Post-colonial ties (23) Flashcards

1
Q

Britain’s relationship with its colonies through the Commonwealth politically

A
  • Britain had created ‘nation states’ with British style legal systems and British values.
  • The commonwealth maintained political ties and influence.
  • Commonwealth conferences with Prime Ministers and Presidents took place at least once every two years
  • Major economic Commonwealth conference in 1952
  • All except one meeting took place in London - British dominance - only because it was in Lagos to coordinate policies towards Rhodesia
  • Provided a strong and wide range diplomatic network
  • Commonwealth Secretary General position established 1965 permitted the co-ordination of Commonwealth activities
  • Citizens of the Commonwealth remained eligible for British honours and listened avidly for the Christmas Day message (Est 1932)
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2
Q

Britain’s relationship with its colonies through Commonwealth militarily

A
  • Commonwealth was not a military alliance but Britain continued to maintain a military with a ‘global’ reach.
  • Recruited citizens from Commonwealth nations - B. retained a brigade of Gurkhas in remnants of old Indian Army
  • Britain’s position on the UN security council can be seen as result of Empire and its world-wide connections
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3
Q

Britain’s economy

A

The City of London remained one of the world’s major financial centres, with headquarters for banking, insurance and investment companies
Empire brought about conventions of international trade and rise of multi-national companies with branches all over the world
Britain emerged from Empire with a vast overseas portfolio and vast trading links
Britain made every effort to keep ex-colonies within the Sterling Area - informal empire

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4
Q

British emigration to Empire and Commonwealth?

A

The effects of the war, continued rationing until 1954 and the demand for labour with better prospects caused a surge in post-war emigration
e.g in Australia, Canada and New Zealand
1946-1957 1 million people left Britain for the Dominions
Survey in 1948 showed that c. 25% of British population were in contact with relatives in the Dominions

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5
Q

British contact with the Dominions?

A

Mass observation survey in 1948 stated that 25% of the population of Britain were in contact with relatives in the Dominions
Raised awareness of Empire
Money transfers between relatives overseas and those in Britain amounted to £12 million in 1959
Upper class British - civil servants, administrators and senior army officials - migrated to see the Empire first hand - mostly public schooled and had been prepared for imperial rule
Lower classes saw Empire mostly through National Service (1939-1960, ages 17-21, 18 months) and fighting in late colonial wars - Suez - Kenya - Malaya
Direct contact with Empire became rarer in 1960s as National Service was abolished and decolonisation sped up

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6
Q

Dominion migration figures

A

1967
Australia - 87.1 thousand emigrated to, 27.8 thousand immigrated from
Canada - 65.8 thousand emigrated to, 9.9 thousand immigrated from

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7
Q

Early Immigration policy?

A

After the British economy began to recover, there was plentiful work (due to war-time losses - almost 70,000 civilian lives) and well-paid work for the unskilled in factories
Government actively encouraged immigration to fill the workers gap
Successful recruitment drives - public transport and NHS - 1956 – London Transport took on nearly 4000 employees – mostly from Barbados

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8
Q

Basic timeline of British immigration

A

1948 – British Nationality Act passed, all Empire and Commonwealth citizens given full British citizenship and right to abode due to Wartime contributions
June 1948 - Empire Windrush lands in Tilbury, East London. Authorities sheltered the 492 mostly Jamaican passengers
1950s – Significant immigration from the Caribbean
1956 – London Transport took on nearly 4000 employees – mostly from Barbados
1960s – Significant immigration from India and Pakistan
1967 – Significant immigration from Kenya as Kenyatta pressurised Asian Kenyans to leave

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9
Q

Commonwealth immigration?

A

1958 - 115,000 West Indians
1958 - 55,000 Indians and Pakistanis
Cypriots - 1959 25,000 - many fleeing civil war
In the three years between 1960 to 1962 more migrants arrived in Britain than in the whole of the twentieth century
Immigration ran at just over 50,000 per year 1962-65
1967 Britains black population was nearly 1 million

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10
Q

Rise of British anti-immigration

A
  • Post-war boom slackened and worries about dilution of British cultural and national identity
  • Commonwealth immigrants bore the brunt of job redundancies and had to live in the least desirable locations
  • Birmingham Immigration Control Association formed in 1960 – pressure group – these types of groups were popping up where migrants were most prominent
  • Survey in 1962, 90% of the British population supported legislation to curb immigration and 80% agreed that there were too many immigrants in Britain already
  • Survey in North London in 1965 showed that 1 in 5 objected to working with black or Asian people and 50% said they would refuse to live next door to a coloured person and 9/10 did not approve of mixed marriages
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11
Q

Assimilation

A

Notting Hill Carnival
late 1950s social mixing of groups and steel drums becoming popular in pubs
1964 local festival setup by West Indian immigrants - West Indians showed off their traditions
In a survey in Nottingham in the early 1960s, Robert Davison found that 87% of the Jamaicans said they felt ‘British’ before they came to England and 86% were happy for their children to feel ‘English’.

