25 june 2010 british association of united nations civil ...€¦ · parents, level of education of...
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25 June 2010
BRITISH ASSOCIATION OF UNITED NATIONS CIVIL SERVANTS
(BAFUNCS)
BODLEIAN LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
UNITED NATIONS CAREER RECORDS PROJECT
REPORT OF RESULTS OF STAGE I
(1989 - 92)
Richard Symonds
Introduction 1. Stage I of the UN Careers Records Project (UNCRP) was carried out between 1989 and 1992 under the auspices of Mr Richard Symonds, and St. Antony’s College, Oxford, for which a Report of the First Stage was prepared by Mr Symonds.This blue-covered report of 34 pages, summarized contributions of about 330 former UN staff, or those who had been associated with UN organisations. This Report was made up of three Parts:
• Part I Organisation of the project, describes its background, objectives, method of work, relations with institutions, and gives some reflections on a further stage, the role of the Bodleian Library, and Acknowledgements (pages 3-6);
• Part II The Results of the Project¸ describes the nature of contributions made, access to materials and summarises responses to the main questions given in the questionnaire relating to the number of agencies represented, nationality of correspondents, the professions of parents, level of education of respondents, profession of spouses, previous employment of respondents, method of first entry to UN agencies, reasons for leaving and consultancies carried out after leaving. It then summarises (pages 6 – 26) salient features of the responses of each of the respondents, grouped by UN agency.
• Part III Some Reflections, provides two and a half pages (pages 26- 29) of observations by the author of various conclusions which can be drawn from the questionnaires and Part II above.
2. Subsequently, in 1995, the Bodleian was able to obtain funds for the engagement of an archivist specialist, Mr Martin Jennings for the purpose of analyzing, classifying and cataloguing contributions made by respondents to the UNCRP. The result was the issuing of a publication “Catalogue of the papers of the United Nations Career Records Project1 Bodleian Library, University of Oxford” on the Bodleian website. In order to facilitate reference by hard copy users, the Stage II project reproduced this catalogue as a Word document, with a full index.
3. It was also noted that the original Stage I report did not appear to have an index of contributors, particularly of the 330 people who submitted questionnaires. Stage II thus prepared a List of contributors to Stage I (Bill Jackson, March 2008), in the form of an Excel table of all these contributors, while summarizing salient features, including name, birth/death years, nationality, UN agencies served in, years served, positions held, status /location of contributions to UNCRP in the Bodleian Library, completion of Part I and keywords and subject areas for researchers.. 4. The above three documents constitute the main outputs relating to the Questionnaires completed under Stage 1.
Michael Askwith
UNCRP Coordinator
25 June 2010
1 Word document showing information on UNCRP from website http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/, with full table of contents of contributors (Michael Askwith, March 2006)
UNCRP STAGE I FINAL REPORT (SEPTEMBER 1992) BY RICHARD SYMONDS.
THE UNITED NATIONS CAREER RECORDS PROJECT
FINAL REPORT ON FIRST STAGE 1989-92
St. Antony’s College, Oxford September 1992
NOTE: From 1 October 1992 correspondence regarding the project should be addressed to Ms. Helen Langley, Western Manuscripts Department, Bodleian Library, Oxford OX1 3BG
[This is a copy in A4 of the report produced by St. Antony’s College]
Table of Contents PART 1 UNCRP STAGE I FINAL REPORT (SEPTEMBER 1992) BY RICHARD SYMONDS. ............ 3
PART I THE ORGANIZATION OF THE PROJECT .................................................................... 13
The Background to the Project ................................................................................................ 13
Objectives of the Project ........................................................................................................ 14
Method of Work..................................................................................................................... 14
Relations with other Institutions ............................................................................................. 14
A Further Stage ...................................................................................................................... 15
The Bodleian Library ............................................................................................................... 15
Acknowledgements ................................................................................................................ 16
PART II THE RESULTS OF THE PROJECT .............................................................................. 16
The Nature of the Contributions ............................................................................................. 16
Access to Materials ................................................................................................................ 16
The Questionnaires ................................................................................................................ 17 Nationality ............................................................................................................................................... 17 Professions of Parents ............................................................................................................................. 17 Level of Education ................................................................................................................................... 17 Profession of Spouses .............................................................................................................................. 17 Previous Employment of Respondents ..................................................................................................... 17 Method of First Entry to U.N. Agencies .................................................................................................... 18 Reasons for Leaving ................................................................................................................................. 18 Consultancies after Leaving ..................................................................................................................... 18
A Summary of Contributions Received .................................................................................... 18 United Nations - General ......................................................................................................................... 18
Dame Mary Smieton (1946-48) ........................................................................................................... 18 Ms. Nina Nash ..................................................................................................................................... 18 R.W. Walsh (1963-81) ......................................................................................................................... 19 A.C. Gilpin ........................................................................................................................................... 19 A.G. Brown (1954-84), ......................................................................................................................... 20 H.W. Singer (1946-69) ......................................................................................................................... 20 M. Pilkington ....................................................................................................................................... 20
Security Council Affairs ............................................................................................................................ 20 Sir Edgar (then Brigadier) Williams ...................................................................................................... 20
Trusteeship .............................................................................................................................................. 20 W.F. Cottrell (1947-65) ........................................................................................................................ 20
United Nations Operation in the Congo (ONUC) ...................................................................................... 20 Technical Assistance ................................................................................................................................ 21
W. Wood (1970-81) ............................................................................................................................. 21 Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) .................................................................................................... 21
D.W.R. Hill (1968-79) ........................................................................................................................... 21 Economic Commission for Europe (ECE)................................................................................................... 21
B.N. Davies (1948-78) .......................................................................................................................... 22 Sir Claus Moser ................................................................................................................................... 22 C.T. Saunders (1965-73) ...................................................................................................................... 22
Social Affairs ............................................................................................................................................ 22 P. Kuenstler (1956-79) ......................................................................................................................... 22
Peacekeeping .......................................................................................................................................... 22 Field Marshall Lord Carver................................................................................................................... 22
5 Brigadier M. Harbottle ........................................................................................................................ 22 General Sir Frank Kitson ...................................................................................................................... 22 General Sir Robert Pascoe ................................................................................................................... 22
Joint Inspection Unit ................................................................................................................................ 22 M.E. Allen (1978-84) ........................................................................................................................... 22
U.K. Government Representatives at U.N. ............................................................................................... 23 Sir Donald Maitland............................................................................................................................. 23 Sir Crispin Tickell ................................................................................................................................. 23 Sir James Bottomley ............................................................................................................................ 23 P. Carter .............................................................................................................................................. 23 S. Golt ................................................................................................................................................. 23 Sir Bernard Ledwidge .......................................................................................................................... 23
The George Ivan Smith Papers ................................................................................................................. 23 Anti-Slavery Society ................................................................................................................................. 23
Col. J.R. Montgomery .......................................................................................................................... 24
United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) and International Relief Organization (IRO) .................................................................................................................. 24
Dame Iris Murdoch ............................................................................................................................. 24 Ms. Joan Luckett ................................................................................................................................. 24 Ms. T.B. Callow-Miles .......................................................................................................................... 24 D.C. Newton ........................................................................................................................................ 24
United Nations Development Programmer (UNDP) and its Predecessors ................................. 24
– U.N. Technical Assistance Board (TAB) and U.N. Special Fund (S.F.) ....................................... 24 T.M. Unwin (1964-83) ......................................................................................................................... 25 Ms. A. MacMillan (1956-59) ................................................................................................................ 25 Ms. P. Guillebaud (1953-86) ................................................................................................................ 25
International Labour Organization (ILO) .................................................................................. 25 W. Farr (1957-82) ................................................................................................................................ 26 V.T. Chivers (1954-88) ......................................................................................................................... 26 W.C. Churchward (1963-78) ................................................................................................................ 26 P.P. Colborne (1966-81) ...................................................................................................................... 26 H. Dunning (1966-77) .......................................................................................................................... 26 G.R. Lunt ............................................................................................................................................. 27 B. Loveridge (1952-75) ........................................................................................................................ 27 L. Pickett (1963-87) ............................................................................................................................. 27 D.R. Stuart-Williams (1972-80) ............................................................................................................ 27
Food and Agricultural Organization ......................................................................................... 27 Lord Boyd Orr ...................................................................................................................................... 27 R.A. Bishop (1952-77) .......................................................................................................................... 27 K.E. Snelson (1964-83)......................................................................................................................... 28 K. Meecham (1967-84) ........................................................................................................................ 28 A.C. Firth (1965-78) ............................................................................................................................. 28 J.W.Davis (1958-72) ............................................................................................................................ 28 A. Seager (1960-63) ............................................................................................................................. 28 Ms. Sheila Cassidy ............................................................................................................................... 28 T. Alun Jones ....................................................................................................................................... 29 A.J. Peckham ....................................................................................................................................... 29 D.F. Howson (1980-86) ........................................................................................................................ 29 A.S.M. Hall (1963-8) ............................................................................................................................ 29
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization ............................................. 29 A.J.A. Elliott (1952-80) ......................................................................................................................... 30 C.T. Crellin ........................................................................................................................................... 30 A.N. Gillett .......................................................................................................................................... 30 P. Mawhood ........................................................................................................................................ 30 F.T. Russell .......................................................................................................................................... 30 C.M. Townsend ................................................................................................................................... 30
6 E.K. Townsend Coles ........................................................................................................................... 30 C. Newbury ......................................................................................................................................... 30 W.E.F. Ward ........................................................................................................................................ 30 W.H. Dodd .......................................................................................................................................... 31 L.H. Palmier ......................................................................................................................................... 31
World Health Organization (WHO) .......................................................................................... 31 Dr J. Galea ........................................................................................................................................... 31 Ms. E.E. Bennett .................................................................................................................................. 31 Dr. A.R. Mills ....................................................................................................................................... 31 J.R. Cullen............................................................................................................................................ 31 Ms. V.M. Fearne .................................................................................................................................. 32 Dr. H.B.L. Russell (1956-69) ................................................................................................................. 32 Sir George Godber............................................................................................................................... 32 Sir John Reid........................................................................................................................................ 32
The World Bank ...................................................................................................................... 32 H.S. Thriscutt (1977-83)....................................................................................................................... 33 S. Please (1963-1983) .......................................................................................................................... 33 A Seager (1973-85) .............................................................................................................................. 33 J. Spencer (1967-78) ............................................................................................................................ 33 Sir Alec Cairncross (1955-6) ................................................................................................................. 33 L.J.C. Evans (1961-73) .......................................................................................................................... 33 G.S. Wyatt (1965-76) ........................................................................................................................... 33 Ms. B. Donaghy (1957-77) ................................................................................................................... 33 J.A. Paint (1986-89) ............................................................................................................................. 34
International Monetary Fund .................................................................................................. 34 L. Alvis ................................................................................................................................................. 34
United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) ................................................ 34 S. Skoumal (1970-80) .......................................................................................................................... 34 Dr. R.A. Khan (1093-82) ....................................................................................................................... 34 E. Knew (1970-72) ............................................................................................................................... 34
United Nations Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA) ........................................................... 34 K.J.W. Lane (1972-85).......................................................................................................................... 34
International Atomic Energy Agency ....................................................................................... 35 F.P.W. Winteringham (1969-8) ............................................................................................................ 35
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) .......................................... 35 O.S. Knowles (1984-80) ....................................................................................................................... 35 J. Mark ................................................................................................................................................ 35 D. Williams .......................................................................................................................................... 35
World Meteorological Organization (WMO) ............................................................................ 35
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) ....................................................................... 35 D.J. Musk ............................................................................................................................................ 36 J. Wilmot ............................................................................................................................................. 36
International Maritime Organization (IMO) ............................................................................. 36 Sir Colin Goad...................................................................................................................................... 36 M.H. Higgins ........................................................................................................................................ 36
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) ...................................................... 36
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) ................................................................................ 36 T.G. Davies (1949-80) .......................................................................................................................... 36 J.M. Saunders ...................................................................................................................................... 36
United Nations Relief and Works Administration For Palestine Refugees in the Middle East (UNWRA) ............................................................................................................................... 36
7
United Nations Institute of Training and Research (UNITAR) .................................................... 37 Dr. Davidson Nicol ............................................................................................................................... 37
PART III SOME REFLECTIONS ............................................................................................. 37
APPENDICES ..................................................................................................................... 40
Appendix 1 Advisory Committee of the United Nations Career Records Project ........................ 40
Appendix 2 Part II Basic Information Questionnaire................................................................. 41
Appendix 3 Some Guidelines for Contributors ......................................................................... 44
PART 2 CATALOGUE OF UNCRP PAPERS IN THE BODLEIAN LIBRARY - Martin Jennings, 1995 ........................................................................................................................................ 47
Papers of the United Nations Career Records Project ................................................................ 1 Scope and Content .................................................................................................................................... 1 Restrictions on Access................................................................................................................................ 3 Preferred Form of Citation ......................................................................................................................... 3 Corporate names (NCA Rules) .................................................................................................................... 3
A. Major contributors ............................................................................................................... 4
A.1 Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair [UNRRA 1944-5, UN 1946-8, 1950, UNICEF 1946-7, UNHCR 1951-5, UNTAB 1959-61, FAO 1961-2], 1944-63 ......................................................................... 4
1. SINCLAIR, John Alexander ...................................................................................................................... 4
A.2 Contributors B-J.................................................................................................................. 6 2. BENNETT, Eveline ................................................................................................................................... 6 3. BROWN, Arthur ...................................................................................................................................... 6 4. COTTRELL, William ................................................................................................................................. 6 5. DAVIES, Sir Arthur .................................................................................................................................. 7 6. DEWIS, John ........................................................................................................................................... 7 7. FEARNE, Viola ........................................................................................................................................ 8 8. GILLETT, A. Nicholas ............................................................................................................................... 8 9. GILPIN, Antony ....................................................................................................................................... 9 10. JACKSON, Sir Robert ........................................................................................................................... 10 11. JENKS, C. Wilfred ................................................................................................................................ 10
A.3 Papers of Michael Kaser [ECE 1951-63], 1953-1980s .......................................................... 11 12. KASER, Michael .................................................................................................................................. 11
A.4 Contributors K-T ............................................................................................................... 14 13. KNEW, Ernest ..................................................................................................................................... 14 14. LOVERIDGE, E. Basil ............................................................................................................................ 14 15. RUSSELL, Hugh ................................................................................................................................... 15 16. SAUNDERS, John ................................................................................................................................ 15 17. IVAN SMITH, George .......................................................................................................................... 15 18. SYMONDS, J. Richard.......................................................................................................................... 15 19. THRISCUTT, H.S. ................................................................................................................................. 16 20. TICKNER, Winifred.............................................................................................................................. 16
A.5 D. Burnell Vickers UNRRA 1945-51, UNHCR 1951, UNRWA 1955-66, UN 1960-3, 1966-80 .... 18 21. VICKERS, D. Burnell ............................................................................................................................ 18
B Minor contributors .............................................................................................................. 21 1. ABHYANKAR, M.G ................................................................................................................................ 21 2. ALLEN, Mark ........................................................................................................................................ 21 3. ALVES, John ......................................................................................................................................... 21 4. BERRY, Celia ......................................................................................................................................... 21 5. BISHOP, Robert .................................................................................................................................... 21 6. BROWN, Andrew.................................................................................................................................. 21 7. CAIRNCROSS, Sir Alec ........................................................................................................................... 21
8 8. CALLOW-MILES, Irene .......................................................................................................................... 21 9. CASSELL, Frank ..................................................................................................................................... 21 10. CASSIDY, Shelagh ............................................................................................................................... 21 11. CHIVERS, Vernon ................................................................................................................................ 21 12. CHURCHWARD, William ..................................................................................................................... 22 13. COHEN, Myer ..................................................................................................................................... 22 14. COLBORNE, Peter ............................................................................................................................... 22 15. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian ....................................................................................................................... 22 16. COOK, David....................................................................................................................................... 22 17. COOPER, Gerald ................................................................................................................................. 22 18. CRELLIN, Cecil .................................................................................................................................... 22 19. CULLEN, James ................................................................................................................................... 22 20. DAVIES, T. Glanmor ............................................................................................................................ 22 21. DEY, James ......................................................................................................................................... 22 22. DONAGHY, Elizabeth .......................................................................................................................... 22 23. DUNNING, Harold .............................................................................................................................. 23 24. ELKAN, Peter ...................................................................................................................................... 23 25. ELLIOTT, Alan ..................................................................................................................................... 23 26. ELVIN, Lionel ...................................................................................................................................... 23 27. EVANS, Lionel ..................................................................................................................................... 23 28. FAINT, J. Anthony ............................................................................................................................... 23 29. FARR, William .................................................................................................................................... 23 30. FLETCHER, Granville ........................................................................................................................... 23 31. FRASER, Charles ................................................................................................................................. 23 32. FRITH, Anthony .................................................................................................................................. 23 33. GALEA, Joseph ................................................................................................................................... 23 34. GOAD, Sir Colin .................................................................................................................................. 24 35. GOODIER, Brian.................................................................................................................................. 24 36. GRIFFITH, Donald ......................................................................................................................... 24 37. GUILLEBAUD, Philomena .................................................................................................................... 24 38. GULLAND, John .................................................................................................................................. 24 39. HALL, Alan .......................................................................................................................................... 24 40. HIGGINS, Michael ............................................................................................................................... 24 41. HILL, D.W.R ........................................................................................................................................ 24 42. HOWSON, David ................................................................................................................................ 24 43. HULL, Eileen ....................................................................................................................................... 24 44. IRWIN, Michael .................................................................................................................................. 24 45. JONES, Alun ....................................................................................................................................... 25 46. KEATING, Rex ..................................................................................................................................... 25 47. KHAN, Riaz ......................................................................................................................................... 25 48. KIRKBRIDE, Thomas ............................................................................................................................ 25 49. IANNACE, H. Vera Klein ...................................................................................................................... 25 50. KNOWLES, Oliver ............................................................................................................................... 25 51. KUENSTLER, Peter .............................................................................................................................. 25 52. LANE, Kenneth Winton ....................................................................................................................... 25 53. LLOYD, Oliver ..................................................................................................................................... 25 54. LOCKWOOD, Derek ............................................................................................................................ 25 55. LOROCH, Kim ..................................................................................................................................... 26 56. LUBBOCK, David ................................................................................................................................. 26 57. LUCKETT, Joan .................................................................................................................................... 26 58. LUNT, George ..................................................................................................................................... 26 59. McMILLAN, Ann ................................................................................................................................. 26 60. MAWHOOD, Philip ............................................................................................................................. 26 61. MEECHAM, Keith ............................................................................................................................... 26 62. MIDWINTER VERGIN, Kathleen .......................................................................................................... 26 63. MILLS, A. Raymond ............................................................................................................................ 26 64. MOLLETT, Geoffrey ............................................................................................................................ 26 65. MOLLETT, Imogen .............................................................................................................................. 26 66. MURDOCH, Dame Iris......................................................................................................................... 27
