From the British perspective, the 1982 Falklands war was waged for what the government and public deemed to be a just cause. The military action had a clear and moral intention in defending three core democratic values: the principle of self-determination of people, the rule of law and political freedom. It was conducted as a legitimate defense against deliberate aggression by a dictatorship, who neither exhausted all peaceful alternatives in regard to its claims nor openly declared war. In the end, the British government was thought to have inflicted proportionate damages and costs upon the enemy in regard to the odds at stake. The short “little” Falklands conflict, thus, became very popular among the British. The war memory can be considered as a bipartisan legacy capable of reaching either the right or the left of the political spectrum. It recalls, wittingly or not, a sense of national unity inside the public consciousness; the same unity that contributed in the 1980s to push the country out of troubles. As The Economist observed in 2012, the victorious Falklands war, particularly its emotional impact, “still shapes the politics” and “still inspires pride and nostalgia” in Britain. “Quietly and enduringly, it left its mark” on the country.

Borsani, D., The British Public and the Falklands War, in D. Mallet, D. M. (ed.), Monumental Conflicts. Twentieth Century Wars and the Evolution of Public Memory, Routledge, New York 2018: 165- 178 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/109545]

The British Public and the Falklands War

Borsani, Davide
Primo
2018

Abstract

From the British perspective, the 1982 Falklands war was waged for what the government and public deemed to be a just cause. The military action had a clear and moral intention in defending three core democratic values: the principle of self-determination of people, the rule of law and political freedom. It was conducted as a legitimate defense against deliberate aggression by a dictatorship, who neither exhausted all peaceful alternatives in regard to its claims nor openly declared war. In the end, the British government was thought to have inflicted proportionate damages and costs upon the enemy in regard to the odds at stake. The short “little” Falklands conflict, thus, became very popular among the British. The war memory can be considered as a bipartisan legacy capable of reaching either the right or the left of the political spectrum. It recalls, wittingly or not, a sense of national unity inside the public consciousness; the same unity that contributed in the 1980s to push the country out of troubles. As The Economist observed in 2012, the victorious Falklands war, particularly its emotional impact, “still shapes the politics” and “still inspires pride and nostalgia” in Britain. “Quietly and enduringly, it left its mark” on the country.
2018
Inglese
Monumental Conflicts. Twentieth Century Wars and the Evolution of Public Memory
9781138282278
Routledge
Borsani, D., The British Public and the Falklands War, in D. Mallet, D. M. (ed.), Monumental Conflicts. Twentieth Century Wars and the Evolution of Public Memory, Routledge, New York 2018: 165- 178 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/109545]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/109545
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