The Cambridge History of the British Empire: The Empire-Commonwealth, 1870-1919John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell Macmillan, 1929 - Great Britain |
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Page 129
Members judged imperial questions upon expediency rather than principle . " Jingo ” and “ Little Englander ” were largely myths of party polemics , truly descriptive only of two extremist and doctrinaire minorities .
Members judged imperial questions upon expediency rather than principle . " Jingo ” and “ Little Englander ” were largely myths of party polemics , truly descriptive only of two extremist and doctrinaire minorities .
Page 653
The vital principles are : the principle of nationality involving the ideas of political freedom and equality ; the principle of autonomy , which is the principle of nationality extended to peoples not yet capable of complete ...
The vital principles are : the principle of nationality involving the ideas of political freedom and equality ; the principle of autonomy , which is the principle of nationality extended to peoples not yet capable of complete ...
Page 677
Moreover , the acceptance in 1906 of the general principle of regulation by multilateral convention was a great step forward . Although the British Government had at first been shy of international regulation in what appeared to be a ...
Moreover , the acceptance in 1906 of the general principle of regulation by multilateral convention was a great step forward . Although the British Government had at first been shy of international regulation in what appeared to be a ...
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