ABSTRACT

This book analyses the changing role of the British Foreign Secretary and presents biographical case studies of all the individual holders of that post, the policies they persued and the issues they faced, since 1974. The work of the British Foreign Secretaries from James Callaghan to Robin Cook is examined in the context of the foreign policy-making machinery, the changing environment of British foreign policy, and the internal and external political forces with which they had to contend.

Using a biographical case study approach, the chapters examine the careers, personalities, policies and influence of successive Foreign Secretaries to increase our knowledge and understanding of the work of the government, and the development of British foreign policy over the last thirty years. British Foreign Secretaries Since 1974 casts light on the hitherto shadowy and understudied role of personality in international relations and on how ten very different personalities helped to shape the detail and the articulation of British foreign policy.

chapter 2|20 pages

James Callaghan, 1974–76

chapter 3|26 pages

Anthony Crosland, 1976–77

chapter 4|24 pages

David Owen, 1977–79

chapter 5|24 pages

Lord Carrington, 1979–82

chapter 6|16 pages

Francis Pym, 1982–83

chapter 7|26 pages

Geoffrey Howe, 1983–89

chapter 8|12 pages

John Major, 1989

chapter 9|36 pages

Douglas Hurd, 1989–95

chapter 10|16 pages

Malcolm Rifkind, 1995–97

chapter 11|21 pages

Robin Cook, 1997–2001