The Pacific Pact and Austrelian Security, 1921-1937:The historical Evolution of Australia-Japan Relations
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Throughout the 1920s mention of Australian security was normally linked to the state of the naval base under construction at Singapore. The strategy devised at the Washington Conference was generally accepted in Australia as sufficient, although delays at Singapore were inclined to arouse references to a possibly hostile Japan. In 1931 there was considerable support for the Japanese action in Manchuria, although once again the reaction was frequently one of relief that Japan had moved westward rather than southward.Once the Manchurian crisis had proved that the League of Nations was a limited force in world affairs and circumstances in Europe began to worsen, Australia had to re-examine her security arrangements, especially as a simultaneous conflict in Europe and the Far East became a distinct possibility. In effect, the Australian reappraisal of her position was slow in coming and by 1937 the old reliance on United Kingdom initiative and leadership began to appear a serious misjudgment.At the Imperial Conference in 1937 the Australian Prime Minister promoted unsuccessfully the formation of a Pacific Pact of non-aggression, in line with the emphasis then being placed on regional pacts in Europe. Then suggestion had been tried in several quarters since 1933 by Japan, the United States and the United Kingdom. The Australian proposal was thus an attempt to achieve something that had been tried and failed. In the circumstances it did provide the Australian electorate with the impression that security planning was a distinct priority.
- 一般財団法人 日本国際政治学会の論文
一般財団法人 日本国際政治学会 | 論文
- ペルシャ湾保護国とイギリス帝国 : 脱植民地化の再検討
- The Revolutionary Diplomacy in the Era of Chinese Nationalist Revolution:East Asia and Japan during a Period of Transition : Historiclal Study
- The Conditionality in the Development Assistance : A Study on the Operational Activities by IMF, the World Bank, and UNDP:The United Nations in a Changing World
- The Sudeten Problem and World Politics between two World Wars:Studies on Diplomatic History of Contemporary Europe
- Hitlers Leadership in Foreign Policy: Chiefly on the Recent Trend of Study in West Germany:The Eve of the Second World War : International Relations in Summer, 1939