincerely believe that we have at last opened the way to
that general appeasement which alone can save the world from
chaos': Appeasement, Containment, and War: October 1938 to
September 1939
11: 'ELthere was no hurry as time was on our side': Chamberlain's
War
Conclusion
David French was born in Essex in 1954 and educated at the
University of York and King's College London. After briefly holding
teaching posts as North London Polytechnic, the University of
Newcastle upon Tyne, and Herriot-Watt University, he spent
twenty-seven years at University College London. The author of nine
previous books, he is a former Fellow of the Woodrow Wilson Centre
in Washington DC, a recipient of the Arthur Goodzeit Prize of the
New
York Military Affairs Symposium, and a three-times winner of the
Templer Medal awarded by the Society for Army Historical Research.
He is now Professor Emeritus at UCL, a Fellow of both the Royal
Historical Society
and the Historical Association, and a Vice-President of the Army
Records Society.
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