9 67. MUSK, Dennis .................................................................................................................................... 27 68. NASH, Nina ........................................................................................................................................ 27 69. NEATH, Ronald ................................................................................................................................... 27 70. NEWBURY, Colin ................................................................................................................................ 27 71. NEWTON, Donald ............................................................................................................................... 27 72. NICOL, Davidson ................................................................................................................................ 27 73. OLSEN, Karl ........................................................................................................................................ 27 74. ORBANEJA, Antonio ........................................................................................................................... 27 75. PALMIER, Leslie .................................................................................................................................. 27 76. PERFREMENT, Denis ........................................................................................................................... 27 77. PICKERING, Donald ............................................................................................................................ 28 78. PICKETT, Liam .................................................................................................................................... 28 79. PILKINGTON, Maurice ....................................................................................................................... 28 80. PLEASE, Stanley .................................................................................................................................. 28 81. RUSSELL, John .................................................................................................................................... 28 82. SAMSON, Klaus .................................................................................................................................. 28 83. SARGENT, Kenneth ............................................................................................................................. 28 84. SAUNDERS, Christopher ..................................................................................................................... 28 85. SAEGER, Andrew ................................................................................................................................ 28 86. SEN, Sudhir ........................................................................................................................................ 28 87. SHARIF, Mohammed .......................................................................................................................... 28 88. SINGER, Hans ..................................................................................................................................... 29 89. SKOUMAL, Stanislav ........................................................................................................................... 29 90. SMIETON, Dame Mary ....................................................................................................................... 29 91. SNELSON, Kenneth ............................................................................................................................. 29 92. SPENCER, Jack .................................................................................................................................... 29 93. STARK, Sir Andrew ............................................................................................................................. 29 94. STEWART, Lady .................................................................................................................................. 29 95. STEWART, Sir Herbert ........................................................................................................................ 29 96. STUART-WILLIAMS, D (Bill) ................................................................................................................. 29 97. SYKES, Alan ........................................................................................................................................ 29 98. TIDMARSH, Kyril ................................................................................................................................. 29 99. TOWNSEND, Charles .......................................................................................................................... 30 100. TOWNSEND COLES, Edwin ............................................................................................................... 30 101. UNWIN, Thomas .............................................................................................................................. 30 102. WILLIAMS, Sir Edgar ......................................................................................................................... 30 103. WILMOTT, John ................................................................................................................................ 30 104. WILSON, Fergus ............................................................................................................................... 30 105. WINTERINGHAM, F. Peter ................................................................................................................ 30 106. WOOD, William ................................................................................................................................ 30 107. WREN, E.G. Christopher ................................................................................................................... 30 108. WYATT, Gavin .................................................................................................................................. 30 109. ZAGNI, Anthony ............................................................................................................................... 30
C Questionnaires .................................................................................................................... 31 ALAGIAH - MUTH ..................................................................................................................................... 31 NAYLOR - WRIGHT ................................................................................................................................... 31
D UK Government representatives .......................................................................................... 32 1. DODD, William ..................................................................................................................................... 32 2. ACHESON, Sir Donald ........................................................................................................................... 33 3. BOTTOMLEY, Sir James ........................................................................................................................ 33 4. BROWNING, Rex .................................................................................................................................. 33 5. BUIST, Ian ............................................................................................................................................ 33 6. CARTER, Peers ...................................................................................................................................... 33 7. GODBER, Sir George ............................................................................................................................. 33 8. GOULT, Sidney ..................................................................................................................................... 33 9. HILDYARD, Sir David ............................................................................................................................. 33 10. LIAM, Martin ...................................................................................................................................... 33 11. LANDYMORE, Alec ............................................................................................................................. 33
10 12. LEDWIDGE, Sir Bernard ...................................................................................................................... 34 13. LOGAN, Sir Donald ............................................................................................................................. 34 14. MACKENZIE, Archibald ....................................................................................................................... 34 15. McLEAN, Peter ................................................................................................................................... 34 16. MAITLAND, Sir Donald ....................................................................................................................... 34 17. MARK, James ..................................................................................................................................... 34 18. MARSHALL, Sir Peter .......................................................................................................................... 34 19. MASON, Sir Frederick ......................................................................................................................... 34 20. MATHIESON, William ......................................................................................................................... 34 21. MILLARD, Sir Guy ............................................................................................................................... 34 22. MOSER, Sir Claus ................................................................................................................................ 35 23. MURRAY, Sir James ............................................................................................................................ 35 24. PARSONS, Sir Anthony ....................................................................................................................... 35 25. PECKHAM, Arthur .............................................................................................................................. 35 26. REID, Sir John ..................................................................................................................................... 35 27. RICHARD, Lord Ivor ............................................................................................................................ 35 28. SANKEY, John ..................................................................................................................................... 35 29. SCOTT, Sir Peter ................................................................................................................................. 35 30. SMITH, William .................................................................................................................................. 35 31. TICKELL, Sir Crispin ............................................................................................................................. 35 32. WARD, William................................................................................................................................... 35 33. WHITAKER, Benjamin ......................................................................................................................... 36 34. WILLIAMS, Dougla .............................................................................................................................. 36
E Military ............................................................................................................................... 37 1. CARVER, Field Marshall Lord ................................................................................................................ 37 2. HARBOTTLE, Brig. Michael ................................................................................................................... 37 3. KITSON, Gen. Sir Frank ......................................................................................................................... 37 4. PASCOE, Gen. Sir Robert ...................................................................................................................... 37 5. WILSON, Lt.-Gen. Sir James .................................................................................................................. 37
F Contributors from non-governmental organizations and obituaries of UN officials ................ 38 1. MONTGOMERY, Col J.R. Patrick ........................................................................................................... 38 2. WOOD, Duncan .................................................................................................................................... 38 3. ALEXANDER, Bernard ........................................................................................................................... 38 4. CARADON, Lord Hugh .......................................................................................................................... 38 5. CAUSTIN, Harold .................................................................................................................................. 38 6. HILL, W. Martin .................................................................................................................................... 38 7. KATZIN, Alfred...................................................................................................................................... 38 8. MARQUAND, Hilary .............................................................................................................................. 38 9. MORSE, David ...................................................................................................................................... 38 10. OWEN, Sir, A. David ........................................................................................................................... 38 11. RAINEY, Reginald................................................................................................................................ 39
G Cassettes ............................................................................................................................ 40 1. JACKSON, Sir Robert ............................................................................................................................. 40 2. IVAN SMITH, George ............................................................................................................................ 40 3. ALLEN, Mark ........................................................................................................................................ 40 4. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian ......................................................................................................................... 40 5. DAVIS Thomas Glanmore ..................................................................................................................... 40 6. GALEA, Joseph ..................................................................................................................................... 40 7. GOAD, Sir Colin .................................................................................................................................... 40 8. KHAMIS, Salim ..................................................................................................................................... 40 9. MIDWINTER-VERGIN, Kathleen ............................................................................................................ 40 10. MURDOCH, Dame Iris......................................................................................................................... 40 11. PICKERING, Donald ............................................................................................................................ 41 12. RHODES JAMES, Sir Robert ................................................................................................................. 41 13. SMIETON, Dame Mary ....................................................................................................................... 41 14. STARK, Sir Andrew ............................................................................................................................. 41 15. WREN, E.G. Christopher ..................................................................................................................... 41
11 16. BROWNING, Rex ................................................................................................................................ 41 17. GODBER, Sir George ........................................................................................................................... 41 18. LEDWIDGE, Sir Bernard ...................................................................................................................... 41 19. MAITLAND, Sir Donald ....................................................................................................................... 41 20. MATHIESON, William ......................................................................................................................... 41 21. MOSER, Sir Claus ................................................................................................................................ 42 22. REID, Sir John ..................................................................................................................................... 42 23. RICHARD, Lord Ivor ............................................................................................................................ 42 24. WHITAKER, Benjamin ......................................................................................................................... 42 25. WILSON, Lt.-Gen. Sir James ................................................................................................................ 42
H Additional ........................................................................................................................... 43
H.1 Printed Material ............................................................................................................... 43 1. GUILDRIDE, Patrick ............................................................................................................................... 43
H.2 Charles Harris ................................................................................................................... 43 2. HARRIS, Charles ................................................................................................................................... 43
H.3 Miscellaneous .................................................................................................................. 46 3. AGOSTINI, Francois .............................................................................................................................. 46 4. DAVIES, T. Glanmore ............................................................................................................................ 46 5. KNEW, Ernest ....................................................................................................................................... 46 6. PITT, David ........................................................................................................................................... 46 7. RHODES JAMES, Sir Robert ................................................................................................................... 46 8. ROBERTSON, James.............................................................................................................................. 46 9. IVAN SMITH, George ............................................................................................................................ 47 10. BURBIDGE, John ................................................................................................................................. 47 11. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian ....................................................................................................................... 47 12. DE NOUE, Jehan ................................................................................................................................. 47 13. KNEW, Ernest ..................................................................................................................................... 47 14. LUKE, Kenneth ................................................................................................................................... 47 15. RUSSELL, Hugh ................................................................................................................................... 47 16. TAYLOR, James ................................................................................................................................... 47 17. WALSH, Nigel ..................................................................................................................................... 47 18. WILLIAMS, Sir Edgard ......................................................................................................................... 48 19. BLAISDELL, Donald ............................................................................................................................. 48
Key to UN and Non-UN acronyms ........................................................................................... 49
Index ..................................................................................................................................... 51
PART 3. LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS TO STAGE I, THROUGH QUESTIONNAIRES ...................... 80
3.1 Note for readers of the database of contributions to UNCRP Stage 1 (Bill Jackson, Oxford Region, March 2008) .............................................................................................................. 80
3.2 Database of contributors to UNCRP Stage 1, prepared for BAFUNCS by Bill Jackson, February 2008 ...................................................................................................................................... 81
TABLE OF CONTENTS Page
No
PART I – ORGANIZATION OF THE PROJECT ……………………………………………………… 3 PART II – THE RESULTS OF THE PROJECT ………………………………………………..……….. 6
The Questionnaires …………………………………………………………………………….. 7 A Summary of Contributions Received ……………………………………………………….. 8 United Nations – General ………………………………………………………………………. 8
Security Council Affairs …………………………………………………………..… 10 Trusteeship ………………………………………………………………………….. 10 U.N. Operation in the Congo (ONUC) ………………………………………….….. 10 Technical Assistance ………………………………………………………………... 11 Economic Commission for Africa …………………………………………………. 11 Economic Commission for Europe …………………………………………….…... 11 Social Affairs ………………………………………………………………………. 12 Peacekeeping ………………………………………………………………………. 12 Joint Inspection Unit ………………………………………………………………. 12 U.K. Government Representatives at UN …………………………………………. 12 The George Ivan Smith Papers ……………………………………………………. 13 Anti-Slavery Society ………………………………………………………..…….. 13
United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration and International Relief Organization…………………………………………………………... 13
United Nations Development Programme …………………………………………………... 14
International Labour Organization …………………………………………………………. 15
Food and Agricultural Organization ……………………………………………………….. 17
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization ………………………… 19
World Health Organization ………………………………………………………….….…. 20
The World Bank ……………………………………………………………………………. 21
International Monetary Fund ……………………………………………………………… 23
United Nations Industrial Development Organization ……………………………………. 23
United Nations Fund for Population Activities …………………………………………… 24
International Atomic Energy Agency …………………………………………………….. 24
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development ……………………………….…… 24
World Meteorological Organization ……………………………………………………..…. 25
International Telecommunications Union …………………………………………………... 25
International Maritime Organization ……………………………………………………….. 25
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees ………………………………………... 25
United Nations Children’s Fund …………………………………………………………... 25
United Nations Relief and Works Administration for Palestine Refugees in the Middle East …………………………………………………. 26
United Nations Institute for Training and Research ………………………………………… 26
PART 111 – SOME REFLECTIONS ………………………………………………………………… 26
APPENDIX 1 – ADVISORY COMMITTEE ……………………………………………………….… 29
APPENDIX 2 – THE QUESTIONNAIRE …………………………………………………………… 30
APPENDIX 3 – GUIDELINES FOR CONTRIBUTIONS …………………………………………… 33
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THE UNITED NATIONS CAREER RECORDS PROJECT PART I THE ORGANIZATION OF THE PROJECT The Background to the Project A noticeable development since the end of the Second World War has been the great expansion of the international civil service, both in numbers and function, after the modest scale of activities of the League of Nations system. Rather little research has been done about the kind of people who worked in the service of U.N. agencies and how, retrospectively, they viewed their careers. Several projects have been concerned with the careers of eminent people in the League of Nations and United Nations systems. Thus, the Carnegie Endowment for World Peace some years ago interviewed senior survivors of the League of Nations. The United Nations, UNICEF and the World Bank have interviewed a few of their senior members but the records are not available. The Institution for Social and Policy Studies at Yale has interviewed people who were concerned with particular political episodes in U.N. history. So far as is known, however, there has been no systematic attempt to obtain, record and analyse the recollections of former officials of the United Nations system at all levels. Yet to future researchers such information is likely to be of considerable value, particularly in relation to the first generation of those who served the U.N. agencies and shaped their traditions in the formative phase after 1945. Aspects which are likely to be of interest include not only their career experience and their impressions of the agencies for which they worked, but also their motivation and their social and educational background. British nationals have had an important role both in the League of Nations and United Nations systems, and more experts were recruited by U.N. agencies in the 1950s and 1960s from Britain than from any other country. It was therefore natural that an initiative for a U.N. Career Records Project should come from the British Association of Former U.N. Civil Servants (BAFUNCS) which had a membership of about 800 former officials of U.N. agencies and felt that it would be a sad loss if the recollections of those who had served the U.N. system in its formative stage should go unrecorded. Although BAFUNCS took a decision to this effect at its annual reunion in 1988, it did not have the resources to undertake such a project itself. The University of Oxford had a long history of co-operation with the League of Nations and with the United Nations, of which the Bodleian Library is a depository. It also had been host to the Colonial Records Project which to some extent could serve as a model for the U.N. project. St. Antony’s College, Oxford, a graduate college with a strong interest in international affairs, agreed to provide an office and administrative services for a U.N. Career Records Project which was funded for a three-year period by the Ford Foundation of New York and the Rhodes Trust of Oxford. The project was launched in September 1989. Richard Symonds, who had served for 25 years with U.N. and UNDP and was a Senior Member of St. Antony’s College, became its Honorary Director. Its Secretary, Diana Hartnell, had also served for many years with U.N. agencies. The project was guided by an Advisory Committee on which representatives of BAFUNCS, St. Antony’s College and the Bodleian Library served, together with several members in an individual capacity. Its Chairman was Professor Adam Roberts, Montague Burton Professor of International Relations in the University of Oxford. The Committee’s membership is shown in Appendix 1.
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Objectives of the Project The Advisory Committee approved a Statement of Objectives, whose main points were as follows:
(a) The main objective of the project is to acquire, record and maintain memoirs, recollections and other written or illustrated materials of U.K. nationals, whether living in Britain or abroad, or of people of other nationalities and its Specialized Agencies. This includes people who worked in Secretariats at Headquarters; in regional or country level offices; and on mission as officials, experts or military observers.
(b) In addition, the project receives materials from U.K. nationals who served as Permanent Representatives, government representatives at general conferences, and on governing bodies of U.N. agencies. In some cases, the same people served at different times as government representatives and as international officials. Another category whose materials may be collected on a selective basis is that of British nationals who served with nongovernmental organizations accredited to U.N. agencies.
(c) The project occasionally accepts materials from nationals of other countries who do not live in Britain.
(d) In all cases, the project exercises discretion as to what materials it agrees to receive and maintain. It acts in full consultation with donors.
(e) The project seeks to complement, rather than duplicate, materials which are in official U.N. records and in the archives of U.N. agencies; U.N. official records and archives often, by their nature, omit important aspects of U.N. activities and decision-making processes.
Method of Work
The project commenced by sending out a circular letter to the 800 members of BAFUNCS asking them to complete a questionnaire and to send contributions regarding their experience in whatever form they wished. Subsequently, further address lists were used which were obtained from associations of former staff members of ILO, FAO, UNESCO and the World Bank, as well as those of the Association of Former United Nations Civil Servants (AFICS) in New York and Geneva. Contributions were also invited through notes placed in various journals, and a number of former U.N. agency officials were traced through private contacts. Discussion with government departments led to contacts with a number of retired officials who had represented the United Kingdom at U.N. agencies.
Those respondents who were former officials of U.N. agencies were asked to complete a questionnaire (Appendix 2). This was intended both for statistical purposes and to provide biographical information which could be attached to individual contributions. All respondents were invited to contribute their recollections in whatever form they considered appropriate. These are contained in Appendix 3.
Relations with other Institutions
It had been the hope of those who initiated the project that similar activities might be organized independently in other countries and that this might lead to collaboration between national projects. There has been correspondence and discussion of such possibilities with institutions and individuals in U.S.A., France, the Netherlands, and the Nordic countries. A project was set up early in 1992 in
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Copenhagen by the Nordic Association of Former International Civil Servants (NAFICS). In the U.S.A., the project has co-operated with the Yale Institution for Policy Studies which is interviewing people concerned with particular episodes of U.N. history. It has also corresponded with U.N.A. of the U.S.A. regarding their proposed “Video Oral History” of the U.N.
Papers on the project have been prepared for circulation to the World Federation of U.N.A., the Section of Archivists of International Organizations of the International Council of Archives, the Academic Council on the U.N. System (U.S.A.) and the European International Studies Association. A meeting of the Federation of Association of Former International Civil Servants (FAFICS) has been addressed by the Hon. Director.
A Further Stage
It will be sent from Part II that the project has to a considerable extent achieved its aims. At the end of September 1992, the office at St. Antony’s College will be closed; the responsibilities of the Hon. Director and Secretary will cease; and the materials will be transferred to the Department of Western Manuscripts of the Bodleian Library, Oxford. The publicity which the project has received is leading to interest on the part of scholars and researchers on access to the materials. Indeed, the transcripts of interviews with Sir Robert Jackson have already been made available to his authorized biographer. It is therefore urgent for the project’s papers to be catalogued. A further grant from the Ford Foundation has been made to the Bodleian Library to finance a part-time cataloguer at the Bodleian Library for a two-year period. During this period, the collection will be kept open for further contributions and the Advisory Committee will remain in being. BAFUNCS will keep its new members informed of the project and its members may occasionally be able to undertake interviews. The Bodleian Library will be responsible for all further activities from 1 October 1992. A final report on the use of funds in the first stage of the project will be prepared after that date.
The Bodleian Library
The Bodleian Library, named after its founder, the Elizabethan diplomat and scholar, Sir Thomas Bodley, is the principal library of Oxford University and one of Britain’s four copyright libraries. The Department of Western Manuscripts holds one of the country’s largest collections of modern political papers. The holdings are drawn from the private papers of politicians, public servants, journalists and others active in public life during the last 150 years. The largest single grouping of material relating to the U.N. is located in the papers of the Oxford scholar and internationalist, Gilbert Murray (1866-1957). Like many of his contemporaries, Murray’s involvement with the U.N. grew out of his earlier activities in the League of Nations and the League of Nations Union. The papers of the former journalist and international civil servant, William Clark (1916-85) are another major source, particularly for Robert McNamara’s Presidency of the World Bank. Smaller amounts of material can be found in nearly a dozen more collections including the papers of Prime Minister, Clement Attlee (1883-1965) and the Society for the Protection of Science and Learning (SPSL). The topics covered in these collections include the 1945 San Francisco conference, UNESCO, the United Nations Association, and the U.N. Third Special Conference on Disarmament in 1988.
In its role as a U.N. Depository Library the Bodleian receives a copy of virtually every U.N. publication intended for general circulation ranging from the records of the General Assembly to papers published by bodies in, or associated with, the U.N., including UNESCO and the ILO. Independent publications by Specialized Agencies, such as UNICEF, are purchased to complement the official holdings. The material is available in the Official Papers Section.
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Acknowledgements
At the conclusion of the first stage, warm thanks may be expressed to the Ford Foundation for the grant of £20,214 and to the Rhodes Trust for a grant of £5,500; to St. Antony’s College for administering the project and providing a base for the project; to the Bodleian Library for professional guidance; and to BAFUNCS for publicizing the project, and to those of its members who conducted interviews. Oxford University has proved a very suitable home for the project, not only because of its various associations with the League of Nations and United Nations. The project has received valuable collaboration from the Rhodes House Library whose colonial records project holds the papers of many colonial officials who subsequently had careers with U.N. It has also been able to co-operate with the Refugees Study Project at Queen Elizabeth House. The project also wishes to thank officials of the United Nations and its Specialized Agencies, as well as officials of the U.K. Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Overseas Development Administration and Department of Health for their advice and help. PART II THE RESULTS OF THE PROJECT The Nature of the Contributions
In addition to the questionnaire which was sent to former officials of U.N. agencies, all respondents were invited to contribute their recollections in whatever form they considered appropriate. The contributions varied in length from memoirs and autobiographies of several hundred pages, to letters of only a few pages. They have mostly been of the following kinds:
(a) Accounts of careers of former U.N. agency officials, prepared specially for the project, usually of about 5-20 pages. Some deal with careers at Headquarters, some with careers in the field, often as technical assistance experts; some deal with both. Some cover whole careers, even going back to the League of Nations period; others describe particular episodes or particular aspects.
(b) Copies of autobiographies and memoirs, originally written with the prospect of publication, or for private circulation.
(c) Collections of diaries, reports, correspondence and photographs.
(d) Cassettes. In some cases, these are self-recorded. In others, they are records of interviews by the Project.
Access to Materials
Contributors were asked to return a form agreeing to access to and use of the materials. Very few requested restrictions or a time embargo.
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The Questionnaires
Questionnaires were sent only to people who had been directly employed by U.N. agencies. Government representatives and military officers are thus excluded from this analysis. 233 replies were received. Several of those who replied had served with more than one U.N. agency. The replies covered service with the following agencies: U.N. 57, FAO 54, World Bank 53, ILO 41, WHO 27, Unesco 24, UNDP (including TAB and S.F.) 20, UNRRA 14, UNHCR 6, UNICEF 5, UNIDO 5, IAEA 5, UNRWA 5, ECA 4, ITU 4, IMF 4, UNCTAD 3, IRO 3, ICAO 3, ECA 3, IMCO 2, UNRISD 2, UPU 2, WMO 2, WFP 2, UNFPA 2, IMCO 2, ESCAP 1, GATT 1, UNITAR 1.
Among the most interesting information emerging from the questionnaires was that about a third of the respondents had worked in colonial services before joining a U.N. agency. The highest proportion of these served in FAO, the World Bank and WHO. The U.N. agencies, as their development work was expanded rapidly, needed to find people with tropical experience, and at about the same time British administrators and professionals were becoming redundant in the process of decolonisation. Nationality
25 respondents had nationalities other than British at birth. Professions of Parents
Over half the respondents replied to this optional question. The largest numbers of fathers were in business and commerce (29), followed by teaching and education (24), engineering (18), government service (14), ministers of religion (13), armed services (12), medicine (9), farming (9), colonial services (7), manual workers (7), accountants (5), lawyers (3), international officials (2), and other (12).
Of mothers, by far the largest number were described as housewives. Of the rest, most were teachers (24), nurses (8), secretaries (7), and artists, actresses or writers (6). Level of Education
The highest level of educational qualifications obtained by respondents were: professional diplomas (66), postgraduate degrees (42), B.A., M.A., or B.Sc. (83), and secondary education (19). At the postgraduate level, London provided most degrees, followed by overseas universities, Cambridge and Oxford. At the graduate level Cambridge came first, followed by London and Oxford. Profession of Spouses
Not all respondents who had been married answered this. The largest number of spouses were U.N. agency officials or employees (28), teachers (28), secretaries (18), government service (14), and medicine and nursing (12). Previous Employment of Respondents
In some cases more than one profession was mentioned. After the 80 who had served in Colonial Services come other government services (56), teaching and education (46), armed services (30), private sector (27), engineering (13), medicine (7), and law (3).
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Method of First Entry to U.N. Agencies
First entry to U.N. service was obtained by direct application by 79 respondents and through personal contact with U.N. agency officials by 73. 38 were proposed by government offices; 29 were directly approached by U.N. agencies; and 9 were proposed by professional institutions. Reasons for Leaving
Age limit (119); expiry of contract (32); family and personal reasons (11); resignation for unspecified reasons (17); for academic posts (10); for private sector (6); for government posts (5); dissatisfaction (5); early retirement and transfer to other U.N. agencies (3); health and overwork (3); other reasons (7). Consultancies after Leaving
121 respondents were re-employed by U.N. agencies. This figure is not very meaningful because it is not possible to distinguish between officials retiring after a permanent career, and “experts” recruited for specific assignments. It appears, however, that a significant number in each category were re-employed.
A Summary of Contributions Received
[Respondents who appear under more than one heading are asterisked,] United Nations - General
Several respondents have referred to Sir Brian Urquhart’s autobiography A Life in Peace and War as a fascinating and authentic commentary on the first 40 years of U.N. To supplement this, Sir Brian has promised to send the project copies of transcripts of interviews which he has given.
There are several descriptions of the early days of U.N. A copy has been obtained from the Yale Project of an interview with Lord Gladwyn who was Executive Secretary to the Preparatory Commission of U.N. in 1945.
Dame Mary Smieton (1946-48) who was brought from Whitehall as the first Director of Personnel describes the confused situation which she found in New York where individual units were recruiting staff without references to the Personnel or Finance Departments, so that salaries were unpaid. Appointments had to be regularized; and a system of recruitment had to be organized which took into account geographical distribution; also a promotions policy. She comments on the misunderstandings arising from differing American and British administrative traditions.
Ms. Nina Nash has contributed a note on a recruitment mission to Czechoslovakia in 1946.
*Sir Robert Jackson, in transcribed interviews with the project, discusses his assignment as Assistant Secretary General for Co-ordination in 1946 and its abrupt termination by Trygvie Lie. Transcripts have also been received, for the project to copy, of interviews held with Sir Robert in New York in 1985. In addition to questions covered in the interviews conducted by UNCRP, he discusses in these his involvement with UNICEF and his role in Bangladesh, Zambia, Kampuchea, and Cape Verde.
Early recruits were only allowed to take £25 each out of Britain. Several respondents mention their initial domestic problems but also the kindness and hospitality extended to the
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newcomers by American organizations and families. Their children tended rapidly to become Americanised. There seems a general impression that there was more camaraderie and better co-ordination in the single storey office at Lake Success than later in the 39 storey U.N, headquarters building. There are several references to the bitterness in the Secretariat during Senator McCarthy’s attacks on U.N. when Trygvie Lie was felt to have betrayed the spirit of the Charter by allowing the F.B.I. free access within Headquarters.
There are a number of accounts of long careers. T.B. Kirkbridge (1945-74) came to U.N. from Standard Oil via UNRRA. For many years he was responsible for preparing the U.N. Budget, which he did on conservative lines. When the developing countries pressed for a great expansion and for a system of programme budgeting, he preferred to move to the U.N. Geneva office as Director of Administration and Budget Services. He had been warmly supported by U Thant, but later saw morale decline and took early retirement. On the whole, however, he had a successful, satisfactory and happy career.
The project holds 5 boxes of the papers of the late D.B.H. Vickers, Legal Counsel to the U.N. In addition to refugee questions in URRA and UNRWA, these deal with the West Irian dispute, relations of U.N. agencies with South Africa and Rhodesia, National Liberation movements, Slavery and Involuntary Servitude. There are also documents concerning the Rev. Michael Scott.
A career which covered an exceptionally long period was that of Ms. A.M. Midwinter Vergin who served from 1930-40 in the League of Nations in its Editorial and Economic Intelligence Departments and Treasury. She next became the first woman Clerk to the House of Commons and later worked in the Foreign Office as a member of British delegations to founding conferences of U.N., UNRRA and FAO. She joined U.N. in 1946 and worked mainly in the Social Affairs Department until retirement in 1969. Afterwards she represented UNRWA in Geneva. She considered that there was a prejudice against women in higher grades and that her experience would have carried her further in U.N. had she been a man.
Another woman with a long U.N. career was Ms. Imogen Mollett (1947-76) who worked in New York as translator, precise writer, as Secretary of the Publications Board and in Recruitment. She took early retirement when promotion was blocked by geographical distribution.
R.W. Walsh (1963-81) came to U.N. from the Colonial Service and worked with ECA, with the Public Administration Division and in Personnel at Headquarters, and with ECE in Geneva. He considered that there was a strong element of luck in recruitment and that U.N.’s system of annual performance reports was useless. His most enjoyable work was in staff training. Despite frustrations and disappointments he regarded this second career as very satisfying.
A.C. Gilpin came to New York in 1952 from ECAFE, worked in the Department of Economic Affairs until 1957 and then with TAB until 1960. He was Chairman of the Headquarters Staff Committee and was impressed with the understanding and percipience of Hammarskjold on staff problems. His memoirs also give a picture of the family life of a British staff member in New York.
