Informal Empire in Crisis
British Diplomacy and the Chinese Customs Succession, 1927–1929
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cornell University Press
Published:31st Mar '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Hardback£116.00(9780939657797)

The Inspector-General of the Chinese Maritime Customs Service was, without doubt, the highest-ranking foreigner in the Chinese Government. His position at the heart of China's fiscal, commercial and mercantile systems was crucial to the continued prosperity of the foreign business community in Shanghai and elsewhere. This work draws on unpublished British Foreign Office records and other contemporary sources to support its examination of the issues surrounding the appointment of a new Inspector-General in 1928, and the bitterness and intrigue which these issues engendered. The underlying debate between the British Legation in Peking and the Foreign Office in London illustrates the dilemma of a diplomatic establishment no longer able to rely upon the use of force to defend British interests in China.
Atkins has done a very good job of illustrating an important aspect of imperial decline in China.
(International History Review)Provides scholars of Republican-era history with a useful opening into the way some British official minds reacted to the fact of successful anti-imperialist nationalism in China.
(The China QuarteISBN: 9780939657742
Dimensions: 241mm x 165mm x 10mm
Weight: 454g
142 pages