White Internationalism and the League of Nations Movement in Interwar Australia
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Published:2023-03-14
Issue:
Volume:
Page:1-21
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ISSN:1740-0228
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Container-title:Journal of Global History
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Journal of Global History
Abstract
Abstract
Popular support for the League of Nations spread around the world in the interwar period but it did not spread evenly. Instead, it was concentrated in white-majority countries: both in Europe and beyond in the form of settler societies around the world. This article explores the relationship between the League movement and white supremacy in one such community: Australia. Citizens in that country combined their allegiance to the League with their beliefs in white supremacy: about the need to restrict immigration through the ‘White Australia’ policy; about the rationale of them ruling over non-white peoples in the territories they held under League ‘mandate’; and about their treatment of Indigenous Australians. In short, they were ‘white internationalists’. Australia’s white internationalists were relatively few. But they reveal a global history of popular white internationalism. Interwar Australians might have been some of the most blatant white internationalists but they were far from the only ones.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History
Cited by
1 articles.
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