In a later period Sir Andrew Stark, after being attached to the U.K. Permanent Mission as a member of the committee on Reorganization of U.N., joined the Secretariat as Under Secretary General for Administration and Management, 1968-71. The project has transcribed an interview with him. One of his responsibilities was Personnel. He discusses the attitude to the International Civil Service of various nationalities as well as pressures from Government
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regarding appointments and promotions. He considered the vast majority of U.N. officials as capable of doing their jobs.
A.G. Brown (1954-84), who served as an Economist at Headquarters and as Director of the OPEX scheme has contributed an unpublished paper written in 1986 on “Reliving the North-South Dialogue in U.N.”.
H.W. Singer (1946-69) UN/UNCTAD/ECA has contributed copies of papers on various economic and trade problems.
M. Pilkington who worked with the U.N. Field Service 1950-82 in a short note described the “chaos” of its inauguration. Security Council Affairs
Sir Edgar (then Brigadier) Williams has presented the project with brief notes made while he served in the Security Council Affairs Department in 1946. These refer to some of the political questions before the Council and to the staffing of the Secretariat. He recorded how “we all become too important for our age group and can’t readily jump down, and [were] used too to quick results”.
*J.R. Symonds served with the U.N. Commission for India and Pakistan (1948-49) whose efforts led to a ceasefire in the Kashmir War but not to a final settlement. He ponders whether the Commission might have achieved more if it had been less cautious and legalistic. He mentions problems of leadership of the secretariat of the mission. His account is part of a recorded interview of his Indian experiences made by the British Library. Trusteeship
W.F. Cottrell (1947-65) came from the Sudan Political Service to the Trusteeship Department, of which he eventually became Deputy Director. He contributes reports of various Trusteeship missions with photographs. He comments adversely on interference by some senior officials in normal recruitment and promotion procedures; also on the practice of recruiting new people whenever new work arose instead of entrusting it to existing staff. He regarded his period with U.N., however, as the most satisfying in his life. His career is more fully described in his published autobiography Better Born Lucky.
*W.A.C. Mathieson, in a recorded and transcribed interview, describes his experiences as Counsellor on Colonial Affairs with the U.K. Delegation to U.N. in New York (1951-54). As such he was a U.K. Representative on the Trusteeship Council, supporting Sir Alan Burns who came over from London. He comments on his colleagues on the Council and on some of the U.N. officials with whom he dealt. He also discusses missions to Trust Territories on which he served. He considers that the fact that Tanganyika was a Trust Territory accelerated the pace of independence in East Africa. United Nations Operation in the Congo (ONUC)
The U.N. operation in the Congo was unique at the time, inasmuch as U.N. found itself virtually responsible for organizing and running the activities of an administration which had collapsed. The project is fortunate in having obtained several substantial accounts based on contemporary letters and papers.
*A.C. Gilpin (1960-5) served as U.N. Representative in Kasai, Assistant to the Representative of the Secretary General, Deputy Chief of Civilian Operations and Deputy Resident Representative of UNTAB. His account, of 200 pages, describes day-to-day work
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and problems, quoting from letters and notes written at the time with a connecting narrative. It is unusually vivid and is supported by numerous photographs.
*J.M. Saunders was Chief Administrative Officer and Deputy UNTAB Resident Representative (1964-65). (There were two Deputies.) His account of about 100 pages consists of extracts from letters written to his wife and background notes, together with copies of documents on administration.
*Dr. A.E. Brown was Deputy Chief of Mission of WHO in the Congo (1962-4) and was virtually Director of Health Services. His substantial contribution mainly consists of reports and correspondence with WHO headquarters and its staff in the Congo and with the Congo Government.
The project has obtained a copy of A Spectator in the Congo – Memories from the Diary of an Onlooker at the Violent Birth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo by the late Winifred Tickner. This was written as a book but apparently was not published. Mrs. Tickner was the wife of F. Tickner, U.N. Representative in Kasai in 1961. Her account records the problems of domestic life in the disturbed conditions which prevailed.
Among papers of the later D.B.H. Vickers, was one by Major M.G. Abhyankar Curing the Open Wound – a survey of the U.N. operations in the Congo. This describes the U.N. military operations. The author’s role is not specified. Technical Assistance
U.N. was responsible for giving technical assistance in areas in which there were no competent specialized agencies. For this purpose, a Technical Assistance Administration (UNTAA) was set up, later to become the Office of Technical Co-operation (OTC). Eventually UNIDO hived off to Vienna taking with it responsibility for assistance in industry.
*J.S.D. Dey (1960-64) was an Expert in Management Accounting in Egypt. Subsequently he transferred to ILO, which took over responsibility for advice on management. He applied to join U.N. after reading an inspiring article about U.N. technical assistance in the Readers Digest. He found the briefing given by UNTAA in Geneva superficial by contrast with that given later by ILO. One of his colleagues as an expert in Egypt spoke no Arabic, English or French and the Egyptian government vetoed the extension of the contract of another colleague. The results of the project were disappointing except for the Fellowships element, but even in this a number of the fellows on returning left the project to work for U.N. agencies elsewhere or in the private sector.
W. Wood (1970-81) served as an expert in Public Administration in the Dominican Republic, India, Iran, Colombia and Project Manager in Liberia. He contributed an account of the Liberian project which was suspended after a coup d’etat. Economic Commission for Africa (ECA)
D.W.R. Hill (1968-79) came from the Colonial Service to become Regional Adviser in Economic Surveys. He considered that among obstacles to efficient work were the recruitment of staff for political rather than professional qualifications; also, the extreme difficulty of getting rid of incompetent staff and poor clerical support. He managed to develop a useful series of economic data, but lack of reliable national data led to late recognition of the serious food situation in the Seventies. Economic Commission for Europe (ECE)
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B.N. Davies (1948-78) came from the Central Statistics Office of the U.K. Cabinet Office to be Senior Statistician and Director of the Statistical Division. The work was completely satisfying – professionally, personally and materially.
Sir Claus Moser, in a taped interview, discussed the work of the Conference of European Statisticians at ECE and of the U.N. Statistical Commission in New York. He found the former a particularly effective body of professionals, well supported by the Secretariat and rather little affected by political controversy.
C.T. Saunders (1965-73) worked in the Economic Research Division. He too found his work satisfying. ECE was responsible for many useful agreements and standards. Some problems arose from the different methods of work of the international staff, but the Commission had a useful educational function in this respect. He had great difficulty in obtaining support from Whitehall in finding U.K. candidates for ECE posts. Social Affairs
P. Kuenstler (1956-79) gives an account of his activities in Community Development and Youth Work in which social affairs is seen as something of a poor relation in the U.N. system. Peacekeeping
In the U.N. Force in Cyprus, the chief of Staff was usually British. The project holds the transcript and tape of an interview with Lt.-Gen. Sir James Wilson who served in this capacity 1964-1966 and as Acting Force Commander. Sir James has also donated copies of chapters of his unpublished memoirs regarding his U.N. experience as well as of lectures on the subject. He found no conflict of loyalties between his responsibilities to U.N. and to the U.K. Government. The mandate of UNFICYP and the support from U.N. Headquarters served its purpose well and the support and understanding from U.N. Headquarters were excellent. He also discusses the diplomatic aspects of his role.
Field Marshall Lord Carver was Chief of Staff of UNFICYP in 1954, after previously commanding the British Peacekeeping Forces. He has contributed copies of several unpublished lectures on the subject. He has also written about this experience in his autobiography Out of Step.
Brigadier M. Harbottle was Chief of Staff of UNFICYP in 1966-68). Subsequently he devoted most of his time to studying and writing about international peacekeeping. The project has copies of some of his papers but it is his intention eventually to present all of them to the Bodleian Library.
General Sir Frank Kitson who was Chief of Staff of UNFICUYP (1967-8) has drawn the project’s attention to relevant chapters in his books Low Intensity Operations and Bunch of Five.
General Sir Robert Pascoe contributes a detailed account of a clash between Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot forces in which he was involved as a UNFICYP Company commander in 1967. Joint Inspection Unit
M.E. Allen (1978-84) in a transcribed taped interview described his experience as a JIU Inspector after retirement from the Foreign Office. Although the Inspectors were instructed by the General Assembly, some governments (not the U.K.) exercised pressure on their
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nationals. The JIU’s reports tended to become gradually less effective and the U.K. Government made no attempt to replace him when he retired. U.K. Government Representatives at U.N.
Several interesting impressions have been received from retired officials who represented the U.K. government at the U.N. in New York and Geneva.
Sir Donald Maitland was U.K. Permanent Representative in New York (1973-4). In a transcribed interview he discusses the Yom Kippur War and world economic crisis which arose from the increase in oil prices. He also considers the relative advantages of having a professional diplomat or politician in the post. He subsequently served as U.K. Representative at the EEC where he felt that “we were all on the same side”, whereas in New York situations were often confrontational, with the valuable exception of the monthly informal lunches of the Security Council.
Sir Crispin Tickell who was U.K Permanent Representative to U.N. (1987-90) has contributed copies of lectures which he gave at the time on the Role of the Security Council, among other questions.
Sir James Bottomley was U.K. Permanent Representative in Geneva (1976-78). In a letter to the project he recollects this as a period when members of the EEC were feeling their way towards common policies. He describes how because in the Geneva agencies, except ILO, decisions were reached by consensus, the serious bargaining used to take place on the final night of the session.
P. Carter who was Senior U.K. Representative in Geneva (1961-63) has contributed a brief note.
S. Golt , who was Deputy Secretary in the Board of Trade, contributes a note on the Brandt Report written in 1970.
Sir Bernard Ledwidge, in a transcribed interview, cites an impression of how U.N. Technical Assistance operations in Afghanistan appeared to the British Embassy in 1952-6. He is critical of the quality of the early experts, except in the health field, but it improved towards the end of his stay.
The project has a record of an interview with Ben Whitaker regarding his experience as a member of the U.N. Human Rights Sub-Committee (1975-78). The George Ivan Smith Papers
These comprise one of the broadest ranging items in the collection, relating to the political, public information and economic and social activities of U.N. George Ivan Smith was born in Australia but now lives in England. After setting up Radio Australia and working in the BBC, he U.N., set up its broadcasting services and became Director of External Affairs of its Department of Public Information. He worked closely with Hammarskjold who he accompanied on a number of missions. He was twice Director of the U.N. Information Centre in London, served in the Congo, and set up the UNDP offices in East and Central Africa where he was simultaneously Personal Representative of the Secretary General. His papers include correspondence with many political and public figures in Britain and Africa and elsewhere. Arrangements are being made for them to be donated to the Bodleian at a later date. Anti-Slavery Society
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Col. J.R. Montgomery, who was Secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society 0 has contributed an account of his role behind the scenes at debates of ECOSOC, bringing to light current instances of slavery, and also recollections of missions to investigate slavery.
United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) and International Relief Organization (IRO)
It has been difficult to contact former officials of UNRRA because most of its work terminated in 1947. Its operations are of particular interest as they were the earliest to be undertaken by UN and many of its officials went on to serve in other UN agencies, carrying the UNRRA tradition and practices with them. British nationals were somewhat favoured in the hasty recruitment process because UNRRA’s European office was in London. A number of officials employed in the displaced persons side of UNRRA’s work were transferred to IRO in 1947.
*Sir Robert Jackson, who was Senior Deputy Director General, describes the shake-out in 1945 of officials who had been recruited from whoever was available during the war, and Churchill’s consequent indignation at the dismissal of his protégés. He sees UNRRA’s operations as a considerable success, inadequately recorded. He reminisces on the style of Governor Lehmann and Mayor La Guardia as successive Directors General; his many anecdotes include the circumstances of the dismissal of General Morgan in Germany.
Dame Iris Murdoch in a transcribed taped interview describes her work with displaced persons in Austria (1945-46). She gives a favourable impression of UNRRA’s operations and staff. *J.R. Symonds, who worked in 1946-47 first in camps in the American zone of Austria and then as the UNRRA Representative in the supply operation in the Russian zone, is somewhat more critical.
Ms. Joan Luckett describes in detail the organization of UNRRA camps in Germany. She later served with ICAO and FAO. Dr. A.E. Brown recollects his astonishment at being appointed as the Chief Medical officer of UNRRA’s mission in Hungary at the age of 28. this led into a long career with WHO.
Ms. T.B. Callow-Miles served with UNRRA (1945-6) in Germany and Austria and subsequently with IRO until 1950. she provides a vivid account of the improvisations of, and heavy responsibilities in, the early days of the D.P. programme in Germany.
D.C. Newton, a Canadian, has sent an account of setting up the UNRRA displaced persons operation in Austria in 1945, based on letters written at the time. He has promised to contribute copies of further episodes in his U.N. career.
United Nations Development Programmer (UNDP) and its Predecessors – U.N. Technical Assistance Board (TAB) and U.N. Special Fund (S.F.) *A.C. Gilpin served with TAB (1957-60) and with its successor, UNDP (1965-74). His account of his experiences as UNDP Regional Representative in Southern Africa 1965-74 (about 150 pages) is largely based on letters written at the time. It covers not only the regular activities of UNDP, but political aspects, with a note on some Zambian personalities. Other parts of his contribution are described under “United Nations”, and “Congo”. As a general reflection he considers himself “extremely lucky to have been in at the early stages, when idealism was rampant – of course it still exists but rather less rampant – and before administrative bureaucracy inevitably developed”.
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*J.R. Symonds served with UNTAB (1950-65) and with UNDP (1972-79) in New York, as Representative in Europe (Geneva), as Resident Representative in Ceylon, Yugoslavia, Greece and Tunisia, and in short postings in Africa. His contribution contains chapters on each assignment and some unpublished reports. His general impression is that the work of a Resident Representative was more rewarding in the early days, when he had a small staff but represented most of the U.N. agencies, than in the 70’s when the staff had greatly expanded and when several U.N. agencies had their own country Representatives. He deplores the trend by which a number of Resident Representatives came to see themselves as “Excellencies”, assimilated to the Diplomatic Corps, a characteristic which is also commented upon unfavourably in several contributions from former Technical Assistance Experts.
T.M. Unwin (1964-83) came from the Colonial Service to serve as Assistant, Deputy and Resident Representative in Malawi, Turkey, the Philippines and Papua-New Guinea. His last three years were on secondment as UNHCR Representative in Uganda. In a letter, he observes that where – as in Africa – there was not a viable civil Service, technical assistance tended to be a waste of time. He records UNDP and the U.N, as once having had excellent services; in later years the level fell through infusions of ex-Ministers and others whose main concern was their own careers.
Ms. A. MacMillan (1956-59) served as Secretary in the UNTAB office in Iran and gives brief impressions of three successive Resident Representatives, each of whose different styles she admired.
A letter from an American national, Myer Cohen, Deputy Administrator of UNDP, very briefly describes his distinguished UNRRA and UNDP career.
Ms. P. Guillebaud (1953-86) served mainly as a Project Officer at UNDP Headquarters and also as Deputy Resident Representative in Angola. She contributes a brief note on the latter experience.
A copy has been received of an account, published in India, of the experience of an Indian national, Sudhir Sen, who worked at Headquarters for UNTAB and then as its Resident Representative in Ghana and Yugoslavia. He also served as Deputy Administrator of the U.N. Temporary Executive Authority in West Irian. His greatest burden was his “bureaucratic masters with hardened arteries and closed minds”. At headquarters “progress was measured in terms of dollars spent, not results achieved”. In spite of this he describes a number of successful initiatives.
*Sir Robert Jackson, in a transcribed interview, discusses the Capacity Study which he conducted for UNDP
International Labour Organization (ILO) The careers of British officials of ILO were affected by two special factors. It is a tripartite organization of governments, employers and workers, and it has a continuous history going back to 1919. Another characteristic was that whereas in most other U.N. agencies it was unusual for a staff member without higher education to be promoted from the General Service to the Professional Grade, this was not uncommon in ILO. It would appear that resignations from ILO were less frequent than in some other U.N. agencies.
The project has acquired in the papers of the late D.B.H. Vickers, the typescript – undated – of a book by C.W. Jenks, at the time Assistant Director-General of ILO, International
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Organizations in the conflict of Laws. Enquiries made to ILO seem to indicate that this is unpublished.
W. Farr (1957-82) who worked at Headquarters mainly in the Personnel Department, of which he became Chief, contributes a particularly informative paper. He points out that ILO was the only U.N. organization which recruited its staff by competition. The calibre of the staff was very high when he joined ILO, but became diluted with the great expansion of the technical assistance programme. He considers that ILO legislation has immeasurably improved the lot of workers in the developed world. Technical assistance was more successful in Asia than in Latin America and Africa, partly because of the large number of military regimes in those regions.
When he first joined ILO, about 90% of international staff acted as true international civil servants. By the time he left, the percentage was about 70%. The core of the Secretariat remained cohesive and dedicated, with some appointments being made at the periphery under political pressure. Despite the frustrations, the writer records his career as very satisfactory.
V.T. Chivers (1954-88) rose from the position of Clerk (G.3) to Secretary of the Staff Insurance Fund (P.5). He served mainly at Headquarters in Geneva, but was for several years in New York and Bangkok. His paper of 59 pages is called A Career in Administration in the ILO. He reflects critically on the lack of decentralisation of decision from Geneva, the lack of financial incentive to work outside of Headquarters, and the poor career prospects of local staff in the field. He also comments on the competition between U.N. agencies for projects. Despite these criticisms he enjoyed his career and felt that in ILO personal qualities and hard work counted for much more than academic qualifications.
W.C. Churchward (1963-78) served as an Expert on vocational Training and as Project Manager in African countries and in Kuwait. He found this work “very productive and worthwhile...99% of my experts were first class and the officials I deal with highly supportive.”
P.P. Colborne (1966-81), an Industrial Training Expert, has provided brief descriptions of missions in Thailand, Malaysia, Liberia and Bangladesh, all of which he considered successful.
*J.S.D. Day (1960-88) (see also under United Nations) worked in the Management Development Branch at ILO Headquarters and also carried out missions in South Korea and Turkey which were successful because of the enthusiasm and diligence of the counterparts. After retirement, he carried out further short assignments on contact. Reflecting on Technical Co-operation, he comments on the unfortunate results of the poaching of key local staff to work at attractive salaries in international organizations, as well as on lack of follow-up after termination of projects. He regards the productivity of ILO staff as having decreased because of the recruitment of unqualified or unsuitable staff for geographical reasons or in response to pressure from national officials to employ their friends and relations. There was over-staffing and virtually no assessment of performance.
H. Dunning (1966-77) came to ILO from the T.U.C. as Chief of the Workers Relations Branch which he regarded as one of the most interesting posts in the U.N. system. He considered that the staff of ILO were by and large devoted to their organization, and competent. There was, however, a tendency to waste resources on unnecessary travel and unmerited promotion, and on an enormous output of documents.
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G.R. Lunt was an ILO Adviser in Management Training (1960-78) in Poland, India, Bulgaria and Cyprus, and also worked for two years for UNESCO. Of seven projects on which he worked only two were successful. He criticizes the planning and execution of Technical Assistance projects and the poor preparation and briefing of experts. Looking back, however, he found the work “most rewarding”.
B. Loveridge (1952-75) served as an Expert in Co-operatives and Project Manager in Asia, the Middle East, Africa and the Caribbean. He criticizes lack of continuity in projects and considers that there ought to have been more planners in the UNDP offices, which should also have made more use of local nationals as professional staff.
L. Pickett (1963-87) was another Co-operative specialist who served as Expert, Regional Adviser in Africa and the Middle East, and later at Headquarters. He found the attitude of the Third World to “us ex-colonialists surprisingly positive and sympathetic”. He regarded his work, visiting and working in 60 countries “with great satisfaction” except for the anxiety caused by spending 15 years on successive one year contracts. He makes some detailed criticisms of technical co-operation.
D.R. Stuart-Williams (1972-80) was an Expert and Project Manager in the field of Social Studies; he served in 7 duty stations, covering 16 countries. He makes a number of criticisms of technical assistance programmes, including poor procedures for selection of Project Managers and vested interests, such as excessive efforts of UN agencies to obtain any kind of technical assistance in order to earn overhead costs from UNDP.
Food and Agricultural Organization Lord Boyd Orr, in his published autobiography gives an account of his election as FAO’s first Director-General and of his period of office. D.M. Lubbock (1946-51), who was his first Personal Assistant, amplifies this in his contribution to the project. He comments on the origins of FAO and on the hostility of the U.K. Government to Boyd-Orr’s proposals for a World Food Board.
Another early recruit was *O. Lloyd (1952-59) who describes how he was peremptorily taken out of the Colonial Office by the Deputy Director General of FAO, Sir Herbert Broadley, who needed a Whitehall trained assistant. He remembers the Director General, B.R. Sen, as a brilliant administrator, fearless and sometimes ruthless; and his Deputy, Sir Herbert Broadley, as a superb draftsman. The Director General’s office was so busy that all got on well together.
Later contributions come both from those who served at Headquarters and those who were in the field. Morale seems generally to have been higher in the field than at Headquarters.
R.A. Bishop (1952-77) served as an Economist at Headquarters and as FAO Country Representative in Turkey. He observes that FAO did not recruit the best available people and suggests that recruitment should be undertaken by competition, except for a limited number of appointees at the Director General’s discretion; the latter would depart at the end of his mandate. R.A. Bishop took early retirement with feelings of disappointment and frustration.
Another long-serving official, Mrs. H.V. Klein Innace (1951-84), was a Statistician and Commodity Specialist. At the beginning (though FAO was known when it moved from Washington to Rome as the “Funny American Organization”) her colleagues were mostly young, idealistic and hardworking; the B.R. Sen era was one of expansion and job satisfaction. Afterwards staff morale suffered because salaries were no longer attractive and the Organization became more politicized. She suggests that FAO was more effective when
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its work was mainly in information, analysis and technical assistance rather than when, later, it tried to become a development agency.
K.E. Snelson (1964-83) was an Irrigation Officer in the FAO-World Bank Co-operative Program in Rome which helped Governments to identify projects. This was subject to fewer bureaucratic and financial restraints than FAO’s other work, but being constantly on mission was stressful and eventually affected his health.
Another Irrigation engineer based at FAO Headquarters, A. Zagni (1984-87) found the work most rewarding professionally but the uncertainty of tenure made it unsuitable for someone in his fifties.
In the Field, B.G. Goodier (1964-76) served as an Expert and Project Manager of the Land and Water Use Division in Venezuela, Peru and Indonesia. He criticizes the failure of FAO to put pressure on its personnel in Latin America to learn Spanish and the World Bank for recruiting key people in developing countries to posts in Washington, to the detriment of their countries’ progress. In Indonesia, he found the Government confused by so many offers of aid from various sources. His assessment of results is mixed, but he made many permanent international friendships.
K. Meecham (1967-84) served as a Fisheries Officer and Project Manager in Africa and Asia. He considered that staff training, particularly of Project Managers, was inadequate. He suggests the need for more decentralization and follow-up. Despite some disappointments, he found the work extremely satisfying.
Another Expert who describes his career as most satisfactory is E. Knew (1959-72) who worked both for FAO and UNIDO as a Hides and Skins Specialist in Sudan (where he had excellent counterparts) and Fiji.
A.C. Firth (1965-78) served as a Project Manager and Forestry Expert in Latin America and Fiji after being a member of the British Administration in Belize. His wife was able to work as a nurse in some countries but prohibited from doing so in others. He comments on the anxieties resulting from uncertainty as to renewal of contracts and the “ritual” of the stream of consultants who visited projects.
J.W.Davis (1958-72) worked as a Soils Chemist in Iran, Nigeria, Tanzania and Thailand. In a paper on “Life in the Field with FAO”, he dwells on the element of change in this kind of career, whose continuation always depended on whether there happened to be another post available at the end of each contract. His recollections were of helpful and considerate support from Rome. The paper, and an Appendix of correspondence, gives a useful picture of the work and life of an FAO Expert. In conclusion, he considers that he benefited greatly from the experience and that the work was financially “vastly rewarding”. The results were mixed – more successful in training counterparts in Thailand and Northern Nigeria than in Iran and Tanzania. Finally “all U.N. people I met have worked with enthusiasm and a sort of missionary zeal.”
