
Contents
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CND and early Cold War civil defence CND and early Cold War civil defence
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The second Cold War and the resurgence of CND The second Cold War and the resurgence of CND
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Protect and Survive and the literature of protest Protect and Survive and the literature of protest
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Policy influence and the cancellation of Hard Rock Policy influence and the cancellation of Hard Rock
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Disarmament and Labour’s 1983 election defeat Disarmament and Labour’s 1983 election defeat
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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3 Protest and survive: The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, the Labour Party and civil defence in the 1980s
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Published:February 2018
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Abstract
This chapter offers a critical investigation into the ways in which the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) sought to undermine the official narrative of nuclear weapons and civil defence policy of successive British governments during the last two decades of the Cold War. The first part of the chapter explores the ways in which CND used the tools of propaganda and parody to turn government advice and publicity surrounding policies of public protection against itself. The second part of the chapter investigates to what extent CND’s activism presented a threat to the process of policy making and to what effect the co-ordinated anti-nuclear campaign by CND and related groups was a cause of anxiety for civil defence planners and policy makers. It asks whether, by offering both the public and political groups of the left alternative politics which sought to challenge the official version of Cold War defence, CND could be said to have contributed to either non-compliance with, or early termination of, civil defence policy.
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