North Borneo; Brunei; Sarawak; Labuan; Fiji; Gilbert and Ellice Islands I


Date(s) of creation: n.d.
Level: File
Format: Archive           
Main author: Royal Institute of International Affairs
Other authors: Royal Institute of International Affairs; Far East Department
Subjects:

collection SOAS Archive
id MS_186375.01
recordtype archive
scb_item_location Archive & Special Collections
item_location Archive & Special Collections
scb_loan_type Reference only
callnumber MS 186375/01
callnumber_txt MS 186375/01
callnumber-sort MS 186375/01
prefix_number 01
title North Borneo; Brunei; Sarawak; Labuan; Fiji; Gilbert and Ellice Islands I
scb_date_creation n.d.
scb_level File
level_sort 7/Collection/Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Sub-Collection/Series/Sub-Series/Sub-Sub-Series/File
author Royal Institute of International Affairs
author_facet Royal Institute of International Affairs
Royal Institute of International Affairs; Far East Department
authorStr Royal Institute of International Affairs
author_letter Royal Institute of International Affairs
author2 Royal Institute of International Affairs; Far East Department
author2Str Royal Institute of International Affairs; Far East Department
format Archive
scb_admin_history The Royal Institute of International Affairs (also known as Chatham House) is an independent research and membership organisation working to promote the understanding of key international issues. The Institute promotes debate and research through meetings, conferences and publications. The British Institute of International Affairs (1920-1926), emerged out of 1919 Paris Peace Conference, along with its sister organisation, the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations. The Institute was renamed as the Royal Institute of International Affairs in 1926. The Institute developed a programme of meetings, research, study groups, conferences and publications, and has a specialist Library and Information Service. It is a privately-funded membership organisation, frequently known as Chatham House from the name of its building in St James's Square. The 'Chatham House Rule', which is used around the world to allow for free speech and confidentiality at meetings, originated with the Royal Institute. The Institute is funded through grants, donations, membership subscriptions and revenue from the Institute's trading subsidiary, Chatham House Enterprises Ltd. The Institute has a presence in the United States of America, where the Chatham House Foundation works to promote Anglo-American relations.
scb_acquisition Donated to SOAS Library in 1964.
scb_related_name_code GB/NNAF/C71207
GB/SOASNAF/C567
scb_related_name_relationship Creator of
Creator of
scb_access_status Open
language English
language_search English
scb_scripts_material Latin
scb-callnumber-first International relations
Research centres
Foreign policy
Foreign affairs
topic International relations
Research centres
Foreign policy
Foreign affairs
topic_facet International relations
Research centres
Foreign policy
Foreign affairs
hierarchy_top_id_raw MS 186375
hierarchy_sequence MS_186375.0001