A. Seager (1960-63) worked as Agricultural Adviser for both FAO and the World Bank after the termination of his career in the U.K. Colonial Service. He criticizes U.N. Agencies for “reinventing the wheel” and paying inadequate attention both to previous studies and to the reasons for the practices of local cultivators.
Ms. Sheila Cassidy after four years with WHO moved to Rome where she worked from 1955—86 with FAO, except for 3 years with WFP. She started as a secretary and ended as a P.2,
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mostly in Disaster Relief. She considered that the achievements of U.N. and FAO in Bangladesh and in Africa were inadequately recognized by the media and that the great majority of FAO personnel were devoted to their jobs. A weakness was the failure of officers (not secretaries) to learn languages.
T. Alun Jones has provided a memoir which covers a colonial and overseas business career before describing his work with the FAO – World Bank Co-operative Programme as an Agricultural Adviser. Its field teams “displayed a tremendous sense of purpose” and the work was the most satisfactory of his career. He criticizes the Bank’s preference for large project loans which were beyond the capacity of some governments to absorb.
The project has obtained a copy of the privately published Selected Writings of Karl Olsen, an American who studied at Cambridge and married a British national. For some 30 years he was the key figure in the FAO’s technical assistance programme and guide to the hundreds of experts who were employed by FAO.
An essay has been received on the International Civil Service by the late Mrs. Jean Fairley Orbaneja, who was for many years Budget Officer at FAO Headquarters.
Some reflections on FAO have been received from two former officials who represented the U.K. Government
A.J. Peckham was U.K. Representative to FAO in Rome (1977-80). He comments on the unfortunate consequences of bad relations between FAO and WFP, the use of patronage and the declining role of British staff – despite all of which some departments continued to do good work. Representation of the U.K. in WFP and IFAD, was more agreeable than that in FAO.
*W.A.C. Matthieson was Under Secretary in charge of the International Division of the Ministry of Overseas Development and Deputy Secretary (1964-75). He attended meetings of the FAO Council and General Conference where he had a good relationship with the “imperious” Dr. B.R.Sen. He more or less took charge of the election campaign of Sen’s successor, Boerma and gives an inside story of the latter’s election, as well as that of his successor Dr. Saouma.
D.F. Howson (1980-86) was an expert in agricultural machinery, based in India, Thailand and Ethiopia. His contribution deals mainly with problems of persuading agriculturalists to adopt new methods. In India and Thailand the work was successful. In Ethiopia there was poor support from the government, and the expert terminated his contract because the living conditions made it impossible for his wife to join him. He suggests that FAO’s motto should be “Fiat papyrus” or “The pen is mightier than the ploughshare”.
A.S.M. Hall (1963-8) came to FAO from the Colonial Service in Tanzania.. He served in FAO as marketing adviser in Mauritius, Project Manager in Iran and at Headquarters. In a particularly reflective contribution he suggests that help in the cultural assimilation of unfamiliar techniques may be more important than actual technical assistance. He considers that the changes which followed the Jackson Capacity Study stifled professional initiatives in FAO.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization Several contributions have referred with approval to the book by Richard Hoggart, Assistant Director-General (1970-75) An Idea and Its Servants; this supports Unesco’s objectives, but criticizes its management. One contributor comments that Sir Julian Huxley, Unesco’s first
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Director General, in his autobiography describes an unfortunate precedent set for the method of staff appointments.
A brief account of the early period at Unesco Headquarters comes from H.L. Elvin who was Director of the Education Department (1950-56); he discusses the relative arguments for concentration or spreading around of Unesco’s resources and contrasts the role of a senior international official with that of a national civil servant. He considers that the long sessions of the Conference and Executive Board hampered the work, and that there was too little devolution of responsibility. Nevertheless “the record is one in which those concerned can take some pride”.
A.J.A. Elliott (1952-80) who served in Paris and was also Chief of Mission in Ethiopia, has contributed a comprehensive account of 22 pages on his career written as much for his family as for the project. This seems a deterioration in the Organization from the time when members of the Executive Board came to speak for governments instead of as individuals. This decline was accentuated by the McCarthy witchhunt of 1954 and later by an increasing politicization. The note also discusses the broader political problems of the Specialized Agencies during the Cold War.
C.T. Crellin, who was with Unesco from 1968-85, mostly in Asia, comments on some general problems. He observes that Unesco officials were often influenced by the governments of their countries because they had less security of tenure than those of most other U.N. Agencies. He also points out that Unesco, unlike UNICEF, did not recruit young officials with a view to developing their careers. Over a period of 20 years Unesco salaries became less attractive. Personal interest is described as a negative element in career development.
A.N. Gillett has contributed three boxes of letters, diaries and other materials from his career in Teacher Training in the Philippines, Thailand and Iran (1954-65).
P. Mawhood contributes an account of the Unesco African Training and Research Centre (CAFRAD) in Tangier, where he was an Expert and Deputy Director (1964-67).
F.T. Russell, whose materials are in Rhodes House, Oxford, worked for both U.N. and Unesco as a Statistical Expert in Southern Africa and the Caribbean. He makes interesting comparisons between this experience and his previous work in the Colonial Service.
C.M. Townsend worked for Unesco (1961-81) as an Education Specialist in Arab States and at Headquarters. He sees African aspirations and conflict over geographical distribution of posts as responsible for the “debacle” when the USA and UK withdrew. In spite of the difficulties, he “always felt privileged to serve the Organisation”. He quotes with approval Richard Hoggart’s description of the role of Unesco in reminding the rest of the U.N. system of the social implications of development programmes.
E.K. Townsend Coles served as Adult Education Specialist in Greece, Afghanistan, Botswana and at Headquarters (1971-82). He considered that there was a decline in professional calibre at Headquarters because of use of short-term contracts, lack of rotation between Headquarters and the Field and politicization of appointments. His most satisfactory experience was as a UNESCOPAS official, directly responsible to the Botswana Governments.
C. Newbury has contributed copies of reports written in 1959 whilst a Research Officer in Social Sciences at Headquarters.
W.E.F. Ward describes his experience as a U.K. Government Representative in the early days of Unesco (1945-66), when he had the task of expounding and defending Britain’s colonial
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education policies, which he also undertook in the U.N. Trusteeship Council. This contribution is part of a wider account of his career, deposited in Rhodes House.
*W.A.C. Matthieson (taped and transcribed) gives an account of representing the U.K. Overseas Development Ministry at the Unesco General Conference. He comments both on Unesco programmes and on the style of René Maheu as Director General and that of Malcolm Adiseshia as Deputy Director General.
W.H. Dodd, who was a member of the Unesco Executive Board (1983-5), has contributed 3 boxes of papers, mainly referring to the U.K.’s withdrawal from the Organisation.
L.H. Palmier worked at the Unesco Research Centre for Social and Economic Development in Southern Asia (Delhi) (1962-5) and at the U.N. Research Institute for Social Development in Geneva (1966-7). His contribution is embargoed.
World Health Organization (WHO) WHO recruited many British nationals, particularly those with tropical experience. The project has, however, received fewer contributions from them than from some other large agencies, partly because an association of former officials of WHO was only in the course of formation at the time when circulars were sent out and a mailing list was not therefore available.
A substantial contribution of broad interest has been received from *Dr. A.F. Brown who was Health Adviser and WHO Representative in Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Ethiopia, and also served in the Congo and in the WHO Regional Office in Alexandria. Copies are included of many of his letters describing not only his professional work but the political and social background. He has also written “vignettes” – descriptions, often entertaining, of particular episodes.
Dr J. Galea served between 1962 in African and Asian countries, mostly as Senior Public Health Administrator and WHO Country Representative. He discusses the merits and disadvantages of the delegation of authority in WHO to its regional offices. Whilst proud of WHO’s achievements, he makes constructive criticisms of its procedures. WHO’s influence in guiding progress in the health sector is seen as decreasing.
Another contribution which describes a field career in several countries is that of E.C.C. Wren (1958-69) who took part in malaria eradication campaigns in Zanzibar, Liberia, Southern Rhodesia, Colombia and Surinam. In 5 cassettes, which have not been transcribed, he comments on his experiences in each country and derives from it both particular and general conclusions.
Ms. E.E. Bennett, Public Health Nurse, has contributed reports on her work in Western Samoa and India and a lighter account of incidents in Afghanistan.
Dr. A.R. Mills who served with WHO (1969-77) as Regional Adviser in Medical Education and WHO Representative in Nepal, contributes a brief note. He found his work interesting and rewarding but considered that communications between field workers and heads of divisions could be improved.
J.R. Cullen describes the total failure of a WHO malaria research team in the Belgian Congo in 1956 because of lack of co-operation from the government
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Ms. V.M. Fearne’s moving autobiography relates her family’s dismay and opposition when she left a secure clerical post in the Bank of England to train as an Occupational therapist and how her work with WHO in Iran, Ceylon and Burma gave her the self-confidence which she had lacked.
Dr. H.B.L. Russell (1956-69) joined WHO after serving with the U.K. Overseas Medical Service in Geneva. He made an epidemiological survey in Ethiopia, was Public Health Adviser in the WHO E. Mediterranean and S.E. Asia Regional Offices and was WHO liaison officer with ECA. He did not find himself useful in the last post and resigned to teach at Edinburgh University. Despite some waste of money in supporting projects which governments failed to continue, he considered WHO to be one of the most successful U.N. agencies.
Two Chief Medical Officers of the U.K. Government who each served on the WHO Executive Board and represented the U.K. in the World Health Assembly, have contributed detailed impressions of WHO.
Sir George Godber was a member of the WHO Executive Board and U.K. Representative at the World Health Assembly between 1960 and 1973. A taped interview with him has been transcribed. The interview dealt with some of the political questions which arose, as well as substantive questions such as malaria eradication, family planning, and smoking. There are comments on the style of Dr. Candau and Dr. Mahler – both seen as great men – and on the consequences of WHO’s decentralised structure.
Sir John Reid was a member of the WHO Executive Board (1973-87), of which he became Chairman, as well as being U.K. Representative at the World Health Assembly. In a note written on this experience and in a taped and transcribed interview, he covers many of the same questions as his predecessor, Sir George Godber, over a later period. He sees WHO as having moved from being a somewhat paternalistic donor type of organization into being an international health co-operative.
The World Bank The World Bank, like the International Monetary Fund, although a Specialized Agency was somewhat aloof from the U.N. system. It did not adopt the U.N. salary scales or participate in the Joint Staff Pension Fund; there were no geographical quotas for employment of staff and the only working language was English. The British benefited, and the Bank drew considerably on British colonial experience. In addition to the contributions summarized below, the Bodleian Library holds the papers of W.D. Clark who was Director of Public Information and Vice President of the Bank.
Personal reflections are contributed by D.C. Pickering (1967-89) who came from the Colonial Service to work in the Agriculture Department in Washington and in the Africa region. After a year, his dislike of life in Washington led to his resignation but he rejoined after a few years in England. He regards Black and MacNamara as the most effective of the Ban’s Presidents, though MacNamara’s reorganization led to tensions between central projects staff and those responsible for lending operations. In agriculture, the Bank was inclined to have too much faith in the application of new technology without due consideration for local traditions. Expansion led to a decline in communication between Bank staff and Executive Directors; also to differences of approach between “grizzled ex-Colonials” and “ young Turks” – economists recruited under the Young Professionals scheme. The impact of the drastic reorganization of 1988, on Bank staff, is described as an exercise acceptable to Americans, disconcerting for Europeans and traumatic for Asians. Despite frustrations,the writer’s career is summarized as interesting, challenging, and rewarding.
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H.S. Thriscutt (1977-83) worked as a Senior Highway Engineer for the Bank in South Asia. He had previously been a member of the Colonial Service and a lecturer and a partner in firms of consulting engineers. He regards as a mixed blessing the replacement of ex-Colonials in the Bank by young professional economists. The latter brought in new ideas, but lacked experience of working in the developing world. Though he had worked in many countries, he and his family found social interaction in Washington more difficult than anywhere else. He enjoyed his work and felt that some useful things were accomplished. Much of his time was spent on mission and he concludes “to be an effective Bank staff member one does not need to be a genius: one needs only to be professionally competent, to be unfrustratable and to have the digestive system of a Yak”. It was essential to guard against the self-importance resulting from being buttered up by borrowers. He has presented the project with a photo album of a rural road project in India.
S. Please (1963-1983) served as an Economist and Regional Director. He has published essays on the Bank as The Hobbled Giant (1984). He has contributed copies of unpublished papers and of a transcript of an interview made for an oral history of the Bank. These are mostly concerned with economic and fiscal policy.
A Seager (1973-85) had previously worked in the Colonial Service and in FAO. He criticizes the Bank for not studying previous records and reports of the Colonial era when initiating work in newly-independent countries; also for ailing to give attention to the reasons for traditional agricultural practices.
J. Spencer (1967-78) served as a Financial Analyst and made appraisal reports in the transport sector. He observes and deplores the fact that in Asia and Africa, World Bank loans indirectly enabled governments to spend a disproportionate amount of their resources on armaments, to the benefit of Western industry. He considers that World Bank staff were handsomely paid.
A memoir of Sir Herbert Stewart, C.I.M. is contributed by Lady Stewart, his widow. Sir Herbert had been Agricultural Commissioner to the Government of India and headed Bank missions to several countries between 1955-62. Lady Stewart worked at the Bank before her marriage.
Sir Alec Cairncross (1955-6) has contributed an account of the establishment by the Bank of its Economic Development Institute, of which he was the first Director. The object was to train senior administrators from developing countries. The teething troubles of the Institute are frankly described as well as its success.
L.J.C. Evans (1961-73) worked in the Agricultural Department of which eventually he became head. He has contributed the text of a lecture on 40 Years of Development Aid (1988), describing the Bank’s activities in the agricultural field. Successes were higher in the sixties and early seventies than later, when activities were perhaps too rapidly extended in Africa.
G.S. Wyatt (1965-76) was Managing Director of the East African Power and Lighting Co. before joining the Bank in the Public Utilities Department and later in the Projects Department. He found the environment and debates delightfully stimulating though he was not in agreement with MacNamara’s methods of management. Most people in the Bank had a sense of mission, but morale and efficiency plummeted under later Presidents.
Ms. B. Donaghy (1957-77) worked in Records Management and “the Bank was small but had a tremendous air of dedication – it was a truly exciting place to work.” This was not the impression of two other respondents, both engineers, who wish to remain unidentified. The
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first worked in Washington and in the field in the seventies and eighties. He criticizes the Bank for failing to select as staff concerned with projects officials who were good managers of people. The Bank’s Young Professional scheme was defective in this respect. The Bank’s annual performance review is considered unrealistic for project personnel. Salaries did not keep up with European levels. The reorganization of 1987 is seen as having a disastrous effect on morale. The writer adds some fascinating comments on national characteristics.
Another engineer who wishes not to be identified and who had a long career with the Bank, found it professionally rewarding before the reorganization of 1987. This led to demoralization of senior technical officers and domination by young economists without either project experience or understanding of the developing world.
J.A. Paint (1986-89) was an Alternative Executive Director for the U.K. He contributes a note on the World Bank reorganization of 1987. The implementation method is seen as a disaster, but one from whose shocks the Bank rapidly recovered.
International Monetary Fund L. Alvis has contributed a copy of his Saudi Arabian diary, April 1978, which gives an amusing account of the background to his negotiations.
United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) S. Skoumal (1970-80) was a Senior Industrial Development Field Adviser (SIDFA) based in Pakistan and responsible for UNIDO work in several other countries. He found the UNIDO Secretariat difficult to work with because of bureaucratic obstructions, low efficiency and low morale due to insecurity of tenure. His subsequent experience in the limited role of a UNIDO expert was much more satisfying.
Dr. R.A. Khan (1093-82) worked as a Scientific Consultant for WHO in many countries and as Project Manager and Expert for UNIDO. He served in 15 countries in Africa, the Middle East and Far East. Most of the countries were apathetic towards the objectives of the projects, the exceptions being Cape Verde, Vietnam and Zambia. Whilst administrative support was usually adequate, the “lofty diplomatic stance” of a few UNDP Resident Representatives was unhelpful. Evaluation of results was rarely undertaken, though WHO did more on this than UNIDO.
E. Knew (1970-72), who previously served with FAO, was a UNIDO Adviser and Project Manager in Fiji on the development of a leather industry. His recommendations were rejected by as Minister of Indian origin because a few Hindu families might be affected by effluent. He believed that the project would have gone ahead had the Minister been an ethnic Fijian.
United Nations Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA) *J.R. Symonds gives an account of the negotiations which led to the establishment of UNFPA and attaches a copy of his report to the Secretary General of UN in 1968 on a proposed action role for U.N. in the population field. This is described more fully in the book which he wrote with Michael Carder on The United Nations and the Population Question (1973). He also comments briefly on a UNFPA mission to India in 1978 of which he was Rapporteur.
K.J.W. Lane (1972-85) served as UNFPA Representative in Bangkok, Tunisia and Morocco and undertook missions in many other countries. He comments on a deterioration in the quality of U.N. officials partly due to the inadequacy of Personnel Officers and also to the sense of impermanence on the part of British nationals. By comparison with the U.K. Civil Service, a serious
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flaw in U.N. practice was failure to minute decisions. Because of the lack of discipline and amount of “dead wood” in U.N. Agencies, he found an international career less satisfying than one in national government. He had previously been Chief Secretary in the Gambia.
International Atomic Energy Agency *O. Lloyd (1958-74) went to Vienna from FAO to set up IAEA’s Technical Assistance programme and remained for 16 years. He participates in all the Agency’s preliminary assistance missions in Africa and the Middle East. He reflects on political implications and aspects of IAEA’s work. He found great satisfaction in his association with the U.N. Technical Assistance Board at which he represented first FAO and then IAEA.
F.P.W. Winteringham (1969-8) worked with WHO as well as IAEA. He discusses the implications for international organizations of the Chernobyl explosion. In general he sees the need not so much for reforms of the U.N. system as for the education of those aspiring to national leadership regarding the disasters which are likely to occur without international co-operation.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) O.S. Knowles (1984-80) came to UNCTAD from the Kenya Government treasury Department and served as an Interregional Adviser with UNCTAD. He comments on political and administrative aspects of UNCTAD’s work. Access to his account is restricted. His broad experience included periods with the U.N. Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East, the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa, and the Economic Community of West Africa advising on trade questions. Among his general observations he concludes that U.N. advisers can only be useful if the government has an adequate administration, and that in inter-country projects there must be potential economic as well as political advantages to ensure success. He also comments on duplication and rivalry between agencies of the U.N. system.
J. Mark represented the U.K. Government at UNCTAD where he felt that the staff, though reasonably competent, did not altogether exhibit the characteristics of an International Civil Servant. He considered that the proliferation of international agencies, at the instance of Third World Governments, did not increase development and led to administrative complexity.
D. Williams has contributed a note written in 1972 on the Third UNCTAD Conference at which he represented the U.K. Government. He gives a detailed account of the British position and the reasons for it, and for differing from R. Prebisch’s dictum that “resolutions are the poetry of UNCTAD. They form its inspirations and express its aspirations”.
World Meteorological Organization (WMO) The late Sir Arthur Davies, who was Secretary General of WMO for 24 years, allowed the project to make a copy of his unpublished autobiography. This describes how, even during the Cold War, the World Weather Watch was developed with the joint assistance of the USA and USSR – a notable success for the functionalist approach to international co-operation. Sir Arthur’s U.K. Staff College training helped him to reshape WMO’s administration. The different style of Hammarsjkold, U Thant and Waldheim as Chairman of the Administrative Committee on Co-ordination (the “Cabinet” of Executive Heads of the U.N. system) is also discussed.
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) From ITU the project has two contributions – one from headquarters and one from the Field.
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D.J. Musk reflects on a career which lasted from 1946 to 1980 at ITU Headquarters in Geneva. Whilst working on the technical side. He was also chairman of the Staff Association. Later he was an Editor and a Personnel officer.
J. Wilmot has sent “Essays” on episodes as a background to technical assistance in Korea.
International Maritime Organization (IMO) Sir Colin Goad came from Whitehall to serve with IMCO (later IMO) from 1963-73 and was its Secretary General from 1968-73. He has written a note for the project, which has also interviewed him and transcribed the tape. IMCO is of special interest in being the only U.N. agency to be based in the U.K. Its relations with the U.K. government are described as “proper rather than cordial”. Sir Colin’s note traces the origins of IMO and the reasons for locating it in Britain; also its evolution from being a small body whose activities mainly consisted of arranging meetings of Experts into one which expanded into the Third World through Technical Assistance programmes. The loss of the Torrey Canyon and consequent popular and governmental concern about pollution is seen as “the making of IMCO”. Sir Colin also reflects on the problems of running an international Secretariat.
M.H. Higgins, who worked with IMCO 1946-49 and 1959-63, has contributed a copy of the record of the case which he brought in 1964 against the Secretary General of IMCO before the Administrative Tribunal for wrongful termination.
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) The late John Alexander-Sinclair’s widow has contributed a note by him on the setting up of the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees of which he was Executive Director in 1951-53. He also served with UNRRA, U.N. and FAO. Obituary notices are attached.
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) T.G. Davies (1949-80) served twice as UNICEF’s Representative in India, also covering neighbouring countries; in East and Southern Africa; in the U.N. Bangladesh operation; and at Headquarters. In taped accounts he discusses these assignments and gives an amusing account of how he was initially recruited in the bar of the Great Eastern Hotel in Calcutta with a letter stating that part of his salary would be withheld until the Indian government made a financial contribution to UNICEF. He compares the attitudes of UNDP and UNICEF to development and regards his UNICEF career as very satisfying.
J.M. Saunders has contributed copies of letters to his wife and other papers relating to the period when he was UNICEF Representative in Kampuchea in 1979-8 and was also the Head of the U.N. Team with the rank of Assistant Secretary-General. (Restricted)
United Nations Relief and Works Administration For Palestine Refugees in the Middle East (UNWRA) The project holds three boxes of the papers of the late *D.B.H. Vickers who worked for UNRWA and later became Legal Counsel of U.N. These consist mainly of reports and correspondence.
*C.M. Townsend was seconded from Unesco to UNRWA (1961-63). He comments briefly on a conflict of interests between Unesco and UNRWA.
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United Nations Institute of Training and Research (UNITAR) Dr. Davidson Nicol, who was Executive Director of UNITAR (1972-82), has contributed a paper on “Research and Training at the United Nations – a Decade of Experimentation and Détente”. This not only relates UNITAR’s achievements, but gives a candid account of the failure of initiatives which were opposed by governments or were sabotaged by vested interests of other U.N. agencies. Dr. Nicol is a national of Sierra Leone, resident in Britain.
*J.R. Symonds, who was UNITAR’s Representative in Europe (1969-71), describes the work which he undertook on the feasibility of a United Nations Staff College and the controversy regarding responsibility for its direction. A copy of the Feasibility Study is included.
PART III SOME REFLECTIONS The League of Nations Secretariat was dominated by the British and French in a careful balance. Thus the first Secretary General of the League, Sir Eric Drummond, was succeeded by his French Deputy, Joseph Avenol; whilst in ILO a British Deputy Director, Harold Butler succeeded the French Director, Albert Thomas. Compromises between the two national administrative systems had to be found. For example, in ILO the French suspicion of a central registry was overcome by giving the Director’s Chef de Cabinet the right to extract items from the incoming mail.1 The staff were bilingual. According to Butler “Letters in ILO were written in French when clarity was required; in English when we wished to appeal to sentiment or imagination”.2
The senior officials recruited to the League in 1919 seem to have been younger than those who joined U.N. in 1945-6, with the notable exception of Commander Robert Jackson in UNRRA. Butler and the two first British Directors in the League, Dame Rachel Crowdy and Sir Arthur Salter, were all still in their thirties. Drummond liked to delegate responsibility and Salter recollected that “We had
1 E. J. Phelan, Yes and Albert Thomas, London, 1936, p. 66
2 H. Butler, Never Glad Confident Morning Again, London, 1950, p. 172.
work which gave full scope for everything in us. It was the happiest time of my official life.1 Junior as well as senior British officials were on the whole fully stretched because the staff was small. The League officials were also comfortable, as Ms. Midwinter Vergin remembers in her contribution to the project.
