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Anglo-American relations and colonialism in east Asia, 1941-1945

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The article was published on 1983-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 8 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Orient & Far East.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Foreign Office and Post-war Planning for East Asia, 1944–45

TL;DR: The Foreign Office devoted considerable time to the problem of British post-war policy for China, Korea and Japan, even though the area was considered a low priority by the British government.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breaking the Monopoly System: American Influence on the British Decision to Prohibit Opium Smoking and End its Asian Monopolies, 1939–1945

TL;DR: The colonial opium monopoly systems remained a major point of international contention in the decades prior to World War II, driving a major wedge between British and US drug diplomats in particular as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Establishing the Ramgarh Training Center: The Burma Campaign, the Colonial Internment Camp, and the Wartime Sino-British Relations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how the Chinese Expeditionary Force joined the Burma Campaign and retreated to India in 1942, and how Chinese, American, and British authorities negotiated to determine the destiny of Chinese forces in India.
Book ChapterDOI

‘Adjusting to a New Period in World History’: Franklin Roosevelt and European Colonialism

Paul Orders
TL;DR: In late November 1943, in a hotel near Cairo, Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt discussed the future of Indochina and expressed concern that China might look to annex the French colony after the defeat of Japan as discussed by the authors.