Conservative Party attitudes to Jews, 1900-1950
"This study examines the attitudes of the Conservative Party towards Jews in Britain, Palestine and elsewhere in the first half of the twentieth century. The work aims to illustrate, by exploring Conservative attitudes to a particular minority community, how the Conservative Party regarded both itself and British society on the one hand and Britain's world-wide role on the other. The book thus discusses Conservative responses to Jewish immigration from both eastern Europe in the first decades of the twentieth century and from central Europe in the 1930s. Conservative views of citizenship and naturalisation as well as immigration control are considered against the background of the international position of Jewry."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2001
Frank Cass, London, 2001