I. Radical, Liberal, and Socialist Interpretations --;Radicalism, Liberalism, and Foreign Policy --;Socialist Origins and Socialist Alternatives --;II. The Beginnings of Labour's Foreign Policy --;The New Liberalism --;The Rise of the Labour Party --;The Labour Party and Foreign Policy Before the First World War --;Labour, Socialism, and the First World War --;III. Labour's Plan for the Peace --;Leonard Woolf and a Fabian Plan --;Towards International Government: Hobson and Brailsford --;The Socialist Organizations and a League of Nations --;Woodrow Wilson and British Labour --;Further Development of Labour's Plans for the Peace --;The Labour Party at the Close of the First World War --;IV. After the Peace --;Labour and the Peace Settlement --;Labour and Post-War Europe --;Secret Diplomacy, Armaments, and Other International Problems --;A General Election and a New Government --;The Labour Government and European Problems --;The Labour Government and the League of Nations --;The End of the First Labour Government --;The Record of the First Labour Government --;V. Lost Opportunities --;Labour and Locarno --;A Post-Mortem on the Late Government --;The Question of Disarmament --;Great Britain and the Soviet Union --;Great Britain, the United States, and the Kellogg-Briand Pact --;Other Aspects of British Foreign Policy --;The Indictment and the Verdict --;VI. The Second Labour Government --;Anglo-Soviet Problems --;Great Britain, France and Germany --;Security Through Arbitration --;The Problem of Disarmament --;Labour and International Organization --;New European Problems --;The End of the Second Labour Government --;VII. Socialist Ideology and Labour's Foreign Policy --;Liberal Principles and Labour's Foreign Policy --;Socialist Principles and Labour's Foreign Policy --;Ideology and Foreign Policy --;Selected Bibliography.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
It seeks to examine and evaluate the British Labour Party's early efforts to apply socialist theories to foreign policy actions.