Навчальний посібник для студентів ос «Бакалавр» галузі знань 03 «Гуманітарні науки»



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babenko country study

1945–1997 
Winston Churchill, who had been leader of the wartime coalition government, 
suffered a surprising landslide defeat to Clement Attlee's Labour party in 
1945 elections. Attlee created a Welfare State in Britain, which most notably 
provided free healthcare under the National Health Service. By the late 1940s, 
the Cold War was underway, which would dominate British foreign policy for 
another 40 years. 
In 1951, Churchill and the Tories returned to power; they would govern 
uninterrupted for the next 13 years. King George VI died in 1952, and was 
succeeded by his eldest daughter, Elizabeth II. 
Churchill was succeeded in 1955 by Sir Anthony Eden, whose 
premiership was dominated by the Suez Crisis, in which Britain, France and 
Israel plotted to bomb Egypt after its President Nasser nationalised the Suez 
Canal. Eden's successor, Harold Macmillan, split the Conservatives when 
Britain applied to join the European Economic Community, but French 
President Charles de Gaulle vetoed the application. 
Labour returned to power in 1964 under Harold Wilson, who brought in 
a number of social reforms, including the legalisation of abortion, the 
abolition of capital punishment and the decriminalisation of homosexuality. In 
1973, Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath succeeded in securing U.K. 
membership in the European Economic Community (EEC), what would later 
become known as the European Union. Wilson, having lost the 1970 election 
to Heath, returned to power in 1974; however, Labour's reputation was 
harmed by the winter of discontent of 1978-9 under Jim Callaghan, which 


53 
enabled the Conservatives to re-take control of Parliament in 1979, under 
Margaret Thatcher, Britain's first female Prime Minister. 
Although Thatcher's economic reforms made her initially unpopular, 
her decision in 1982 to retake the Falkland Islands from invading Argentine 
forces, in what would become known as the Falklands War, changed her 
fortunes and enabled a landslide victory in 1983. After winning an 
unprecedented third election in 1987, however, Thatcher's popularity began to 
fade and she was replaced by former chancellor John Major in 1990. 
Tensions between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland came 
to a head in the late 1960s, when nationalist participants in a civil rights 
march were shot by members of the B Specials, a reserve police force manned 
almost exclusively by unionists. From this point the Provisional Irish 
Republican Army, also known as the Provos or simply the IRA, began a 
bombing campaign throughout the U.K., beginning a period known as The 
Troubles, which lasted until the late 1990s. 
Prince Charles, the Prince of Wales and Elizabeth's eldest son married 
Lady Diana Spencer in 1981; the couple had two children, William and Harry, 
but divorced in 1992, during which year Prince Andrew and Princess Anne 
also separated from their spouses, leading the Queen to call the year her 
'annus horribilis'. In 1997, Diana was killed in a car crash in Paris, leading to 
a mass outpouring of grief across the United Kingdom, and indeed the world. 
On the international stage, the second half of the 20th century was 
dominated by the Cold War between the Soviet Union and its socialist allies 
and the United States and its capitalist allies; the U.K. was a key supporter of 
the latter, joining the anti-Soviet military alliance NATO in 1949. During this 
period, the U.K. became involved in several Cold War conflicts, such as the 
Korean War (1950–1953). In contrast, the Republic of Ireland remained 
neutral and provided troops to U.N. peace-keeping missions. 




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