After the departure of Drummond, the Secretariat became demoralized by the appointment in senior positions of Fascists and Nazis and by the decreasing effectiveness of the League. Some of the ablest British departed before the end.2 A number of them later joined the staff of the U.N. and specialized agencies. Some indeed had continued with ILO in Canada and with the Economic Section of the League in the USA throughout the second war.
Despite the appointment of British nationals as the first Directors General of FAO and Unesco, in the post-1945 U.N. system the British started as junior partners to the Americans. The new system was more Anglophone and less francophone than that of the League. The Americans, in whose educational system précis writing was seldom taught, found the British particularly useful as draughtsmen. The British Civil Service was generally admired and British nationals were appointed in senior personnel posts in many of the agencies. There was something of an Anglo-American mafia of former colleagues in UNRRA who came to hold the key administrative posts throughout the U.N. system.
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In the early days, New York was a less comfortable and convenient family station for the British than Geneva. “You exist, we live”, said a visitor from Geneva to one of the project’s respondents in New York. The USA was culturally absorptive. Some of the British were happy for themselves and their families to be absorbed. Others – particularly in the McCarthy period – sought transfer to Europe or even to the field.
Geneva, Paris and Rome, all within easy reach of Britain for holidays and schools, were popular posts. Secretaries were recruited by the European U.N. agencies through examinations in London. On the whole they appear to have been happier in Paris and Rome than in Geneva though there is insufficient evidence on this in the project material.
In the contributions received by the project, several themes can be discerned. One is that at the beginning, when international agencies were small, they were efficient, honest and friendly, but that as they expanded they became less competent and politicized partly because of the use of patronage. There is a tendency, however, to look back to the good old days, when everyone knew each other and before bureaucracy deadened the spirit, in most organizations which expand rapidly, whether national or international.
As for patronage, it could be recollected that this had been exercised in the favour of the British in the early days. Sir David Owen, for example, gave plentiful opportunities to U.K. nationals to commence rewarding careers in TAB/UNDP Field posts, which were not subject to geographical distribution. Throughout the U.N. system, more technical assistance experts were recruited from the U.K. than any other country in the 50s and 60s. It was not inequitable that later other nationalities
1 Lord Salter Memoirs of Public Servant, London, 1961, p. 205.
2 Ibid, p. 206 and J. Barros, Betrayal from Within, Yale, 1969.
should be favoured. Richard Hoggart has described “promotion sickness” as the most common cause of unhappiness in Unesco “driving staff members to bouts of frenetic marginal activities or long hours of simply staring over their desks, brooding over diplomatic privileges.1 Most of the project’s respondents, however, appear to have felt that since promotion depended more on geographical distribution than on merit, self-respect could be retained even if it did not take place.
A high proportion of contributors served in the field. Here a common theme is contempt for the ignorance and lack of intelligence of their superiors at headquarters. This is by no means peculiar to U.N. agencies. Similar attitudes can be found abundantly in the correspondence of colonial officials towards Whitehall, or military officers towards the general staff, and even of missionaries towards their head offices in Britain. In the U.N. agencies the feeling was usually mitigated if there were fairly frequent visits from headquarter to the field and a rotation of posts between headquarters and field staff. Most of the former colonial officials who joined the U.N. agencies enthusiastically embraced the new international loyalty, though they tended to be critical of over-staffing, of slow decision-making processes and “politicization”. An experience which helped them to adapt was that most had already served under African or Asian masters in the last stages of decolonisation. Another was that under British colonial administration an officer frequently changed jobs. What seems generally to emerge, despite frustrations, is thankfulness for the experience of a U.N. career when a number of their contemporaries who became redundant ended up as secretaries of golf clubs or in similar positions.
Replies to the questionnaires show that a high proportion of the British were recruited through direct contacts with U.N. agency secretariats. Some came in through influential networks of
39
professional institutions which were widely used by FAO and WHO, whilst U.N. and Unesco tended to circulate vacancy notices to governments, which presented pre-screened candidates for interview. Although in previous projects former senior officials of the League and U.N. systems have been interviewed in connection with studies of particular episodes, our exercise has been a pilot project in seeking to obtain the recollections of as many survivors as possible at all levels. Although the value of the material collected should be considerable to future researchers, it is much to be hoped that similar projects – perhaps with a different methodology – will develop in other countries, so that some of the issues and attitudes which emerge from the U.N. Career Records Project may be studied comparatively within an international framework. Replies to the questionnaires show that a high proportion of the British were recruited through direct contacts with U.N. agency secretariats. Some came in through influential networks of professional institutions which were widely used by FAO and WHO, whilst U.N. and Unesco tended to circulate vacancy notices to governments, which presented pre-screened candidates for interview. Although in previous projects former senior officials of the League and U.N. systems have been interviewed in connection with studies of particular episodes, our exercise has been a pilot project in seeking to obtain the recollections of as many survivors as possible at all levels. Although the value of the material collected should be considerable to future researchers, it is much to be hoped that similar projects – perhaps with a different methodology – will develop in other countries, so that some of the issues and attitudes which emerge from the U.N. Career Records Project may be studied comparatively within an international framework. 1 Richard Hoggart, An Idea and Its Servant – Unesco from Within, London, 1978, p. 126.
APPENDICES Appendix 1 Advisory Committee of the United Nations Career Records Project Chairman: Prof. Adam Roberts, Montague Burton Professor of
International Relations, University of Oxford and Fellow of Balliol College
Ms. Maggie Black Author of the official history of UNICEF. Mr. Alan Elliott BAFUNCS*, formerly UNESCO. Mr. Granville Fletcher BAFUNCS*, formerly United Nations. Dr. Erik Jensen Director, General Assembly Affairs, United Nations, New
York. Mr. M.C. Kaser Director, Institute of Russian, Soviet and E. European Studies,
University of Oxford, Fellow of St.Antony’s, and formerly with U.N. Economic Commission for Europe.
Ms. Helen Langley Dept. of Western MSS, Bodleian Library, Oxford Ms. Imogen Mollett (from June 1992). Chairman, BAFUNCS*, formerly United
Nations Mr. R.W. Neath BAFUNCS*, formerly United Nations. Dr. A. Shlaim Alastair Buchan Reader in International Relations, University of
Oxford, and Fellow of St. Antony’s. Sir Crispin Tickell Warden, Green College, Oxford. Formerly British Permanent
Representative to the United Nations, New York. Sir Brian Urquhart Formerly Under-Secretary-General, United Nations Mr. Graeme Warner Director, U.N. Information Centre, London. Hon. Director Richard Symonds, Senior Associate Member, St. Antony’s
College, formerly UNDP, UNRRA, UNITAR Secretary Ms. Diana Hartnell, formerly ILO, UNDP, UNHCR • British Association of Former United Nations Civil Servants
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Appendix 2 Part II Basic Information Questionnaire
Please complete and send to Richard Symonds, United Nations Career Records Project, St. Antony’s College, Oxford OX2 6JF Continue on further page if necessary. This information will be used collectively and individual information will not be disclosed without consent. 1. Name M F 2. Address and telephone number 3. U.N. agency(ies) with which respondent served 4. Date and place of birth 5. Nationality at birth Subsequent nationality if changed 6*. Names and professions of parents 7.* Name, nationality and profession of spouse(s). If spouse served with U.N. agencies, specify which 8. Number and age of children at beginning of U.N. services Number and age of children at end of U.N. service * Whilst these questions may be of interest to social historians, replies can be treated as optional.
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9. Education of respondent, including degrees, diplomas and main subjects studied at University, post-University and professional levels 10. Positions held or experience before, between and after periods of service with U.N. agencies, with approximate dates 11. (a) Positions held in U.N. agencies with grades and approximate dates (b) Approximate dates of entry, and resignation or retirement 12. Method of entry to U.N. agency(ies) e.g. proposed by government, recruited through a professional institution, personal contact with U.N. agency officials, direct application to agency, transfer from another agency 13. Reaons for leaving agency e.g. age, retirement, resignation, transfer to another U.N. agency, expiry of contract, for post in government, academic institution, or private sector
43
14. U.N. agency reports or publications to which respondent made an important contribution 15. Other publications (books and major reports,; articles need not be mentioned, unless of special significance) 16. Consultancies with any U.N. agencies (specify which) before or after U.N. career with subject and approximate dates 17. Any other significant information on career, e.g. consultancies undertaken for agencies other than U.N., cross-reference to WHO’s WHO or similar publications, honours and decorations, honorary degrees 18. Were you an officer or committee member of a Staff Association. Specify with approximate dates. 19. Will you be replying to Part I also?
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Appendix 3 Some Guidelines for Contributors Contributors are invited to write about their experiences and to give their reflections in whatever way and at whatever length seems best. The following points are not a questionnaire but an indication of some aspects which may be taken into consideration. Because the structure and nature of the Agencies of the U.N. system varied considerably, all of these will not be relevant in each case and other points may be important in particular cases. Examples and incidents (with approximate dates) from personal experience will be particularly valuable in the work of U.N. Agencies. Whilst replies should preferably be typed on A.4 paper, the project will accept handwritten replies. Materials such as diaries, reports, photographs etc. are acceptable in any form. Observations on how objectives of international agencies were set Did they emanate from governments, secretariat or from outside pressures? To what extent were they attained? Reasons for success or failure. Information on preparatory work in setting up U.N. agencies and on their early days may be of special interest; also on the evolution of their policies, programmes and structure. The role of the secretariat and the international official Relationships with government, NGOs and other bodies. How far did the secretariat function as “an international civil service”, and obstacles to this. National characteristics of staff members and delegates and their consequences. The composition and functioning of the secretariat (a) Methods of recruitment, and promotion; intervention of governments in this. Consequences of national and geographical quotas. Methods of assessment of performance. Technical competence of officials. Style of leadership of executive heads and senior officials. The impact of personalities. Staff training and morale. (b) Systems of contracts and salaries: Did these cause “dead wood” to accumulate, or, conversely, did unsatisfactory conditions of service prevent capable people from being recruited or retained? Policies of recruitment and promotion of women in professional posts. The organization of the secretariat, degree of centralization to departments, and divisions, and to regional and country offices. Was the structure efficient in terms of decision making? How far and in what ways were regional and country level offices used for political purposes by the executive head, e.g. to help him to be reappointed? Staff Associations. Interagency co-operation at headquarters, regional, country or project level or through ECOSOC or ACC. Effectiveness of and relations with TAB/SF/UNDP resident representatives. Co-operation, duplication and competition between international agencies. Relations with bilateral programmes and non-governmental organizations. Technical assistance and co-operation and economic and social aid. Observations on how programmes and projects originated and of successes and failures, with reasons for them. Selection and briefing of experts. Relationships with governments, including counterparts. Refugee, relief and rehabilitation work.
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Political work. This varies so much that a check list would not be appropriate; examples of successes and failures and the reasons for them will be particularly useful. Peacekeeping work, including Peacekeeping Forces. Research. What limitations were experienced due to lack of published information or co-operation of governments, pressure of time on drafting, intervention of national delegations or of other U.N. agency officials? Were the reports produced effective in fostering U.N. agency, governmental, or other actions? Public information. Whilst all agencies had full time information officers, many other officials also became involved in public information activities. How far were international agencies successful in obtaining recognition of the importance of their work and by what means? General reflections, e.g. (a) What reforms if any are needed in U.N. agencies? (b) For those who were employed in a U.N. agency, how satisfactory was this career? Examples of achievements, failures and frustrations; system of salaries and allowances; effect on families of life abroad; occupation or employment of spouses, education or separation from children; language factors; relations with local community or with national delegations or diplomatic missions.
PART 2 CATALOGUE OF UNCRP PAPERS IN THE BODLEIAN LIBRARY - Martin Jennings, 1995
Catalogue of the papers of the United
Nations Career Records Project2 Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
Martin Jennings
©1995 Department of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts
Bodleian Library Broad Street
Oxford OX1 3BG
United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0) 1865 277046 Fax: +44 (0) 1865 277182
E-mail: [email protected] http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/
Conversion to EAD supported by the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation
2 Word document showing information on UNCRP from website http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/, with full table of contents of contributors (Michael Askwith, March 2006)
i
Table of Contents
Papers of the United Nations Career Records Project ...................................................................... 1
Scope and Content ......................................................................................................................... 1
Restrictions on Access .................................................................................................................... 3
Preferred Form of Citation .............................................................................................................. 3
Corporate names (NCA Rules) ......................................................................................................... 3
A Major contributors ................................................................................................................4
A.1 Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair [UNRRA 1944-5, UN 1946-8, 1950, UNICEF 1946-7, UNHCR 1951-5, UNTAB 1959-61, FAO 1961-2], 1944-63 ............................................................................... 4
1. SINCLAIR, John Alexander ............................................................................................................................ 4
A.2 Contributors B-J........................................................................................................................ 6 2. BENNETT, Eveline ......................................................................................................................................... 6 3. BROWN, Arthur ............................................................................................................................................ 6 4. COTTRELL, William ....................................................................................................................................... 6 5. DAVIES, Sir Arthur ........................................................................................................................................ 7 6. DEWIS, John ................................................................................................................................................. 7 7. FEARNE, Viola .............................................................................................................................................. 8 8. GILLETT, A. Nicholas ..................................................................................................................................... 8 9. GILPIN, Antony ............................................................................................................................................. 9 10. JACKSON, Sir Robert ................................................................................................................................. 10 11. JENKS, C. Wilfred ...................................................................................................................................... 10
A.3 Papers of Michael Kaser [ECE 1951-63], 1953-1980s ................................................................ 11 12. KASER, Michael ........................................................................................................................................ 11
A.4 Contributors K-T ..................................................................................................................... 14 13. KNEW, Ernest ........................................................................................................................................... 14 14. LOVERIDGE, E. Basil .................................................................................................................................. 14 15. RUSSELL, Hugh ......................................................................................................................................... 15 16. SAUNDERS, John ...................................................................................................................................... 15 17. IVAN SMITH, George ................................................................................................................................ 15 18. SYMONDS, J. Richard................................................................................................................................ 15 19. THRISCUTT, H.S. ....................................................................................................................................... 16 20. TICKNER, Winifred.................................................................................................................................... 16
A.5 D. Burnell Vickers UNRRA 1945-51, UNHCR 1951, UNRWA 1955-66, UN 1960-3, 1966-80 .......... 18 21. VICKERS, D. Burnell .................................................................................................................................. 18
B Minor contributors .............................................................................................................. 21 1. ABHYANKAR, M.G ...................................................................................................................................... 21 2. ALLEN, Mark .............................................................................................................................................. 21 3. ALVES, John ............................................................................................................................................... 21 4. BERRY, Celia ............................................................................................................................................... 21 5. BISHOP, Robert .......................................................................................................................................... 21 6. BROWN, Andrew........................................................................................................................................ 21 7. CAIRNCROSS, Sir Alec ................................................................................................................................. 21 8. CALLOW-MILES, Irene ................................................................................................................................ 21 9. CASSELL, Frank ........................................................................................................................................... 21
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10. CASSIDY, Shelagh ..................................................................................................................................... 21 11. CHIVERS, Vernon ...................................................................................................................................... 21 12. CHURCHWARD, William ........................................................................................................................... 22 13. COHEN, Myer ........................................................................................................................................... 22 14. COLBORNE, Peter ..................................................................................................................................... 22 15. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian ............................................................................................................................. 22 16. COOK, David............................................................................................................................................. 22 17. COOPER, Gerald ....................................................................................................................................... 22 18. CRELLIN, Cecil .......................................................................................................................................... 22 19. CULLEN, James ......................................................................................................................................... 22 20. DAVIES, T. Glanmor .................................................................................................................................. 22 21. DEY, James ............................................................................................................................................... 22 22. DONAGHY, Elizabeth ................................................................................................................................ 22 23. DUNNING, Harold .................................................................................................................................... 23 24. ELKAN, Peter ............................................................................................................................................ 23 25. ELLIOTT, Alan ........................................................................................................................................... 23 26. ELVIN, Lionel ............................................................................................................................................ 23 27. EVANS, Lionel ........................................................................................................................................... 23 28. FAINT, J. Anthony ..................................................................................................................................... 23 29. FARR, William .......................................................................................................................................... 23 30. FLETCHER, Granville ................................................................................................................................. 23 31. FRASER, Charles ....................................................................................................................................... 23 32. FRITH, Anthony ........................................................................................................................................ 23 33. GALEA, Joseph ......................................................................................................................................... 23 34. GOAD, Sir Colin ........................................................................................................................................ 24 35. GOODIER, Brian........................................................................................................................................ 24 36. GRIFFITH, Donald ............................................................................................................................. 24 37. GUILLEBAUD, Philomena .......................................................................................................................... 24 38. GULLAND, John ........................................................................................................................................ 24 39. HALL, Alan ................................................................................................................................................ 24 40. HIGGINS, Michael ..................................................................................................................................... 24 41. HILL, D.W.R .............................................................................................................................................. 24 42. HOWSON, David ...................................................................................................................................... 24 43. HULL, Eileen ............................................................................................................................................. 24 44. IRWIN, Michael ........................................................................................................................................ 24 45. JONES, Alun ............................................................................................................................................. 25 46. KEATING, Rex ........................................................................................................................................... 25 47. KHAN, Riaz ............................................................................................................................................... 25 48. KIRKBRIDE, Thomas .................................................................................................................................. 25 49. IANNACE, H. Vera Klein ............................................................................................................................ 25 50. KNOWLES, Oliver ..................................................................................................................................... 25 51. KUENSTLER, Peter .................................................................................................................................... 25 52. LANE, Kenneth Winton ............................................................................................................................. 25 53. LLOYD, Oliver ........................................................................................................................................... 25 54. LOCKWOOD, Derek .................................................................................................................................. 25 55. LOROCH, Kim ........................................................................................................................................... 26 56. LUBBOCK, David ....................................................................................................................................... 26 57. LUCKETT, Joan .......................................................................................................................................... 26 58. LUNT, George ........................................................................................................................................... 26 59. McMILLAN, Ann ....................................................................................................................................... 26 60. MAWHOOD, Philip ................................................................................................................................... 26 61. MEECHAM, Keith ..................................................................................................................................... 26 62. MIDWINTER VERGIN, Kathleen ................................................................................................................ 26
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63. MILLS, A. Raymond .................................................................................................................................. 26 64. MOLLETT, Geoffrey .................................................................................................................................. 26 65. MOLLETT, Imogen .................................................................................................................................... 26 66. MURDOCH, Dame Iris............................................................................................................................... 27 67. MUSK, Dennis .......................................................................................................................................... 27 68. NASH, Nina .............................................................................................................................................. 27 69. NEATH, Ronald ......................................................................................................................................... 27 70. NEWBURY, Colin ...................................................................................................................................... 27 71. NEWTON, Donald ..................................................................................................................................... 27 72. NICOL, Davidson ...................................................................................................................................... 27 73. OLSEN, Karl .............................................................................................................................................. 27 74. ORBANEJA, Antonio ................................................................................................................................. 27 75. PALMIER, Leslie ........................................................................................................................................ 27 76. PERFREMENT, Denis ................................................................................................................................. 27 77. PICKERING, Donald .................................................................................................................................. 28 78. PICKETT, Liam .......................................................................................................................................... 28 79. PILKINGTON, Maurice ............................................................................................................................. 28 80. PLEASE, Stanley ........................................................................................................................................ 28 81. RUSSELL, John .......................................................................................................................................... 28 82. SAMSON, Klaus ........................................................................................................................................ 28 83. SARGENT, Kenneth ................................................................................................................................... 28 84. SAUNDERS, Christopher ........................................................................................................................... 28 85. SAEGER, Andrew ...................................................................................................................................... 28 86. SEN, Sudhir .............................................................................................................................................. 28 87. SHARIF, Mohammed ................................................................................................................................ 28 88. SINGER, Hans ........................................................................................................................................... 29 89. SKOUMAL, Stanislav ................................................................................................................................. 29 90. SMIETON, Dame Mary ............................................................................................................................. 29 91. SNELSON, Kenneth ................................................................................................................................... 29 92. SPENCER, Jack .......................................................................................................................................... 29 93. STARK, Sir Andrew ................................................................................................................................... 29 94. STEWART, Lady ........................................................................................................................................ 29 95. STEWART, Sir Herbert .............................................................................................................................. 29 96. STUART-WILLIAMS, D (Bill) ....................................................................................................................... 29 97. SYKES, Alan .............................................................................................................................................. 29 98. TIDMARSH, Kyril ....................................................................................................................................... 29 99. TOWNSEND, Charles ................................................................................................................................ 30 100. TOWNSEND COLES, Edwin ..................................................................................................................... 30 101. UNWIN, Thomas .................................................................................................................................... 30 102. WILLIAMS, Sir Edgar ............................................................................................................................... 30 103. WILMOTT, John ...................................................................................................................................... 30 104. WILSON, Fergus ..................................................................................................................................... 30 105. WINTERINGHAM, F. Peter ...................................................................................................................... 30 106. WOOD, William ...................................................................................................................................... 30 107. WREN, E.G. Christopher ......................................................................................................................... 30 108. WYATT, Gavin ........................................................................................................................................ 30 109. ZAGNI, Anthony ..................................................................................................................................... 30
C Questionnaires .................................................................................................................... 31 ALAGIAH - MUTH ........................................................................................................................................... 31 NAYLOR - WRIGHT ......................................................................................................................................... 31
D UK Government representatives ......................................................................................... 32
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1. DODD, William ........................................................................................................................................... 32 2. ACHESON, Sir Donald ................................................................................................................................. 33 3. BOTTOMLEY, Sir James .............................................................................................................................. 33 4. BROWNING, Rex ........................................................................................................................................ 33 5. BUIST, Ian .................................................................................................................................................. 33 6. CARTER, Peers ............................................................................................................................................ 33 7. GODBER, Sir George ................................................................................................................................... 33 8. GOULT, Sidney ........................................................................................................................................... 33 9. HILDYARD, Sir David ................................................................................................................................... 33 10. LIAM, Martin ............................................................................................................................................ 33 11. LANDYMORE, Alec ................................................................................................................................... 33 12. LEDWIDGE, Sir Bernard ............................................................................................................................ 34 13. LOGAN, Sir Donald ................................................................................................................................... 34 14. MACKENZIE, Archibald ............................................................................................................................. 34 15. McLEAN, Peter ......................................................................................................................................... 34 16. MAITLAND, Sir Donald ............................................................................................................................. 34 17. MARK, James ........................................................................................................................................... 34 18. MARSHALL, Sir Peter ................................................................................................................................ 34 19. MASON, Sir Frederick ............................................................................................................................... 34 20. MATHIESON, William ............................................................................................................................... 34 21. MILLARD, Sir Guy ..................................................................................................................................... 34 22. MOSER, Sir Claus ...................................................................................................................................... 35 23. MURRAY, Sir James .................................................................................................................................. 35 24. PARSONS, Sir Anthony ............................................................................................................................. 35 25. PECKHAM, Arthur .................................................................................................................................... 35 26. REID, Sir John ........................................................................................................................................... 35 27. RICHARD, Lord Ivor .................................................................................................................................. 35 28. SANKEY, John ........................................................................................................................................... 35 29. SCOTT, Sir Peter ....................................................................................................................................... 35 30. SMITH, William ........................................................................................................................................ 35 31. TICKELL, Sir Crispin ................................................................................................................................... 35 32. WARD, William......................................................................................................................................... 35 33. WHITAKER, Benjamin ............................................................................................................................... 36 34. WILLIAMS, Dougla .................................................................................................................................... 36
E Military ............................................................................................................................... 37 1. CARVER, Field Marshall Lord ...................................................................................................................... 37 2. HARBOTTLE, Brig. Michael ......................................................................................................................... 37 3. KITSON, Gen. Sir Frank ............................................................................................................................... 37 4. PASCOE, Gen. Sir Robert ............................................................................................................................ 37 5. WILSON, Lt.-Gen. Sir James ........................................................................................................................ 37
F Contributors from non-governmental organizations and obituaries of UN officials .............. 38 1. MONTGOMERY, Col J.R. Patrick ................................................................................................................. 38 2. WOOD, Duncan .......................................................................................................................................... 38 3. ALEXANDER, Bernard ................................................................................................................................. 38 4. CARADON, Lord Hugh ................................................................................................................................ 38 5. CAUSTIN, Harold ........................................................................................................................................ 38 6. HILL, W. Martin .......................................................................................................................................... 38 7. KATZIN, Alfred............................................................................................................................................ 38 8. MARQUAND, Hilary .................................................................................................................................... 38 9. MORSE, David ............................................................................................................................................ 38 10. OWEN, Sir, A. David ................................................................................................................................. 38
v
11. RAINEY, Reginald...................................................................................................................................... 39
G Cassettes............................................................................................................................. 40 1. JACKSON, Sir Robert ................................................................................................................................... 40 2. IVAN SMITH, George .................................................................................................................................. 40 3. ALLEN, Mark .............................................................................................................................................. 40 4. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian ............................................................................................................................... 40 5. DAVIS Thomas Glanmore ........................................................................................................................... 40 6. GALEA, Joseph ........................................................................................................................................... 40 7. GOAD, Sir Colin .......................................................................................................................................... 40 8. KHAMIS, Salim ........................................................................................................................................... 40 9. MIDWINTER-VERGIN, Kathleen .................................................................................................................. 40 10. MURDOCH, Dame Iris............................................................................................................................... 40 11. PICKERING, Donald .................................................................................................................................. 41 12. RHODES JAMES, Sir Robert ....................................................................................................................... 41 13. SMIETON, Dame Mary ............................................................................................................................. 41 14. STARK, Sir Andrew ................................................................................................................................... 41 15. WREN, E.G. Christopher ........................................................................................................................... 41 16. BROWNING, Rex ...................................................................................................................................... 41 17. GODBER, Sir George ................................................................................................................................. 41 18. LEDWIDGE, Sir Bernard ............................................................................................................................ 41 19. MAITLAND, Sir Donald ............................................................................................................................. 41 20. MATHIESON, William ............................................................................................................................... 41 21. MOSER, Sir Claus ...................................................................................................................................... 42 22. REID, Sir John ........................................................................................................................................... 42 23. RICHARD, Lord Ivor .................................................................................................................................. 42 24. WHITAKER, Benjamin ............................................................................................................................... 42 25. WILSON, Lt.-Gen. Sir James ...................................................................................................................... 42
H Additional ........................................................................................................................... 43
H.1 Printed Material ..................................................................................................................... 43 1. GUILDRIDE, Patrick ..................................................................................................................................... 43
H.2 Charles Harris ......................................................................................................................... 43 2. HARRIS, Charles ......................................................................................................................................... 43
H.3 Miscellaneous ........................................................................................................................ 46 3. AGOSTINI, Francois .................................................................................................................................... 46 4. DAVIES, T. Glanmore .................................................................................................................................. 46 5. KNEW, Ernest ............................................................................................................................................. 46 6. PITT, David ................................................................................................................................................. 46 7. RHODES JAMES, Sir Robert ......................................................................................................................... 46 8. ROBERTSON, James.................................................................................................................................... 46 9. IVAN SMITH, George .................................................................................................................................. 47 10. BURBIDGE, John ....................................................................................................................................... 47 11. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian ............................................................................................................................. 47 12. DE NOUE, Jehan ....................................................................................................................................... 47 13. KNEW, Ernest ........................................................................................................................................... 47 14. LUKE, Kenneth ......................................................................................................................................... 47 15. RUSSELL, Hugh ......................................................................................................................................... 47 16. TAYLOR, James ......................................................................................................................................... 47 17. WALSH, Nigel ........................................................................................................................................... 47 18. WILLIAMS, Sir Edgard ............................................................................................................................... 48 19. BLAISDELL, Donald ................................................................................................................................... 48
vi
Key to UN and Non-UN acronyms ................................................................................................. 49
Index ........................................................................................................................................... 51
1
Papers of the United Nations Career Records Project
Abstract: Recollections and memoirs of UK nationals in Britain or abroad, and of other nationals living in Britain, who were employed by the UN and its Specialized Agencies.
