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Central organizations of defence in Great Britain

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Central organizations of defence in Great Britain. / Edmonds, Martin.
Central Organizations of Defense. ed. / Martin Edmonds. Taylor and Francis, 2019. p. 85-107.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Edmonds, M 2019, Central organizations of defence in Great Britain. in M Edmonds (ed.), Central Organizations of Defense. Taylor and Francis, pp. 85-107. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429044717-5

APA

Edmonds, M. (2019). Central organizations of defence in Great Britain. In M. Edmonds (Ed.), Central Organizations of Defense (pp. 85-107). Taylor and Francis. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429044717-5

Vancouver

Edmonds M. Central organizations of defence in Great Britain. In Edmonds M, editor, Central Organizations of Defense. Taylor and Francis. 2019. p. 85-107 doi: 10.4324/9780429044717-5

Author

Edmonds, Martin. / Central organizations of defence in Great Britain. Central Organizations of Defense. editor / Martin Edmonds. Taylor and Francis, 2019. pp. 85-107

Bibtex

@inbook{e81b5061f0544fc8a56f3b03241f9068,
title = "Central organizations of defence in Great Britain",
abstract = "The 1946 Central Organisation for Defence clearly laid down the basic principles underlying British post-war defence management, principles that have continually been challenged and debated, and constantly modified since then. One aspect of defence reorganization that received less attention at the time was the supply side, but it was one that was increasingly to become a focus of concern. The details of the restructured central organization for defence were contained in a White Paper dated July 1963. The War Cabinet contained two defence committees, one for operations and one for supply, with a common secretariat, and through Winston Churchill{\textquoteright}s dual role a unified defence policy was achieved. The development of the central organization for defence in Great Britain since the end of World War II was characterized in 1971 by Professor Michael Howard, arguably the country{\textquoteright}s foremost exponent of the subject, as a reflection of the dialectic between two contrasting conceptions, or models.",
author = "Martin Edmonds",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.4324/9780429044717-5",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780429705625 (ISBN); 0865316848 (ISBN); 9780367014858 (ISBN)",
pages = "85--107",
editor = "Martin Edmonds",
booktitle = "Central Organizations of Defense",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Central organizations of defence in Great Britain

AU - Edmonds, Martin

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - The 1946 Central Organisation for Defence clearly laid down the basic principles underlying British post-war defence management, principles that have continually been challenged and debated, and constantly modified since then. One aspect of defence reorganization that received less attention at the time was the supply side, but it was one that was increasingly to become a focus of concern. The details of the restructured central organization for defence were contained in a White Paper dated July 1963. The War Cabinet contained two defence committees, one for operations and one for supply, with a common secretariat, and through Winston Churchill’s dual role a unified defence policy was achieved. The development of the central organization for defence in Great Britain since the end of World War II was characterized in 1971 by Professor Michael Howard, arguably the country’s foremost exponent of the subject, as a reflection of the dialectic between two contrasting conceptions, or models.

AB - The 1946 Central Organisation for Defence clearly laid down the basic principles underlying British post-war defence management, principles that have continually been challenged and debated, and constantly modified since then. One aspect of defence reorganization that received less attention at the time was the supply side, but it was one that was increasingly to become a focus of concern. The details of the restructured central organization for defence were contained in a White Paper dated July 1963. The War Cabinet contained two defence committees, one for operations and one for supply, with a common secretariat, and through Winston Churchill’s dual role a unified defence policy was achieved. The development of the central organization for defence in Great Britain since the end of World War II was characterized in 1971 by Professor Michael Howard, arguably the country’s foremost exponent of the subject, as a reflection of the dialectic between two contrasting conceptions, or models.

U2 - 10.4324/9780429044717-5

DO - 10.4324/9780429044717-5

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9780429705625 (ISBN); 0865316848 (ISBN); 9780367014858 (ISBN)

SP - 85

EP - 107

BT - Central Organizations of Defense

A2 - Edmonds, Martin

PB - Taylor and Francis

ER -