000 02081nam a22002297a 4500
001 1092649
003 SE-LIBR
005 20180312103359.0
008 011211s1964 xxk 000 0 eng c
040 _aL
_dSipr
041 _aeng
100 1 _aFoot, Hugh
245 0 2 _aA start in freedom /
_cHugh Foot
260 _aLondon :
_bHodder & Stoughton,
_c1964
300 _a256 p. :
_bill.
500 _aSIP1822
500 _aKIRKUS REVIEW This record of a life in the British Colonial Service is long on earnestness but it does point up the fact that the British gave their administrators authority at a very early age and usually were not disappointed in the results. Sir Hugh springs from a talented family that has always been prominent in law and politics. He parted company from his brothers by going to Cambridge and into a career which has stretched from the post of a junior official in Palestine to that of Governor-General of Cyprus and lately to high responsibilities in the United Nations. His genius, like that of many another Britisher, is to make haste slowly and his efforts have led, as his brother Michael rather cruelly has written, to ""working himself out of one job after another (Palestine, Trans-Jordan, Nigeria, Jamaica, Cyprus) and hauling down the flag at increasingly impressive ceremonial occasions..."" Probably his greatest challenges were in Cyprus, where he served for the best part of four years, beginning in 1957, and which he left in a state of uneasy quiet after a fierce and bloody rebellion. In 1962, Sir Hugh resigned from the British Mission to the United Nations in disagreement with the Government's policies towards Africa in general and Southern Rhodesia in particular. Of interest particularly for its account of how Great Britain paved the way for the independence of its colonies. Publisher: Harper & Row
650 _abiography
_xcolonialism
_xforeign policy
_xdiplomacy
_zUK
650 _aUN
_xPalestinians
_xconflict resolution
_zIsrael
_zMiddle East
_zNigeria
_zJamaica
_zCyprus
_zJordan
653 _adecolonization
942 _cMONO
999 _c79584
_d79584