
2011
First Published
4.00
Average Rating
357
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This is an important new history of decision-making and policy-making in the British Admiralty from Trafalgar to the aftermath of Jutland. C. I. Hamilton explores the role of technological change, the global balance of power and, in particular, of finance and the First World War in shaping decision-making and organisational development within the Admiralty. He shows that decision-making was found not so much in the hands of the Board but at first largely in the hands of individuals, then groups or committees, and finally certain permanent bureaucracies. The latter bodies, such as the Naval Staff, were crucial to the development of policy-making as was the civil service Secretariat under the Permanent Secretary. By the 1920s the Admiralty had become not just a proper policy-making organisation, but for the first time a thoroughly civil-military one.
Avg Rating
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Author
C.I. Hamilton
Author · 1 books
A specialist in 19th century naval history, Charles Iain Hamilton teaches modern European history at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. Hamilton earned a BA at Keele University, and a Ph.D. at Queens' College, Cambridge in 1974.