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In this new book, Andrea Bosco provides a broad reappraisal of the Round Table from its early days through the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. Bosco argues that the movement must be understood as part of a ‘strong federalist trend within British political culture’ that included the Act of Union (1707) and the Irish Home Rule debates (p. 1).
- John C. Mitcham
- 2020
Jun 8, 2018 · Andrea Bosco is Director of the Lothian Foundation, and has been Jean Monnet “ad personam” Chairholder on the History and Theory of European Integration at the School of Political Science of the University of Florence. He has been co-director of the European Institute at South Bank University.
- Andrea Bosco
- 2018
Bosco brings the subject alive, and from a purely British perspective he is right: 14–16 June 1940 and 22 June 2016—77 years apart—were both turning points in British constitutional and political history.
Andrea Bosco is Jean Monnet “ad personam” Chairholder on the History and Theory of European Integration at the School of Political Science of the University of Florence, “expert” at the Jean Monnet European Centre of Excellence at the same institution, and Director of the Lothian Foundation.
Home / Britain and the World / List of Issues / Volume 13, Issue 1 / Andrea Bosco, The Round Table Movement and the Fall of the ‘Second’ British Empire (1909–1919)