The South Africa Disputes before Apartheid: The United Nations and Commonwealth Relations, 1946-1952
By (Author) Robert Barnes
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
8th February 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Violence, intolerance and persecution in history
African history
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
In examining the early United Nations disputes over South African racial and expansionist policies between 1946 and 1952, this book explores how South Africa had become out of step with the post-war international environment and had become a parish state even before apartheid had come to the fore.
Focusing on international concerns around two specific disputes; the treatment of Indians in South Africa, and Pretorias attempts to annex the territory of South West Africa (Namibia), Barnes highlights how divisive these issues became for the British Commonwealth of Nations. As the new members, especially India, led the charge in criticizing these policies, the old members, from whom South Africa expected support, went the furthest in standing by its partner, but also clearly felt uncomfortable openly endorsing them. Utilizing national archives of all the Commonwealth countries involved, The South African Disputes before Apartheid shows how these issues caused the deepest rifts within the Commonwealth during the early postwar period and set the scene for South Africas departure from the organization in 1961. Offering an international context to South Africas early disputes over the future of race relations and territorial claims, Barnes charts opposition against South African policies in a postwar world even before its eventual descent into apartheid.
Robert Barnes is Senior Lecturer in History at York St John University, UK. He is the author of The US, the UN and The Korean War: Communism in the Far East and the American Struggle for Hegemony in the Cold War (Bloomsbury, 2020)