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12
Q

Rise of public racism

A
  • Racist extremism – Alf Garnett’s Till Death Do Us Part from 1965 intended to mock bigotry yet he became a popular figure for racist extremists
  • 1958 – ‘Teddy Boy’ youths attacking black people and violent riots in Nottingham and Notting Hill, London
    In East of London, violence rendered some areas ‘no-go’ areas as Bengalis were subject to violent racism – ‘paki-bashing’ became a trend
  • Issues of immigration were clear in the 1964 general election – Conservative Peter Griffiths won by using the slogan, ‘If you want a n**r for a neighbour, vote Labour’
  • Although the new labour government headed by Harold Wilson, who stated that the slogan was a disgrace, the Labour government reduced the quota of vouchers and barred children over 16 from entering Britain as family members of already-existing immigrants
  • Of the 982 complaints made to the Race Relations Board (1965), 734 were dismissed due to lack of evidence and the Board could not compel witnesses to attend – weren’t taking racism seriously
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13
Q

1962 Commonwealth Immigrants Act

A
  • 1962
  • Free entry from Commonwealth countries ENDED unless a works voucher/permit could be obtained.
  • It indirectly discriminated against black and Asian colonies, only 34,500 black applicants successfully gained entry after 12 months.
  • The Irish were exempt from the scheme and White Dominions had the necessary skills to easily obtain a visa.
  • Act had massive public support - poll suggested 70%
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14
Q

Failure of assimilation?

A
  • The Islamic belief on the consumption of alcohol kept Muslims out of local public houses and yet this was very often the centre of white British working class culture.
  • In a survey in Nottingham in the early 1960s, Robert Davison found that Only 2% of Indians felt ‘British’ before coming to England and only 6% wanted their children to feel English.
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15
Q

Decline of interest in Empire?

A

Britain was moving into decolonisation
Society becoming subject to Americanisation
More interest in Europe with charter flight holidays and political concerns about joining EEC
Empire Day abolished in 1962

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16
Q

Cultural ties

A
  • Empire left a British diaspora of 10 million spread around the world, forming ex-patriot communities - maintained English traditions and contacts
  • The Union Jack was retained in the corner of many flags - Fiji, New Zealand, Australia
  • Anglican Church had more members in Africa than in Britain
  • Boy Scout movement maintained its ties across the former Empire
  • Sport - rugby, football, racket sports etc were all exported - firmly established in countries such as rugby in New Zealand and South Africa and cricket in India and Australia
  • Countries regularly remember their participation in Empire through the Commonwealth Games every four years (est. 1954, replacing Empire Games from 1930)
  • Empire languages transferred into English language - ‘pyjamas’ from India and ‘mumbo-jumbo’ from Africa
  • Royal honours continued imperial legacy - ‘British Empire Medal’
  • 1954 - ‘Last night of the proms’ - Sir Malcolm Sargent established the tradition of using this for a rendering of patriotic British music - imperial spirit - ‘Rule Britannia!’ by Thomas Arne
17
Q

Popular culture?

A
  • Loss of Empire saw an end to Imperialist topics in media
  • Boy’s comic Eagle - told its writers that foreigners could not be seen as the enemy or villains and at least 1/5 children must be from a minority
  • TV replaced radio as the main medium for the spread of popular culture in post war era.
  • People no longer supported overly patriotic films due to struggles of Post-war Britain e.g economic decline, decolonisation etc.
  • E.G: Lawrence of Arabia (1962) - British First World War hero in the Middle East - torn between loyalty to Empire and Arabs - critical view of Empire
  • E.G: Guns at Batasi (1964) - About the internal divisions within colonies and the struggles of dealing with them
  • E.G: That Was the Week - mocking comedy programme from 1962-1963 - made fun of imperial traditions
  • E.G: Till Death Do Us Part - ridiculed immigrant communities, racial stereotypes etc.