Front cover image for South Africa and the world: the foreign policy of apartheid

South Africa and the world: the foreign policy of apartheid

South Africa may be situated in an outlying corner of the world but it has been an important factor in world politics for more than three centuries. The antecedents of the Republic of South Africa go back to the planting of a colony by the Dutch East India Company on Table Bay at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652. Long before the establishment of Cape Town, Dutch and English ships had stopped with increasing regularity at the Cape to break the long voyage to and from the East and to take on a supply of fresh water
eBook, English, [1970]
University Press of Kentucky, [Lexington], [1970]
1 online resource (viii, 303 pages) map
1153626718
Part I. Background
1632-1910
1. From tavern of the seas to British Dominion
2. Social structure and foreign policy
Part II. Conciliation
1910-1924
3. World War I : development of an independent foreign policy
4. The union and the borderlands
Part III. National-Labor coalition
1924-1933
5. Formal recognition of sovereign status
Part IV. Fusion
1933-1939
6. Uncertainty in the midst of rising world tensions
Part V. World War II and aftermath
1939-1948
7. The resurgence of Afrikaner Nationalism
8. New World and storm signals. Part VI. The Foreign Policy of Apartheid
1948-
9. Nationalism and Foreign Policy
10. The High Commission territories
11. Rhodesia : South African Protégé
12. The lands farther north
13. Expulsion from the Commonwealth
14. Conflict with the United Nations : treatment of Indians
15. Conflict with the United Nations : South West Africa
16. Conflict with the United Nations : Apartheid
17. Siege and counteroffensive
Electronic reproduction, [Place of publication not identified], HathiTrust Digital Library, 2020
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