Shelfmarks: MSS. Eng. c. 4655-748, c. 4797, c. 5229 Extent: 96 shelfmarks Scope and Content
The international civil service has undergone a marked expansion since 1945 but remarkably little research has been carried out on the perceptions and composition of United Nations personnel. A number of projects have targeted senior members of UN Agencies (for example studies completed by the Agencies themselves) or personnel involved in specific incidents, such as the interviews carried out by the Institution for Social and Policy Studies at Yale, but until now no effort has been made to record the experiences and opinions of former United Nations officials from throughout the Organization's structure.
Based at St. Antony's College, Oxford, under the Honorary Directorship of Richard Symonds, a retired UN official, the first stage of the United Nations Career Records Project (UNCRP) ran for three years from September 1989. The chief objective was to secure the recollections and memoirs of UK nationals, whether living in Britain or abroad, or of other nationals living in Britain, who were employed by the UN and its Specialized Agencies. Material was also sought from UK nationals who served as Permanent Representatives to the UN, or Government Representatives at conferences or on governing bodies of UN Agencies, as well as from UK nationals who worked with Non-Governmental Organizations accredited to UN Agencies. Although the project is thus primarily concerned with the influence of Britain on the UN (more experts were recruited by UN Agencies in the 1950s and 1960s from Britain than from any other country) there are, exceptionally, materials from nationals of other countries not living in Britain. (A fuller account of this phase of the project is provided in 'The United Nations Career Records Project, Final Report on First Stage 1989-92' by Richard Symonds.)
The contributions take two forms. Respondents were asked to complete a questionnaire by supplying biographical information and details of the length and nature of UN service. In addition to this, they were invited to contribute recollections in whatever form they desired, together with such contemporary papers as they considered appropriate.
The papers are divided into eight sections and each section is arranged alphabetically by respondents' surnames. Each respondent's papers are arranged chronologically by the date upon which the papers were received by the Project team. In the catalogue description which follows the contents of each box of a respondent's papers are listed by the date of the service to which they refer, so the folio numbers do not necessarily run in sequence in the text.
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The first section contains the larger acquisitions. These include the papers of Viola Fearne concerning occupational therapy with the World Health Organization in Asia, 1971-3; Sir Robert Jackson relating to his time in UNRRA, 1945-7 and as Assistant Secretary-General for Co-ordination, UN 1948, as well as his work with UNDP, 1967-71, and the relief operations he organised in the 1970s; Michael Kaser concerning his work with ECE relating to Soviet Economics, 1951-63, and D. Burnell Vickers UN Legal Counsel, 1960-3, 1966-80, relating to a variety of matters including refugees, relations between UN Agencies and South Africa and Rhodesia and international slavery.
The second section is concerned with smaller contributions, the largest being that received from Klaus Samson, mainly comprising correspondence concerning his International Labour Organization work, 1977-87.
Section Three consists of questionnaires from those sending no contribution other than their completed questionnaire.
Material received from UK Government Representatives forms Section Four. First among these are the papers of William Dodd, relating to his work as UK Representative on the Executive Board of UNESCO, 1983-5, incorporating an extensive set of press cuttings concerning the UK withdrawal from UNESCO, 1983-90. Also included in this section are contributions from Sir Claus Moser, UK Representative to the UN Statistics Commission, 1960s-1970s, Sir Anthony Parsons, Permanent UK Representative to the UN, 1979-82, and Sir Crispin Tickell, Permanent UK Representative to the UN, 1987-90.
The fifth section comprises the papers of military officers serving with the United Nations Force in Cyprus, including Field Marshall Lord Carver, UNFICYP 1964 and Brigadier Michael Harbottle, UNFICYP 1966-8.
Section Six is made up of contributions from Non-Governmental Organization members, including Colonel J. R. Patrick Montgomery of the Anti-Slavery Society, 1963-80, and obituaries of UN officials including Lord Caradon, Permanent UK Representative to the UN, 1964-70.
Interviews with some twenty individuals concerning their UN careers were recorded between 1990 and 1993 by Ron Neath, a retired UN official, and the resulting cassettes constitute the bulk of Section Seven, which includes interviews with Dame Iris Murdoch, UNRRA 1945-6 and Sir Robert Rhodes James, UN 1972-6. This section also contains a number of recorded contributions which describe the work of UN Agencies, including WHO and UNICEF.
The final section contains contributions received after the start of cataloguing in the second stage. These include the contributions of Patrick Guilbride, FAO 1963-82 and Charles Harris, UN Consultant in Local Government 1965, 1968, 1971-2.
The UNCRP computer database, located in Room 132 of the Bodleian, is the primary source of information on the collection. The database has been constructed simultaneously with the catalogue and has enhanced search facilities. It provides rapid, direct access to the portion of the collection in which the reader is interested, by enabling the reader to search the database via the use of keywords such as the country, the subject or the UN Agency (or official) concerning which
3
the reader wishes to see information. It offers more detailed descriptions of some of the material described in the hard copy, and points the reader to any other papers or items contributed subsequently by the respondent, to be found in the Latest Accessions or Cassettes sections. It also provides printouts of any information required by the reader.
The first stage of the United Nations Career Records Project was funded by grants from the Ford Foundation, New York, and the Rhodes Trust, Oxford; the second by the Ford Foundation.
Restrictions on Access
Certain material is at present closed to readers. Papers contributed by John Saunders concerning UNRRA in Greece, UN in the Congo and UNICEF in Cambodia fall into this category as do less substantial contributions from John Alves, Celia Berry, Oliver Knowles, Anthony Zagni and Douglas Williams, together with several of Col. Patrick Montgomery's papers. Most will be available by the year 2005. Preferred Form of Citation
Oxford, Bodleian Library [followed by the shelfmark and item number, e.g. MS. Eng. c. 4655, fols. 1-2].
Corporate names (NCA Rules)
United Nations Career Records Project
4
A. Major contributors Arrangement: Alphabetical Note: Career histories of each individual occur with their first entry in the catalogue
A.1 Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair [UNRRA 1944-5, UN 1946-8, 1950, UNICEF 1946-7, UNHCR 1951-5, UNTAB 1959-61, FAO 1961-2], 1944-63 1. SINCLAIR, John Alexander
Shelfmarks: MSS. Eng. c. 4655-63 1944-9 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4655 Extent: 316 leaves
Includes material mainly concerning
• (fols. 11-187) UNRRA military and governmental liaison and his work in Displaced Persons Branch, 1944-5
• (fols. 188-208, 246-7) UNICEF finance, 1947-8 • (fols. 209-43) UNICEF operations in (fols. 209-17) Korea, 1948, and (fols. 218-43) the
Middle East, 1948 • (fols. 255-316) Geneva Convention concerning the protection of civilians in wartime,
1949
1950-53 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4656 Extent: 352 leaves
Concerning
• (fols. 1-225) personnel at High Commissioner's Office, UNHCR, Geneva, 1950-2 • (fols. 226-54) transition from Geneva to Rome, 1952 • (fols. 255-352) his work as Representative of the High Commissioner for Refugees in
Italy, Rome, 1952-Feb. 1953
1953-4 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4657 Extent: 353 leaves
Relates to his work as Representative of the High Commissioner for Refugees in Italy, Rome, Mar. 1953-1954.
1953-7 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4658 Extent: 362 leaves
Mainly concerns
5
• (fols. 1-150) the events leading to his resignation from the post of Representative of the High Commissioner for Refugees in Italy, 1955-6
• (fols. 151-233) his work as Representative of the High Commissioner for Refugees in Italy, n.d.
• (fols. 234-362) his work in the International Rescue Committee (IRC) regarding the resettlement of refugees in Sardinia, 1953-Oct. 1957
1957-1960, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4659 Extent: 385 leaves
Mainly concerns his work in the IRC regarding the resettlement of refugees in Sardinia and the Homeless European Land Programme (HELP), Nov. 1957-1960, n.d.
1957-9 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4660 Extent: 351 leaves
• (fols. 1-165) UNTAA's work suppressing opium trade and consumption, Thailand, 1957-9 • (fols. 166-351) his work as UNTAB expert on the relocation and re-employment of
surplus workers in the Iranian oil industry, 1958-May 1959
1959-60 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4661 Extent: 356 leaves
Concerning his work as UNTAB expert on the relocation and re-employment of surplus workers in the Iranian oil industry, June 1959-June 1960.
1960-1, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4662 Extent: 356 leaves
Concerning his work as UNTAB expert on the relocation and re-employment of surplus workers in the Iranian oil industry, July 1960-1961, n.d.
1953-63, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4663 Extent: 243 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 1-9) maps of N.W. Africa and S. France, 1953-8 • (fols. 10-200) papers concerning his FAO work in Morocco, 1960-3, n.d. • (fols. 201-42) addresses of colleagues and friends, n.d.
6
A.2 Contributors B-J Shelfmarks: MSS. Eng. c. 4664-79 Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4664 Extent: 262 leaves 2. BENNETT, Eveline
• (fols. 1-98) Eveline Bennett, WHO 1954-74, including material concerning o (fols. 54-62, 90-7) Afghanistan, 1950s, 1960 o (fols. 6-20, 65-8) nursing in India, 1962-6 o (fols. 46-9, 73-7) maternal and child health services in Libya, 1966-70 o (fols. 21-45, 69-72) rural health services in Western Samoa, 1967-9 o (fols. 78-87) rural health services in Nigeria, 1971-2
3. BROWN, Arthur
• (fols. 99-end) Arthur Brown, UNRRA 1946 and WHO 1947-8, 1953-74, including material concerning
o (fols. 104-7, 131-50, 164-75, 177-85, 188-92, 200-1) Cambodia, 1954 o (fols. 108-9, 151, 186-7, 203-46, 257-61) Vietnam, 1954-5 o (fols. 122-5) Ethiopia, 1964 o (fols. 130, 202) Thailand, 1954 o (fols. 152-7) South China Sea, 1954 o (fols. 158-63, 176, 193-9) Philippines, 1954 o (fols. 247-56) Singapore, 1955
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4665 Extent: 269 leaves, of
• (fols. 1-190) Arthur Brown, mainly in French, mainly concerning health services in the Congo, 1960s, with some miscellaneous papers
4. COTTRELL, William
• (fols. 191-269) William Cottrell, UN (trusteeships) 1947-64, including material relating to o (fols. 198-202) the UN at Lake Success, 1947 o (fols. 205-32) UN visiting mission to the British and French Cameroons, 1955 o (fols. 233-62) UN visiting mission to Nauru, Guinea and the Pacific Islands, 1959
Printed material contributed by William Cottrell Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4666 Extent: 5 items
Comprises
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• (item 1) Sigrid Arne, United Nations Primer (New York & Toronto, 1945) • (item 2) W. R. Crocker, Can the United Nations Succeed? (Melbourne, 1951) • (item 3) F. Van Langenhowe, The Idea of the Sacred Trust of Civilisation with Regard to
the Less Developed Peoples (New York, 1951) • (item 4) K. T. Behanan, Realities and Make Believe - Personnel Policy in the United
Nations Secretariat (New York, 1952) • (item 5) W. R. Crocker, The Racial Factor in International Relations (Canberra, 1956)
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4667 Extent: 370 leaves, of 5. DAVIES, Sir Arthur
• (fols. 1-309) Sir Arthur Davies, WMO 1951-79, including memoirs of career o (fols. 118-150) in East Africa, 1951-5 o (fols. 151-223) as Secretary General of WMO in Geneva, 1955-79
with
o (fols. 4-35) papers concerning Study Group on UN Agencies and Programmes, 1985
o (fols. 302-5, 309) obituaries • (fols. 310-70) John Dewis, FAO 1958-72, including material concerning
o (fols. 318-19, 334-54) Iran 1958-62 o (fols. 319v-20, 355-8) Nigeria, 1962-5 o (fols. 368-70) international agriculture, 1963 o (fols. 321-2, 359-60) Tanzania, 1965-6 o (fols. 322v-8, 361-3) Thailand, 1967-72 o (fols. 328v-9v) social and personal aspects of FAO placements, 1958-72 o (fols. 330-2) post-retirement consultancies
6. DEWIS, John
Printed material contributed by John Dewis Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4668 Extent: 6 items
• (items 1-2) technical reports on soil fertility, Thailand, 1969-70 • (items 3-6) project working papers on soil fertility, Thailand, 1971-2
Printed material contributed by John Dewis Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4669 Extent: 7 items
Project working papers on soil fertility, Thailand, 1971-2.
8
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4670 Extent: 328 leaves, of 7. FEARNE, Viola
• (fols. 1-198) Viola Fearne, WHO 1971-3, mainly concerning her career in occupational therapy, including papers on
o (fols. 163-70) Iran, 1971-2 o (fols. 172-9) Burma, 1972-3 o (fols. 179-83) Sri Lanka, 1973
8. GILLETT, A. Nicholas
• (fols. 199-328) A. Nicholas Gillett, UNESCO 1954-8, 1963-5, including o (fols. 237-44) papers concerning community schools in the Philippines, 1954 o (fols. 251-9) letters from Thailand, 1954 o (fols. 261-327) letters from the Philippines, 1954 o (fols. 210-30) UN Technical Assistance Board, Briefing of International
Consultants (New York, 1964)
Papers of A. Nicholas Gillett, 1954-5 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4671 Extent: 286 leaves
Includes letters from
• (fols. 1-169) the Philippines, 1954-5 • (fols. 171-194) Australia, 1955 • (fols. 196-228) USA, 1955
with
• (fols. 229-54, 258-86) papers on education, 1955
Papers of A. Nicholas Gillett, 1956-7 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4672 Extent: iv + 316 leaves
• (fols. i-156) papers relating to Philippine Community Schools, 1956 • (fols. 157-316) letters from Thailand, 1956-7
Papers of A. Nicholas Gillett, 1958-65 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4673 Extent: 208 leaves
Includes
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• (fols. 1-30) letters from Thailand, 1958 • (fols. 31-41) report on rural teacher education, Thailand, 1958 • (fols. 43-9) report on UNESCO mission to Iran, 1963 • (fols. 50-208) letters from Iran, 1963-5
Papers, 1960-5 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4674 Extent: ii + 324 leaves, of
• (fols. i-237) A. Nicholas Gillett, including o (fols. i-205) letters from Iran, 1963-5 o (fols. 206-16) papers on education in Iran, 1964-5 o (fols. 218-25) papers on Philippine children and parents, n.d. o (fols. 226-8) papers on parents and teachers, n.d.
9. GILPIN, Antony
• (fols. 238-324) Antony Gilpin, UN 1947-60, UNTAB 1957-60, ONUC 1960-5, UNDP 1965-74, including
o (fols. 244-324) letters from the Congo, 1960-1
Papers of Antony Gilpin, 1952-89 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4675 Extent: 341 leaves
Includes letters from
• (fols. 305-37) New York, 1952-9 • (fols. 338-40) West Indies, 1959 • (fols. 1-65, 73-95, 100-1, 107-8) the Congo, 1960-5 • (fols. 109-62, 167-93, 201-9, 213-20, 227-64) Zambia and Southern Africa, 1965-74 • (fols. 162-6) UNDP Regional Meeting, Ethiopia, 1968 • (fols. 194-200) UNDP Global Conference, New Delhi, 1971 • (fols. 221-7) UNDP Regional Meeting, Ethiopia, 1972 • (fols. 265-72, 284-8) New York, 1974-6 • (fols. 272-5) UN Committee on Decolonisation, Portugal, 1975 • (fols. 275-84) Africa, 1975
with papers on
• (fols. 294-8) pacifism, 1985 • (fols. 299-300) international aid, 1989
Papers, 1945-8, 1985 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4676 Extent: 333 leaves, of
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• (fols. 1-88) Antony Gilpin, including letters from o (fols. 3-15) London, 1945-7 o (fols. 16-20) Geneva, 1947 o (fols. 21-8) Cuba, 1947-8 o (fols. 29-46) China, 1948 o (fols. 47-52) Australia and Singapore, 1948 o (fols. 53-85) South-east Asia, 1949-52
• (fols. 89-157) transcript of interview, 1983, with Lord Gladwyn, Acting Secretary General UN 1946, Security Council 1950-4, mainly concerning early days of the UN
10. JACKSON, Sir Robert
• (fols. 158-323) Sir Robert Jackson, UNRRA 1945-7, UN 1948, 1969, 1972-84, UNDP 1967-71, including
o (fols. 194-333) transcripts of interviews, 1985, mainly concerning his career before joining the UN, his time in UNRRA 1945-7, and Trygvie Lie, 1948
Transcripts of interviews with Sir Robert Jackson, 1985-6 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4677 Extent: 296 leaves
Mainly concerning
• (fols. 41-68) the formation of UNDP, 1962-7 • (fols. 71-97) the Capacity Study, 1968-9 • (fols. 98-133) Bangladesh, 1972-5 • (fols. 143-82) Zambia, 1973-8 • (fols. 184-241) Cambodia, 1979-84 • (fols. 242-96) comments on each Secretary General, and views on the future of the UN
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4678 Extent: 315 leaves
Comprising
• (fols. 1-137) papers of Sir Robert Jackson, including o (fols. 2-112, 116-17) transcripts of interviews, 1990, mainly concerning UNRRA,
1945-7, Trygvie Lie, 1948, and the Capacity Study, 1968-9 o (fols. 113-15) obituaries o (fols. 118-37) text of Lord Boyd-Orr Memorial Lecture
• (fols. 138-315) typescript by C. Wilfred Jenks, ILO 1945-73, of 'International Organisations in the Conflict of Laws', chapters 1-6
11. JENKS, C. Wilfred
11
Typescript by C. Wilfred Jenks Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4679 Extent: 348 leaves
'International Organisations in the Conflict of Laws', chapters 7-20.
A.3 Papers of Michael Kaser [ECE 1951-63], 1953-1980s 12. KASER, Michael
Shelfmarks: MSS. Eng. c. 4680-96 1953-62 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4680 Extent: 332 leaves
• (fols. 1-189) correspondence with Alec Nove mainly concerning Soviet economics, 1953-62
• (fols. 190-332) ECE material, mainly concerning Soviet economics, 1953-Feb. 1956
ECE material, mainly concerning Soviet economics, Apr. 1956-June 1960 Shelfmark: MS.Eng. c. 4681 Extent: 349 leaves ECE material as MS. Eng. c. 4681 above, July 1960-14 Mar. 1962 Shelfmark: MS.Eng. c. 4682 Extent: 212 leaves ECE material as MS. Eng. c. 4681 above, 27 Mar.-Dec. 1962 Shelfmark: MS.Eng. c. 4683 Extent: 305 leaves ECE material as MS. Eng. c. 4681 above, 1963, n.d. Shelfmark: MS.Eng. c. 4684 Extent: 338 leaves ECE material, 1955, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4685 Extent: 293 leaves
mainly concerning
• (fols. 1-96) Soviet economics, n.d. • (fols. 97-204) the Housing Committee, 1955, n.d. • (fols. 205-93) papers, July 1956-1964, concerning Quaker International Seminars, 1957
Mainly WHO material concerning healthcare, 1956-71 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4686 Extent: 272 leaves
12
Mainly WHO material, 1958-64, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4687 Extent: 231 leaves
Concerning
• (fols. 1-109) healthcare, n.d. • (fols. 110-47) the UNESCO Meeting of Economists on Peaceful Co-operation and
International Understanding, 1958 • (fols. 148-231) the European Expert Group on Social Planning, UN Bureau of Social
Affairs, 1958-64, n.d.
Papers mainly concerning the Carnegie Endowment Round Table on Needs and Resources of Social Investment, 1958-60, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4688 Extent: 256 leaves
With (fols. 170-256) papers concerning the economics of education, 1959-60.
