Abstract In 1949, the British Labour Party had been in power for four years. Domestically, the British government faced post-war reconstruction; internationally, its imperial grip was loosening. Nonetheless, it still ruled over lands in Africa and Asia and controlled resources such as oil in the Middle East. A contradiction emerged between its people-focused internal politics and its condescension in the conduct of foreign and colonial affairs. Concerns around the emerging Cold War infused British imperial policy. Seeing the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) as a communist vehicle, the British government treated it with suspicion, especially in view of its influence over two areas of imperial interest: the Iranian oil industry and the British colony of Malaya. An examination of the situations in both countries reveals the WFTU’s influence on trade union movements in those regions and uncovers London’s imperial anxieties about its position in the post-war global order.
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Rowena Abdul Razak
International Review of Social History
University of London
Universidad de Londres
SOAS University of London
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Rowena Abdul Razak (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c7724e8bbfbc51511e2b53 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020859026101254