Page 189 - Berkshire Encyclopedia Of World History Vol Two
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538 berkshire encyclopedia of world history



                                                         A diplomat is a man who always remembers a woman’s birthday
                                                         but never remembers her age. • Robert Frost (1874–1963)





            attempted to make a secret deal with Italian dictator Ben-  as it presents world leaders in a positive light. But diplo-
            ito Mussolini to end the crisis. Such dealings would have  macy will also increasingly function in the context of
            been routine in the nineteenth century. However, details  international multi-lateral organizations such as the
            of the agreement, which would have given Mussolini  North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the G-7 con-
            most of Ethiopia, were leaked to the press, forcing the res-  cert of the world’s economic powers, the European
            ignations of both Hoare and Laval.                  Union and the United Nations.
                                                                                                     Paul W. Doerr
            Summit Diplomacy
            The approach of war in 1938 saw the emergence of sum-  See also Berlin Conference; Cold War; Congress of
            mit diplomacy. Heads of state had been expressing frus-  Vienna; Containment; Détente; Treaty of Versailles
            tration with what they felt was the plodding pace of
            diplomatic activity. Soon after taking power, Neville
            Chamberlain (1869–1940), prime minister of Britain                      Further Reading
            from 1937 to 1940, said that he wanted to “stir up” the  Albrecht-Carrié, R. (1973). A diplomatic history of Europe since the Con-
                                                                  gress of Vienna. New York: Harper and Row.
            British foreign office. Modern communications and trans-  Craig, G., & Gilbert, F. (1953). The diplomats. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
            portation meant that leaders could conduct their own  University Press.
                                                                Crankshaw, E. (1981). Bismarck. New York: Viking.
            diplomacy, and no longer had to rely on professionals. In
                                                                Doerr P. (1998). British foreign policy, 1919–1939: Hope for the best,
            September 1938, Neville Chamberlain flew to Germany    prepare for the worst. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press.
            three times to meet with Hitler in a bid to defuse the cri-  Jonsson, C., & Langhorne, R. (Eds). (2004). Diplomacy (3 vols.). Lon-
                                                                  don: Sage.
            sis over Czechoslovakia. Chamberlain’s actions created a  Kissinger, H. (1994). Diplomacy. New York: Simon and Schuster.
            sensation at a time when air travel was still the preserve  Lammers, D. (1971). Fascism, Communism and the foreign office. Jour-
                                                                  nal of Contemporary History, 6(2), 66–86.
            of the wealthy elite. Chamberlain’s efforts proved futile,
                                                                Lawford,V. (1963). Bound for diplomacy. London: John Murray.
            but face-to-face meetings of leaders, known as summit  Machiavelli, N. (1979). The Portable Machiavelli (P. Bondanella & M.
            diplomacy, proved an enduring innovation. The Allied  Musa, Eds. & Trans.). New York: Penguin.
                                                                Mattingly, G. (2004). Renaissance diplomacy. New York: Dover.
            leaders met repeatedly during World War II to coordinate  Mayer A. (1970). Political origins of the new diplomacy. New York:
            their efforts. Summit meetings between presidents of the  Vintage.
                                                                McKay, D., & Scott, H. (1983). The rise of the great powers 1648–1815.
            United States and Soviet leaders became a regular feature
                                                                  London: Longman.
            of the Cold War. During the early 1970s the constant  Nicolson, H. (1939). Diplomacy. London: Thornton Butterworth.
            movements of United States secretary of state Henry  Rich, N. (1992). Great power diplomacy, 1814–1814. New York:
                                                                  McGraw-Hill.
            Kissinger between Middle Eastern capitals, in an attempt  Sharp, A. (1976).The foreign office in eclipse. History, 61, 198–218.
            to resolve the Arab–Israeli conflict, gave rise to the phrase
            “shuttle diplomacy.”


            Diplomacy in the
            New Century                                                           Disease and
            Summit diplomacy remains the preferred form of diplo-
            macy for world leaders at the dawn of the twenty-first                      Nutrition
            century. Foreign ministries continue to debate foreign pol-
            icy issues and offer advice to heads of state.Ambassadors  uman infectious disease depends on the interaction
            are less important than in the past but still play a key role  Hof humans with parasites—prions, viruses, bacte-
            in the functioning of diplomacy. Summit diplomacy will  ria, protozoa, macroscopic worms, and others—that
            continue to dominate the future of diplomacy, especially  must survive, replicate, and disseminate themselves if they
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