Papers concerning the economics of education, 1961-3, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4689 Extent: 239 leaves Papers, 1961-5, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4690 Extent: 329 leaves
Concerning
• (fols. 1-162) the Graduate Institute of International Studies, 1961-5, n.d. • (fols. 163-251) Economic Abstracts, 1961-3, n.d. • (fols. 252-329) the UN Seminar on Planning Techniques, 1964
Papers in Russian, concerning the UN Seminar on Planning Techniques, 1964 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4691 Extent: 275 leaves Papers, mainly correspondence, 1963-74 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4692 Extent: 329 leaves
Concerning
• (fols. 1-81) UNICEF, 1963-9, n.d. • (fols. 82-119) UN, 1963-74
13
• (fols. 120-71) UNRISD, 1963-5, n.d. • (fols. 172-233) Comecon, 1963-73 • (fols. 234-41) ECA, 1963-8, n.d. • (fols. 242-329) International Institute for Educational Planning, 1963-5
Papers concerning the International Institute for Educational Planning, 1965-9 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4693 Extent: 346 leaves Papers, 1963-76, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4694 Extent: 376 leaves
Concerning
• (fols. 1-86) the International Institute for Educational Planning, n.d. • (fols. 87-376) WHO, 1963-76, n.d.
Papers, mainly correspondence, 1963-79 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4695 Extent: 323 leaves
Concerning
• (fols. 1-81) OECD, 1963-70, n.d. • (fols. 82-146) ECE, 1963-74 • (fols. 147-75) FAO, 1963-6 • (fols. 176-210) UNESCO, 1964-74 • (fols. 211-46) International Institute for Labour Studies, 1964-73 • (fols. 247-58) GATT, 1965-75 • (fols. 259-84) EC, 1967-78 • (fols. 285-9) WB and IMF, 1968-73 • (fols. 290-7) the East African Community, 1969-71 • (fols. 298-323) NATO, 1970-9
Miscellaneous papers, 1964-1980s Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4696 Extent: 261 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 1-35) essay, Towards a Planning Typology, 1964 • (fols. 67-134) UNCTAD material, concerning Eastern European economic support for
developing countries, 1974 • (fols. 135-261) paper on economic co-operation among countries with different economic
and social systems, 1980s
14
A.4 Contributors K-T 13. KNEW, Ernest
Papers of Ernest Knew, FAO 1959-69, UNIDO 1970-2 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4697 Extent: 24 leaves
Includes
• (fols 6-13) notes on career in o (fols. 6-8, 10-12, 19-22) Sudan, 1947-56, 1959-69 o (fol. 7) Kenya, 1956-9 o (fols. 8-9) the Fiji Islands, 1969-72
• (fols. 14-18) report on hides and skins improvement in the tropics, n.d.
Printed material contributed by Ernest Knew Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4698 Extent: 4 items
• (item 1) FAO Agricultural Development Paper No. 49, Flaying and Curing of Hides and Skins as a Rural Industry (Rome, 1955)
• (item 2) FAO Agricultural Development Paper No. 68, Rural Tanning Techniques (Rome, 1960)
• (item 3) FAO Report No. 1445, Hides Skins and Tanning Development (Rome, 1961) • (item 4) FAO, Hides, Skins and Leather Development and Training Project, The Sudan
(Rome, 1969)
14. LOVERIDGE, E. Basil
Papers of E. Basil Loveridge, ILO 1952-3, 1955-7, 1961-6, 1970-81, FAO 1966-70 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4699 Extent: 21 leaves
Includes material concerning
• (fols. 8-10, 17) Botswana, 1971-5 • (fols. 11-12) Indonesia, 1978 • with (fols. 14-5, 19-20) some miscellaneous papers
Printed material contributed by E. Basil Loveridge Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4700 Extent: 3 items
• (item 1) ILO, Report to the Government of Ceylon on Co-operative Education (Geneva, 1953)
• (item 2) FAO, An Introduction to Co-operative Management (Baghdad, 1970)
15
• (item 3) Ministry of Agriculture, Botswana, Annual Report (Gaborone, 1973)
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4701 Extent: 334 leaves, of 15. RUSSELL, Hugh
• (fols. 1-113) Hugh Russell, WHO 1956-69, including o (fols. 11-111) reports on mobile health team, Ethiopia, 1956-7
16. SAUNDERS, John
• (fols. 114-334) John Saunders, UNRRA 1945-8, UNICEF 1949, 1979-81, UNESCO 1949-53, UNTAB 1953-62, UN 1962-8, UNDP 1968-79 (= res.), including material mainly concerning
o (fols. 128-171, 282-334) the Congo, 1964-5 o (fols. 175-269) UNICEF in Cambodia, 1980-1 o with (fols. 272-80) comments on history of UNICEF
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4702 Extent: 225 leaves, of
• (fols. 1-131) John Saunders (= res.), including o (fols. 92-116) material concerning UNRRA/NGO relief work, Greece, 1945-6 o (fols. 1-35) letters from the Congo, 1964-5 o (fols. 40-87) letters from Cambodia, 1979-80 o (fols. 90-1) notes on interview with Sir Bernard Ledwidge, 1991 o (fols. 125-8) papers concerning George Ivan Smith, 1992
17. IVAN SMITH, George
• (fols. 132-225) George Ivan Smith, UN 1945-1980s, mainly letters and articles concerning current affairs and his post-retirement activities, 1990-2
18. SYMONDS, J. Richard
Papers of J. Richard Symonds, UNRRA 1946-7, UN 1948-9, UNTAB 1950-3, 1965-6, UNDP 1954-65, 1972-8, 1978-9, UNFPA 1968-9, 1978, UNITAR 1969-71 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4703 Extent: v + 310 leaves
Includes
• (fols. i-160) memoirs of his UN career, mainly concerning o (fols. 11-27) Austria, 1946-7 o (fols. 28-42) Kashmir, 1947-9,
16
o (fols. 43-8, 134-8) New York, 1950-1, 1978-9 o (fols. 48-9, 70-8, 110-17) Geneva, 1951-3, 1958-61, 1969-71 o (fols. 50-9) Ceylon, 1954-5 o (fols. 59-69) Yugoslavia, 1955-8 o (fols. 78-89) East Africa, 1961-5 (Institute of Commonwealth Studies, 1963-5) o (fols. 89-94) Southern Africa, 1965-6 o (fols. 95-109) Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, 1966-9 o (fols. 118-25) Greece, 1972-5 o (fols. 126-33) Tunisia, 1975-8
with
o (fols. 163-6, 170-1) recollections of Gandhi, 1940s o (fols. 204-13) R. Symonds, 'Reflections on Localisation' (offprint from the Journal
of Commonwealth Political Studies, Leicester, 1964) o (fols. 276-92) papers on technical assistance, 1967, 1974 o (fols. 214-65) papers on training Pakistani workers in Britain (the Colombo Plan),
1969 o (fols. 266-75) papers on administrative problems in international organizations,
1969 o (fols. 293-310) papers on population action programmes 1969
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4704 Extent: 313 leaves
• (fols. 1-107) J. Richard Symonds o (fols. 1-47) feasibility study concerning a UN staff college, 1971 o (fols. 48-57) papers on UNDP in Greece, 1975 o (fols. 58-61) papers on UNDP in Tunisia, 1976 o (fols. 62-102) report on Commonwealth Professional Associations, 1980 o (fols. 103-7) summary of his publications
19. THRISCUTT, H.S.
• (fols. 108-22) H.S. Thriscutt, UNESCO 1966, WB 1977-83, including o (fols. 111-14) career notes mainly concerning transport engineering in Colombia,
1966, and South Asia, 1977-83
20. TICKNER, Winifred
• (fols. 123-313) Winifred Tickner, wife of UN Representative, mainly memoirs concerning her experiences during the birth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, 1960s
Photograph album of H. S. Thriscutt Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4705 Extent: 58 pages
17
Contains photographs concerning WB rural road project, 1983.
A.5 D. Burnell Vickers UNRRA 1945-51, UNHCR 1951, UNRWA 1955-66, UN 1960-3, 1966-80 21. VICKERS, D. Burnell
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4706 Extent: 300 leaves
Includes material mainly concerning
• (fols. 36-72) establishment of UNRWA, 1948-9 • (fols. 73-300) UNRWA and refugees in the Lebanon, Syria, Turkey and Egypt, 1949-Apr.
1953
with (fols. 17, 20-2) articles written by his wife Jeanne Vickers on development education, 1984
Papers concerning UNRWA in the Middle East, May 1953-Nov. 1958 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4707 Extent: 274 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 40-55) material concerning Palestinian refugee camps, 1955 , and • (fols. 56-68) reports on relief and rehabilitation programmes for Palestinian refugees,
1955 • (fols. 94-114) reports on the Gaza fishing industry, 1956 • (fols. 127-37, 142-65) daily summaries of events in Gaza, 1-8 Nov. 1956
Papers concerning UNRWA in the Middle East, Dec. 1958-May 1964 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4708 Extent: 277 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 1-12) UNRWA statistical summary, 1958 • (fols. 63-120) UNRWA Organization Directive No. 3 - organization of headquarters,
1963 • (fols. 141-75) Education Act, Jordan, 1963 • (fols. 222-58) Educaton Act, Jordan, 1964
Papers concerning UNRWA in the Middle East, June 1964-28 May 1967 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4709 Extent: 357 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 3-26) Middle East Forum, June 1964
19
• (fols. 57-61, 75-81, 146-59, 309) material concerning the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) and the Palestine National Congress, 1965, 1967
• (fols. 97-109) extracts from reports to the General Assembly by the Director of UNRWA, 1965
• (fols. 116-34, 312-29, 330-53) papers on Straits of Tirai and Gulf of Aqaba, 1965-7 • (fols. 160-83) papers on privileges and immunities of specialized UN agencies, 1965 • (fols. 194-212) papers on education and training programme, Syria, 1965 • (fols. 214-25) papers on conditions of service for UNRWA employees, 1965 • (fols. 283-91) papers on repatriation and compensation of Palestine refugees, 1966
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4710 Extent: 358 leaves
Concerning
• (fols. 1-82) UNRWA in the Middle East, 29 May 1967-1970, including papers on o (fols. 1-44) Egypt-Israel relations, 1967 o (fols. 45-65) UNRWA claims against Israel for damage to property during 1956
and 1967 hostilities, 1968 • (fols. 83-358) UN Office of Legal Affairs and Southern Africa, 1949, 1960-Nov. 1971,
including o (fols. 92-105) extracts from report concerning General Assembly Resolutions
1598 (xv) and 1596 (xv) concerning Namibia, 1961 o (fols. 117-88) papers on dispute between WB and UN concerning Portugal and
South Africa, 1960s o (fols. 189-98) papers on sanctions against Southern Rhodesia, 1970 o (fols 222-42, 254-5, 270-84) papers on economic relations between Britain and
South Africa, 1970-1, and o (fols. 203-21, 243-51, 256-64, 285-90, 302-58) South Africa and Namibia, 1970-1
Papers concerning UN Office of Legal Affairs and Southern Africa, Dec. 1971-July 1976 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4711 Extent: 318 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 14-93, 111-27, 142-58, 163) US court papers concerning trade with Southern Rhodesia, 1972-3
• (fols. 94-110, 242-46, 268-77, 282-8, 290-317) papers on South Africa and Namibia, 1972, 1975-6
• (fols. 135-41, 246) papers on economic relations between Britain and South Africa, 1972-3
• (fols. 191-207, 221-32) US court papers concerning investment in South Africa, 1973 • (fols. 208-18, 253-8) notes on ways of encouraging change in South Africa and its
neighbours, 1973-4
20
Papers concerning UN Office of Legal Affairs and Southern Africa, Aug. 1976-1982, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4712 Extent: 398 leaves
Includes papers on
• (fols. 13-78, 81-239) South Africa and Namibia, 1977-82, n.d. • (fols. 240-80) South African apartheid, n.d. • (fols. 304-21) Britain and South Africa, n.d. • (fols. 322-60) US court papers concerning trade with Southern Rhodesia, n.d. • (fols. 374-98) papers on representation of national liberation movements (including
SWAPO) in UN organizations, n.d.
Papers concerning UNTEA in Papua New Guinea, 1960-8, n.d., and miscellaneous papers, 1967-76 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4713 Extent: 324 leaves
• (fols. 1-248) papers concerning UNTEA in Papua New Guinea, 1960-8, n.d., including o (fols. 11-33) correspondence with and notes by U Thant relating to the agreement
between Indonesia and the Netherlands concerning West New Guinea, 1962 o (fols. 225-48) draft UNTEA budget, n.d.
• (fols. 249-324) miscellaneous papers, including material concerning o (fols. 249-73) the international civil service, 1967 o (fols. 274-9, 312-6) UN budget, 1969, n.d. o (fols. 280-4, 288-311) slavery, 1973, 1976
21
B Minor contributors Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4714 Extent: i + 399 leaves, of 1. ABHYANKAR, M.G
• (fols. i-22) M. G. Abhyankar, UN, n.d.
2. ALLEN, Mark
• (fols. 23-31) Mark Allen, UN Joint Inspection Unit 1978-84
3. ALVES, John
• (fols. 32-99) John Alves, IMF 1958-79, UNDP 1985 (= res.)
4. BERRY, Celia
• (fols. 100-11) Celia Berry, UNESCO 1964-79, 1981, 1986-7, UN 1985-6 (= res.)
5. BISHOP, Robert
• (fols. 112-23) Robert Bishop, FAO 1952-77
6. BROWN, Andrew
• (fols. 124-45) Andrew Brown, UNRRA 1946, WHO 1947-8
7. CAIRNCROSS, Sir Alec
• (fols. 146-67) Sir Alec Cairncross, WB (Economic Development Institute), 1955-6
8. CALLOW-MILES, Irene
• (fols. 168-82) Irene Callow-Miles, UNRRA 1945-9, IRO 1950
9. CASSELL, Frank
• (fols. 183-91) Frank Cassell, IMF/WB 1988-90
10. CASSIDY, Shelagh
• (fols. 192-201) Shelagh Cassidy, WHO 1951-5, FAO 1955-86
11. CHIVERS, Vernon
22
• (fols. 202-69) Vernon Chivers, ILO 1954-88
12. CHURCHWARD, William
• (fols. 270-3) William Churchward, ILO 1963-78
13. COHEN, Myer
• (fols. 274-7) Myer Cohen, UNRRA 1945-6, IRO 1946-51, UNDP 1952-1960s
14. COLBORNE, Peter
• (fols. 279-87) Peter Colborne, ILO 1966-81
15. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian
• (fols. 288-399) Ian Constantinesco, FAO 1963-74
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4715 Extent: 378 leaves, of 16. COOK, David
• (fols. 1-8) David Cook, WB 1974-87
17. COOPER, Gerald
• (fols. 9-19) Gerald Cooper, ILO 1965-83, 1985
18. CRELLIN, Cecil
• (fols. 20-93) Cecil Crellin, UNESCO 1968-9 (secondment), 1970-85
19. CULLEN, James
• (fols. 94-105) James Cullen, WHO 1956-82
20. DAVIES, T. Glanmor
• (fols. 106-19) T. Glanmor Davies, UNICEF 1949-80
21. DEY, James
• (fols. 120-53) James Dey, UNTAB 1960-4, ILO 1964-88
22. DONAGHY, Elizabeth
23
• (fols. 154-7) Elizabeth Donaghy, WB 1957-77
23. DUNNING, Harold
• (fols. 158-66) Harold Dunning, ILO 1966-77
24. ELKAN, Peter
• (fols. 167-74) Peter Elkan, UNCTAD 1970-4, ECE 1974-82
25. ELLIOTT, Alan
• (fols. 175-206) Alan Elliott, UNESCO 1952-80
26. ELVIN, Lionel
• (fols. 207-13) Lionel Elvin, UNESCO 1950-6
27. EVANS, Lionel
• (fols. 214-49) Lionel Evans, WB 1961-73
28. FAINT, J. Anthony
• (fols. 250-72) J. Anthony Faint, WB 1986-9
29. FARR, William
• (fols. 273-96) William Farr, ILO 1957-82
30. FLETCHER, Granville
• (fols. 297-313) Granville Fletcher, UN 1946-71
31. FRASER, Charles
• (fols. 314-23) Charles Fraser, ILO 1970-82
32. FRITH, Anthony
• (fols. 324-35) Anthony Frith, FAO 1965-82
33. GALEA, Joseph
• (fols. 336-78) Joseph Galea, WHO 1962-86
24
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4716 Extent: 372 leaves, of 34. GOAD, Sir Colin
• (fols. 1-56) Sir Colin Goad, IMCO/IMO 1963-72
35. GOODIER, Brian
• (fols. 57-71) Brian Goodier, FAO 1964-76
36. GRIFFITH, Donald
• (fols. 72-128) Donald Griffith, WHO 1961-76
37. GUILLEBAUD, Philomena
• (fols. 129-44) Philomena Guillebard, UN 1953-8, UNDP 1959-86
38. GULLAND, John
• (fols. 145-51) John Gulland, FAO 1966-84
39. HALL, Alan
• (fols. 152-253) Alan Hall, FAO 1963-80
40. HIGGINS, Michael
• (fols. 254-61) Michael Higgins, IMCO 1946-9
41. HILL, D.W.R
• (fols. 262-8) D.W.R. Hill, ECA 1968-79, UNDP 1979-82
42. HOWSON, David
• (fols. 269-77) David Howson, ESCAP 1980-1, FAO 1981-6
43. HULL, Eileen
• (fols. 278-87) Eileen Hull, UNRRA 1944-8, UN 1948-9, ICITO/GATT 1949-50, ILO 1955-80
44. IRWIN, Michael
25
• (fols. 288-94) Michael Irwin, UN 1957-61, 1963-6, 1982-9, UNDP 1961-3, 1973-6, UNICEF 1977-82, WB 1989-90
45. JONES, Alun
• (fols. 295-372) T. Alun Jones, FAO/WB 1967-80
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4717 Extent: 313 leaves, of 46. KEATING, Rex
• (fols. 1-6) Rex Keating, UNESCO 1956-71
47. KHAN, Riaz
• (fols. 7-15) Riaz Khan, WHO 1972-84, UNIDO 1977-80, 1982, 1986
48. KIRKBRIDE, Thomas
• (fols. 16-69) Thomas Kirkbride, UNRRA 1945-6, UN 1964-74
49. IANNACE, H. Vera Klein
• (fols. 70-81) H. Vera Klein Iannace, FAO 1951-84
50. KNOWLES, Oliver
• (fols. 82-101) Oliver Knowles, UNCTAD 1969-82, 1982-4 (consultant) (= res.)
51. KUENSTLER, Peter
• (fols. 102-15) Peter Kuenstler, UN 1964-79, UNDP 1974-6
52. LANE, Kenneth Winton
• (fols. 116-33) Kenneth Winton Lane, IRO 1947-9, UNTAB/UNDP 1966-70, UNFPA 1972-8
53. LLOYD, Oliver
• (fols. 134-45) Oliver Lloyd, FAO 1952-9, IAEA 1959-76
54. LOCKWOOD, Derek
• (fols. 146-58) Derek Lockwood, ILO 1967-84
26
55. LOROCH, Kim
• (fols. 159-75) Kim Loroch, FAO 1969-74
56. LUBBOCK, David
• (fols. 176-80) David Lubbock, FAO 1946-51
57. LUCKETT, Joan
• (fols. 181-215) Joan Luckett, UNRRA/IRO 1945-51, ICAO 1951
58. LUNT, George
• (fols. 216-23) George Lunt, ILO 1960s, UNESCO 1970s
59. McMILLAN, Ann
• (fols. 224-8) S. Ann McMillan, UN 1947-56, 1959-77, UNDP 1956-9
60. MAWHOOD, Philip
• (fols. 229-99) Philip Mawhood, UNESCO 1964-7
61. MEECHAM, Keith
• (fols. 300-313) Keith Meecham, FAO 1967-89
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4718 Extent: 362 leaves, of 62. MIDWINTER VERGIN, Kathleen
• (fols. 1-91) Kathleen Midwinter-Vergin, UN 1946-69
63. MILLS, A. Raymond
• (fols. 92-5) A. Raymond Mills, WHO 1969-77
64. MOLLETT, Geoffrey
• (fols. 96-100) Geoffrey Mollett, UN 1953-73
65. MOLLETT, Imogen
• (fols. 101-31) Imogen Mollett, UN 1953-73
27
66. MURDOCH, Dame Iris
• (fols. 132-62) Dame Iris Murdoch, UNRRA 1945-6
67. MUSK, Dennis
• (fols. 163-72) Dennis Musk, ITU 1946-80
68. NASH, Nina
• (fols. 173-81) Nina Nash, UN n.d.
69. NEATH, Ronald
• (fols. 182-219) Ronald Neath, UN 1963-81
70. NEWBURY, Colin
• (fols. 220-316) Colin Newbury, UNESCO 1959
71. NEWTON, Donald
• (fols. 317-62) Donald Newton, UNRRA/IRO 1944-51, UNRWA 1952-7, UNICEF 1957-68, UNIDO 1968-74
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4719 Extent: 322 leaves, of 72. NICOL, Davidson
• (fols. 1-15) Davidson Nicol, UN 1970-82 (President of the Security Council 1970)
73. OLSEN, Karl
• (fols. 16-135) Karl Olsen, FAO 1940s-1980
74. ORBANEJA, Antonio
• (fols. 134-47) Antonio Orbaneja, ICAO 1945-50, FAO 1950-72
75. PALMIER, Leslie
• (fols. 148-58) Leslie Palmier, UNESCO 1962-5, UN 1966-7
76. PERFREMENT, Denis
• (fols. 159-78) Denis Perfrement, WB 1973-89
28
77. PICKERING, Donald
• (fols. 179-221) Donald Pickering, WB 1967-8, 1973-88, WB/FAO 1969-73
78. PICKETT, Liam
• (fols. 222-32) Liam Pickett, ILO 1963-86
79. PILKINGTON, Maurice
• (fols. 233-46) Maurice Pilkington, UN 1950-82
80. PLEASE, Stanley
• (fols. 247-315) Stanley Please, WB 1963-83
81. RUSSELL, John
• (fols. 316-22) John Russell, WB 1972-88
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4720 Extent: 338 leaves, of 82. SAMSON, Klaus
• (fols. 1-228) Klaus Samson, ILO 1956-87;
83. SARGENT, Kenneth
• (fols. 229-35) Kenneth Sargent, FAO 1969-83;
84. SAUNDERS, Christopher
• (fols. 236-43) Christopher Saunders, ECE 1965-73;
85. SAEGER, Andrew
• (fols. 244-57) Andrew Seager, FAO 1960-3, WB 1973-85;
86. SEN, Sudhir
• (fols. 258-74) Sudhir Sen, UN 1956-61;
87. SHARIF, Mohammed
• (fols. 275-87) Mohammed Sharif, WHO 1963, WHO/UNRWA 1964-75, 1975-7;
29
88. SINGER, Hans
• (fols. 288-327) Hans Singer, UN 1947-62, ECA 1959-62, UNRISD 1962-3, UNIDO 1964-8; and
89. SKOUMAL, Stanislav
• (fols. 328-38) Stanislav Skoumal, UNIDO 1970-80.
