Embassies in Crisis Conference at the British Academy

Embassies in Crisis Conference at the British Academy

By Dr Rogelia Pastor-Castro, Strathclyde, Professor Martin Thomas, Exeter, Professor Richard Toye, Exeter

Date and time

Thu, 9 Jun 2016 09:00 - 17:00 GMT+1

Location

British Academy

10-11 Carlton House Terrace London SW1Y 5AH United Kingdom

Description

Organised by the Universities of Exeter and Strathclyde in conjunction with the FCO Historians and the British International History Group, this one-day conference will combine academic papers with two seminar sessions at which serving and former diplomats will be invited to present their testimonies and perspectives.


8.45-9.10 Registration

9.10-9.20 Welcoming remarks: Martin Thomas

9.20-10.40 Panel I Chair: James Ellison (Queen Mary University of London)

Richard Smith, Keeping the Flag Flying: John Reeves and the British Consulate in Macau, 1941-45

Rogelia Pastor-Castro, The British Embassy in Paris and the Fall of France

Karine Varley, ‘Imprisoned in the Vatican’: Neutrality and the Challenges Facing the French Embassy to the Holy See, 1940-1944

10.40-11.00 Refreshment break

11.00-12.00 Panel II Chair: Patrick Salmon (Foreign & Commonwealth Office)

Jane Marriott, Director of the UK’s Joint International Counter Terrorism Unit, former Ambassador to Yemen

Simon Smith, former Ambassador to Ukraine

12.00-12.45 Lunch – Mall Room

12.45-13.45 Panel III Chair: Geoffrey Swain (University of Glasgow)

Mary Heimann, The Mindszenty Affair and the U.S. Embassy in Budapest

David Schriffl, Cold War Crises: Austrian diplomatic representations in Czechoslovakia from the early 1950s to the late 1960s

13.45-14.15 Refreshment break

14.15-15.00 Panel IV

Chair: Martin Thomas (University of Exeter)

Eric Hepburn, Head of Security & DSO Foreign & Commonwealth Office

15.00-15.20 Refreshment break

15.20-16.50 Panel V Chair: Richard Toye (University of Exeter)

Alex Ferguson, The U.S. Embassy in Saigon and the Crisis at Dien Bien Phu, 1954

Lorena De Vita, ‘Such a relationship should be a two-way street’: The First German Embassy in Israel between Crises and Opportunities, 1966-1967

Isabella Ginor and Gideon Remez, Hook, line and sinker: The British Embassy in Cairo and the supposed 'expulsion of Soviet advisers' from Egypt, 1972

16.50 Concluding remarks: Richard Toye


In conjunction with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Historians and the British International History Group

For further information, visit the conference page.


Organised by

Dr Rogelia Pastor-Castro Lecturer in International History at the University of Strathclyde and Treasurer of the British International History Group

Prof Martin Thomas is Professor of Imperial History and Director of the Centre for War, State, and Society at the University of Exeter.

Prof Richard Toye is Professor of Modern History at the University of Exeter.

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