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4721 Extent: 303 leaves, of 90. SMIETON, Dame Mary
• (fols. 1-28) Dame Mary Smieton, UN 1946-8
91. SNELSON, Kenneth
• (fols. 29-39) Kenneth Snelson, FAO 1964-83
92. SPENCER, Jack
• (fols. 40-3) Jack Spencer, WB 1967-78
93. STARK, Sir Andrew
• (fols. 44-79) Sir Andrew Stark, UN 1968-71
94. STEWART, Lady
• (fols. 80-2) Lady Stewart, WB 1951-7;
95. STEWART, Sir Herbert
• (fols. 83-127) Sir Herbert Stewart, UN 1949, UNRWA 1950-1, WB 1955-62
96. STUART-WILLIAMS, D (Bill)
• (fols. 128-38) D. (Bill) Stuart-Williams, ILO 1972-81
97. SYKES, Alan
• (fols. 139-200) Alan Sykes, FAO 1967-81
98. TIDMARSH, Kyril
• (fols. 201-32) Kyril Tidmarsh, ILO 1955-6, 1958-60, 1969-93
30
99. TOWNSEND, Charles
• (fols. 233-43) Charles Townsend, UNESCO 1961-81 (secondment to UNRWA 1961-3)
100. TOWNSEND COLES, Edwin
• (fols. 244-59) Edwin Townsend Coles, UNESCO 1971-82 (consultant WB 1975-7)
101. UNWIN, Thomas
• (fols. 260-6) Thomas Unwin, UNDP 1964-81, UNHCR 1981-3
102. WILLIAMS, Sir Edgar
• (fols. 267-79) Sir Edgar Williams, UN 1946-7
103. WILMOTT, John
• (fols. 280-303) John Willmott, ITU 1964-74 (ITU/UPU 1971-4)
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4722 Extent: 151 leaves, of 104. WILSON, Fergus
• (fols. 1-79) Fergus Wilson, FAO 1964-70
105. WINTERINGHAM, F. Peter
• (fols. 80-7) F. Peter Winteringham, WHO 1961-2, FAO 1967-9, FAO/IAEA 1969-80
106. WOOD, William
• (fols. 88-106) William Wood, UN 1970-81
107. WREN, E.G. Christopher
• (fols. 107-15) E. G. Christopher Wren, WHO 1958-69
108. WYATT, Gavin
• (fols. 115-47) Gavin Wyatt, WB 1965-76
109. ZAGNI, Anthony
• (fols. 148-51) Anthony Zagni, WB 1979-81, 1984-9, FAO 1981-4 (= res.)
31
C Questionnaires ALAGIAH - MUTH
Questionnaire responses, Alagiah - Muth Shelfmark: MSS. Eng. 4723 Extent: 260 leaves NAYLOR - WRIGHT
Questionnaire responses, Naylor - Wright Shelfmark: MSS. Eng. 4724 Extent: 170 leaves
32
D UK Government representatives 1. DODD, William
Papers of William Dodd, UK Representative, Executive Board, UNESCO 1983-5 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4725 Extent: 161 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 8-40) report on UNESCO General Conference, 1983, from UK delegation to the UK National Commission for UNESCO
• (fols. 41-61) material concerning possibility of UK withdrawal from UNESCO, 1984 • (fols. 62-137) material concerning UNESCO General Conference, 1985 • (fols. 138-44) recommendations of the Advisory Committees of the UK National
Commission for UNESCO, 1985, and • (fols. 145-53) recommendations of the Keep Britain in UNESCO Campaign, 1985 • (fols. 154-61) Foreign Affairs Committee, Government Observations on the Fifth Report
from the Committee, Session 1984-85 (United Kingdom Membership of UNESCO) (London 1986)
Press cuttings collected by William Dodd, concerning the UK's withdrawal from UNESCO, 1983-17 July 1985 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4726 Extent: 400 leaves Press cuttings as MS. Eng. c. 4726 above, 18 July 1985-1990 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4727 Extent: 375 leaves Printed material contributed by William Dodd Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4728 Extent: 10 items
Includes
• (item 1) UNESCO, Executive Board Manual (Paris, 1982) • (item 2) Foreign Affairs Committee, United Kingdom Membership of UNESCO (London,
1985) • (item 3) Council for Education in World Citizenship, Britain and UNESCO (London,
1985) • (item 4) UNESCO, General Conference Guide (Paris, 1985) • (item 5) UNESCO, Manual of the General Conference (Paris, 1986) • (item 7) UNESCO, The Executive Board of UNESCO (Paris, 1986) • (item 8) Foreign Affairs Committee, First Report - UNESCO (London, 1990).
33
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4729 Extent: 385 leaves, of 2. ACHESON, Sir Donald
• (fols. 1-4) Sir Donald Acheson, WHO Executive Board 1987-90
3. BOTTOMLEY, Sir James
• (fols. 5-10) Sir James Bottomley, UK Mission to UN 1959, Permanent UK Representative to UN (Geneva) 1976-8
4. BROWNING, Rex
• (fols. 11-62) Rex Browning, Alternate UK Executive Director, WB 1973-6
5. BUIST, Ian
• (fols. 63-6) Ian Buist, Under Secretary, FCO (ODA), involved with UNCTAD, FAO and IFAD 1976-90
6. CARTER, Peers
• (fols. 67-9) Peers Carter, UK Delegation to UN 1961, Head of UK Permanent Mission to UN (Geneva) 1961
7. GODBER, Sir George
• (fols. 70-114) Sir George Godber, UK Representative, WHO 1961-73
8. GOULT, Sidney
• (fols. 115-32) Sidney Golt, Leader of UK Delegation to UNCTAD 1968
9. HILDYARD, Sir David
• (fols. 133-5) Sir David Hildyard, Minister and Alternate UK Representative to UN 1968-70, Ambassador and Permanent UK Representative to UN (Geneva) 1973-6
10. LIAM, Martin
• (fols. 136-8) Martin Lam, Leader of UK Delegation to UNCTAD 1972
11. LANDYMORE, Alec
• (fols. 139-41) Alec Landymore, Permanent UK Representative to FAO and WFP 1966-71
34
12. LEDWIDGE, Sir Bernard
• (fols. 142-53) Sir Bernard Ledwidge, UK Representative to UNICEF 1950s
13. LOGAN, Sir Donald
• (fols. 154-90) Sir Donald Logan, Ambassador and Permanent Leader, UK Delegation to • UN Conference on Law of the Sea 1976-7 (but concerning Suez, 1956)
14. MACKENZIE, Archibald
• (fols. 191) Archibald Mackenzie, UK Mission to UN 1973-5
15. McLEAN, Peter
• (fols. 192-208) Peter McLean, Minister and Permanent UK Representative to FAO 1980-5
16. MAITLAND, Sir Donald
• (fols. 209-59) Sir Donald Maitland, Permanent UK Representative to UN 1973-4
17. MARK, James
• (fols. 260-6) James Mark, UK Representative, UNCTAD 1960s
18. MARSHALL, Sir Peter
• (fols. 267-70) Sir Peter Marshall, UK Representative, ECOSOC 1975-9, Ambassador and Permanent UK Representative to UN (Geneva) 1979-83
19. MASON, Sir Frederick
• (fols. 271-2) Sir Frederick Mason, Ambassador and Permanent UK Representative to UN (Geneva) 1971-3
20. MATHIESON, William
• (fols. 273-347) William Mathieson, UK Delegation to UN 1951-4, UNDP (consultant) 1976-81
21. MILLARD, Sir Guy
• (fols. 348-85) Sir Guy Millard, Private Secretary to the Prime Minister, 1955-6
35
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4730 Extent: 277 leaves, of 22. MOSER, Sir Claus
• (fols. 1-28) Sir Claus Moser, UK Representative to UN Statistics Commission 1960s-1970s
23. MURRAY, Sir James
• (fols. 29-31) Sir James Murray, Deputy Permanent UK Representative to UN 1974-8, Ambassador and Permanent UK Representative to UN (Geneva) 1978-9
24. PARSONS, Sir Anthony
• (fols. 32-90) Sir Anthony Parsons, Permanent UK Representative to UN 1979-82
25. PECKHAM, Arthur
• (fols. 91-102) Arthur Peckham, Permanent UK Representative to FAO 1977-80
26. REID, Sir John
• (fols. 103-60) Sir John Reid, WHO Executive Board 1973-87 (= res.)
27. RICHARD, Lord Ivor
• (fols. 161-84) Lord Richard, Permanent UK Representative to UN 1974-9
28. SANKEY, John
• (fols. 185-8) John Sankey, Permanent UK Representative to UN (Geneva) 1985-90
29. SCOTT, Sir Peter
• (fols. 189-91) Sir Peter Scott, Permanent UK Representative to UN (Geneva) 1963-6
30. SMITH, William
• (fols. 192-5) William Smith, UK Representative to UNESCO 1969-72
31. TICKELL, Sir Crispin
• (fols. 196-232) Sir Crispin Tickell, Permanent UK Representative to UN 1987-90
32. WARD, William
36
• (fols. 233-53) William Ward, UK Delegation to UNESCO 1940s-1950s
33. WHITAKER, Benjamin
• (fols. 254-60) Benjamin Whitaker, UK National Commission for UNESCO 1978-85; and
34. WILLIAMS, Dougla
• (fols. 261-77) Douglas Williams, UK Representative to UNCTAD 1970s (= res.)
37
E Military Papers of military officers serving with UNFICYP Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4731 Extent: 336 leaves
Comprises
1. CARVER, Field Marshall Lord
• (fols. 1-115) Field Marshall Lord Carver, 1964
2. HARBOTTLE, Brig. Michael
• (fols. 116-56) Brig. Michael Harbottle, 1966-8
3. KITSON, Gen. Sir Frank
• (fols. 157-60) Gen. Sir Frank Kitson, 1963-4, 1967-8
4. PASCOE, Gen. Sir Robert
• (fols. 161-84) Gen. Sir Robert Pascoe, 1967
5. WILSON, Lt.-Gen. Sir James
• (fols. 185-336) Lt.-Gen. Sir James Wilson 1964-6.
38
F Contributors from non-governmental organizations and obituaries of UN officials Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4732 Extent: 140 leaves, of 1. MONTGOMERY, Col J.R. Patrick
• (fols. 1-59) Col. J. R. Patrick Montgomery, Anti-Slavery Society 1963-80 (fols. 28-46 = res.)
2. WOOD, Duncan
• (fols. 60-85) Duncan Wood, Quaker Representative, n.d.
3. ALEXANDER, Bernard
• (fols. 86-92) obituaries of Bernard Alexander, UN & UNHCR 1940s-1950s
4. CARADON, Lord Hugh
• (fol. 93) Lord Caradon, UK Mission to UN 1961-2, Permanent UK Representative to UN 1964-70
5. CAUSTIN, Harold
• (fols. 94-116) Harold Caustin, UNRRA 1944-7, UN 1947-66
6. HILL, W. Martin
• (fols. 117-27) W. Martin Hill, UN 1946-70
7. KATZIN, Alfred
• (fols. 128-9) Alfred Katzin, UNRRA & UN 1940s-1950s; (fol. 130) Evan Luard, UN (Representative) 1967-8
8. MARQUAND, Hilary
• (fols. 131-4) Hilary Marquand, ILO 1961-5
9. MORSE, David
• (fols. 135-6) David Morse, ILO 1948-70
10. OWEN, Sir, A. David
• (fols. 137-8) Sir A. David Owen, UN 1945-51, UNTAB 1951-65, UNDP 1966-9
39
11. RAINEY, Reginald
• (fols. 139-40) Reginald Rainey, FAO 1960-7, WMO n.d., WHO n.d.
40
G Cassettes Cassettes of major contributors, and of minor contributors (A-R) Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4733 Extent: 18 items
Comprises interviews with
1. JACKSON, Sir Robert
• (items 1-4) Sir Robert Jackson, 1990
2. IVAN SMITH, George
• (item 5-6) George Ivan Smith, 1993
3. ALLEN, Mark
• (item 7) Mark Allen, 1992
4. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian
• (item 8) Ian Constantinesco, 1993
5. DAVIS Thomas Glanmore
• (items 9-11) information concerning WHO and UNICEF, 1949-80, contributed by Thomas Glanmor Davies
6. GALEA, Joseph
• (item 12) information concerning WHO, 1980, contributed by Joseph Galea
7. GOAD, Sir Colin
• (item 13) Sir Colin Goad, 1991
8. KHAMIS, Salim
• (item 14) Salim Khamis, 1993
9. MIDWINTER-VERGIN, Kathleen
• (item 15) Kathleen Midwinter-Vergin, 1990
10. MURDOCH, Dame Iris
• (item 16) Dame Iris Murdoch, 1991
41
11. PICKERING, Donald
• (item 17) information concerning WB, 1978, contributed by Donald Pickering
12. RHODES JAMES, Sir Robert
• (item 18) interview, 1993, with Sir Robert Rhodes James, UN 1972-6
Cassettes of minor contributors (S-Z), representatives and military Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4734 Extent: 18 items
Comprises interviews with
13. SMIETON, Dame Mary
• (item 1) Dame Mary Smieton, 1990
14. STARK, Sir Andrew
• (item 2) Sir Andrew Stark, 1991
15. WREN, E.G. Christopher
• (items 3-7) information concerning WHO 1958-69, contributed by E. G. Christopher Wren
16. BROWNING, Rex
• (item 8) information concerning WB, contributed by Rex Browning, 1991
17. GODBER, Sir George
• (item 9) Sir George Godber, 1991
18. LEDWIDGE, Sir Bernard
• (item 10) Sir Bernard Ledwidge, 1991
19. MAITLAND, Sir Donald
• (item 11) Sir Donald Maitland, 1991
20. MATHIESON, William
• (items 12-13) William Mathieson, 1991
42
21. MOSER, Sir Claus
• (item 14) Sir Claus Moser, 1992
22. REID, Sir John
• (item 15) Sir John Reid, 1992
23. RICHARD, Lord Ivor
• (item 16) Lord Richard, 1993
24. WHITAKER, Benjamin
• (item 17) Benjamin Whitaker, 1991
25. WILSON, Lt.-Gen. Sir James
• (item 18) Lt.-Gen. Sir James Wilson, 1991
43
H Additional
H.1 Printed Material 1. GUILDRIDE, Patrick
Printed material contributed by Patrick Guilbride, FAO 1963-82 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4735 Extent: 2 items
Comprises 'Far Away Cows', Books 1-2, memoirs of his work in
• (item 1) Northern Rhodesia • (item 2) Jamaica
Printed material contributed by Patrick Guilbride Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4736 Extent: 2 items
Comprises 'Far Away Cows', Books 3-4, memoirs of his work in
• (item 1) Uganda • (item 2) Peru
Printed material contributed by Patrick Guilbride Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4737 Extent: 2 items
Comprises 'Far Away Cows', Books 5-6, memoirs of his work in
• (item 1) Brazil • (item 2) Mozambique
H.2 Charles Harris 2. HARRIS, Charles
Papers of Charles Harris, UN (Consultant in Local Government and Administration) 1965, 1968, 1971-2 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4738 Extent: 395 leaves
Comprises
• (fols. 1-144) material concerning his work in Somalia, 1963, on behalf of the British Council
• (fols. 145-85) mainly correspondence concerning talks given by Harris, 1964, and attempts to secure UN positions in Ceylon, Libya, Jordan and Ethiopia, 1964
44
• (fols. 186-395) material, 1963-July 1965, concerning his work in Saudi Arabia, 1965, including (fols. 342-95) report on decentralization and local government, July 1965
Papers of Charles Harris, Sept. 1965-1970, n.d., Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4739 Extent: 370 leaves
Concerning his work in Saudi Arabia, 1965, including
• (fols. 29-63) report on decentralization and local government, Dec. 1965 • (fols. 180-268) report on the civil service in Saudi Arabia, n.d.
Printed material contributed by Charles Harris, Shelfmark: MS. Eng c. 4740 Extent: 7 items
Concerning the Territory of Papua and New Guinea (TPNG), including
• (items 2-3) Annual Reports of Papua, 1965-6, and New Guinea, 1966-7 (Canberra, 1960s) • (item 6) Department of Information and Extension Services, Presenting Papua and New
Guinea (Port Moresby, TPNG, 1967)
Papers of Charles Harris concerning his work in TPNG on behalf of the Australian government [1967-8], 1968-9 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4741 Extent: 314 leaves
Includes (fols. 147-212) report on economic development in TPNG, 1968.
Papers of Charles Harris as MS. Eng. c. 4741 above, n.d. Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4742 Extent: 284 leaves
Includes notes on
• (fols. 44-56, 61-156) various governmental procedures, n.d. • (fols. 207-70) a public service methods review, n.d.
Papers of Charles Harris concerning his work in Cyprus [1968], 1959-68, n.d., Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4743 Extent: 262 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 1-99) Cypriot laws on municipal corporations, villages, public health and water supplies, 1959
45
• (fols. 118-58) reports on public administration, 1967 • (fols. 218-49) reports on local government, 1968
Papers of Charles Harris concerning his work in Nigeria [1971-2], 1963, 1970-1, Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4744 Extent: 277 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 90-140) paper on local government reorganization, 1971 • (fols. 143-277) Report on the School of Oriental and African Studies expedition to
Yorubaland, 1971
Printed material contributed by Charles Harris, Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4745 Extent: 6 items
Comprises
• (items 1-5) Nigerian newspapers, 1972 • (item 6) edition of Nigerian Opinion, n.d.
Papers of Charles Harris concerning his work in Nigeria [1971-2], 1972-3 Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4746 Extent: 276 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 8-33, 147-207) calendars for courses in local government studies, 1972-3 • (fols. 62-101) paper on UNDP project concerning the Institute of Administration,
University of Ife, 1972 • (fols. 116-37, 231-8, 242-3, 244-51, 254-64) papers concerning local government, 1972-3
Papers of Charles Harris concerning his work in Nigeria [1971-2], n.d., Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4747 Extent: 300 leaves
Includes
• (fols. 1-147) mainly handwritten notes on local government, n.d. • (fols. 151-300) course and lecture notes, n.d.
Papers of Charles Harris Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4748 Extent: 214 leaves
46
Comprises
• (fols. 1-168) material, n.d., concerning his work in Nigeria, 1971-2, comprising notes on urbanization and planning, n.d.
• (fols. 169-214) some miscellaneous material including o (fols. 169-93) notes and press cuttings concerning the report of the Redcliffe
Maud Commission on local government reorganization, 1969-70, n.d.
H.3 Miscellaneous Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 4797 Extent: 203 leaves, of 3. AGOSTINI, Francois
• (fols. 1-24) Francois Agostini, ILO 1961-86, including material concerning o (fols. 4-10) ILO decentralization, 1978 o (fols. 11-17) ILO Regional Department for the Americas, 1978 o (fols. 18-24) field service conditions, 1979
4. DAVIES, T. Glanmore
• (fols 25-50) T. Glanmor Davies, an account of his work in o (fols. 27-39, 47-50) India, 1949-61, 1976-80 o (fols. 39, 40, 47) New York, 1961-5, 1969-70, 1974-6 o (fols. 39-40) East Africa, 1965-9 o (fols. 44-7) Bangladesh, 1971-4
5. KNEW, Ernest
• (fols. 51-5) Ernest Knew, photographs relating to the Sudanese hides industry, 1950s-1970s
6. PITT, David
• (fols. 56-152) David Pitt, WHO 1979-83, a social and organizational study of WHO, 1983, and an article concerning power in the UN bureaucracy, 1986
7. RHODES JAMES, Sir Robert
• (fols. 153-72) Sir Robert Rhodes James, including o (fols. 154-72) transcript of interview, 1993, concerning his work under Kurt
Waldheim, 1972-6
8. ROBERTSON, James
• (fols. 173-86) James Robertson, UN (DTCD) 1986-8, including
47
o (fols. 176-86) account of water resources management study, India, 1986-8
9. IVAN SMITH, George
• (fols. 187-203) George Ivan Smith, transcript of interview, 1993, concerning his work under Dag Hammerskjold, 1950s
Papers Shelfmark: MS. Eng. c. 5229 Extent: 162 leaves, of 10. BURBIDGE, John
• (fols. 1-5) John Burbidge, ILO 1962-77 including o (fols. 2-5) 'Turin International Centre, Early Days', an account, n.d., of his work at
the ILO Training Centre, 1967-77
11. CONSTANTINESCO, Ian
• (fols. 6-20) Ian Constantinesco, transcript of interview, 1993, concerning his work in Bangladesh, 1963-5, and Rome, Italy, 1965-74
12. DE NOUE, Jehan
• (fols. 21-102) Jehan de Noue, UN 1946-67, including o (fols. 23-102) his book, Indiscretions diplomatiques (St. Etienne, 1991)
13. KNEW, Ernest
• (fols. 103-10) Ernest Knew, material relating to travels in the Sudan, conducting surveys as part of a development programme for the tanning industry, 1947-56
14. LUKE, Kenneth
• (fols. 111-14) Kenneth Luke, UNDP 1964-76, questionnaire response, 1994
15. RUSSELL, Hugh
• (fols. 115-31) Hugh Russell, report on health services in Ethiopia, 1956
16. TAYLOR, James
• (fols. 132-3) James Taylor, ILO 1966-78, questionnaire response, 1992
17. WALSH, Nigel
• (fols. 134-6) Nigel Walsh, WB 1967-79, curriculum vitae, 1993
48
18. WILLIAMS, Sir Edgard
• (fols. 137-62) Sir Edgar Williams, comprising
19. BLAISDELL, Donald
o (fols. 137-41) Donald Blaisdell, 'Co-ordination of American Security Policy at the UN' (from International Organization, vol. II, no. 3, Sept. 1948)
o (fols. 142-62) 'Trieste', n.d., a history of the region from pre-1914 to post-1945
49
Key to UN and Non-UN acronyms
• CMEA/COMECON Council for Mutual Economic Aid • CTC Commission on Transnational Corporations • EC European Community • ECA Economic Commission for Africa • ECAFE Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East • ECE Economic Commission for Europe • ECLAC Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean • ECOSOC Economic and Social Council • ESCAP Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific • ESCWA Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia • FAO Food and Agriculture Organization • GATT General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade • HABITAT United Nations Commission on Human Settlements • HELP Homeless European Land Programme • IAEA International Atomic Energy Authority • ICAO International Civil Aviation Organization • ICITO Interim Commission for the International Trade Organization • IFAD International Fund for Agricultural Development • IFC International Finance Corporation • ILO International Labour Organization • IMF International Monetary Fund • IMCO Intergovernmental Maritime Consultative Organization • IMO International Maritime Organization • IRC International Rescue Committee • IRO International Refugee Organization • ITU International Telecommunications Union • NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization • ODA Overseas Development Administration • OECD Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development • ONUC United Nations Operation in the Congo • PLO Palestinian Liberation Organization • UN United Nations • UNCTAD United Nations Conference on Trade and Development • UNCTC United Nations Centre for Transnational Corporations • UNDEA United Nations Department of Economic Affairs • UNDP United Nations Development Programme • UNDTC (D) United Nations Department of Technological Co-operation (and
Development) • UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization • UNFICYP United Nations Force in Cyprus • UNFPA United Nations Population Fund • UNHCR United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees • UNICEF United Nations Children's Fund • UNIDA United Nations International Development Association • UNIDO United Nations Industrial Development Organization
50
• UNITAR United Nations Institute of Training and Research • UNOTC United Nations Office of Technical Co-operation • UNRISD United Nations Research Institute for Social Development • UNRRA United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration • UNRWA United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near
East • UNSF United Nations Special Fund • UNTAA United Nations Technical Assistance Administration • UNTAB United Nations Technical Assistance Board • UNTEA United Nations Temporary Executive Authority • UPU Universal Postal Union • WB World Bank • WFC World Food Council • WFP World Food Programme • WHO World Health Organization • WMO World Meteorological Organization
Index
ABHYANKAR (M.G.). Papers concerning UN career, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. i-22 ACHESON (Sir Ernest Donald) 1926-
Papers as UK Representative, WHO, 1987-90 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 1-4
AFGHANISTAN Papers of Eveline Bennett, relating to work of WHO in, 1950s, 1960
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 54-62, 90-7 AFRICA
Letters from, 1975 MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 275-84
AFRICA, East Papers of UN officials relating to, 1951-71
MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 118-50 MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 291-7 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 78-83 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 39-40
AFRICA, South Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning, 1961-82, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 117-88, 203-51, 254-64, 270-90, 302-58 MS. Eng. c. 4711, fols. 94-110, 135-41, 191-218, 221-46, 253-8, 268-77, 282-8, 290-317 MS. Eng. c. 4712, fols. 13-78, 81-280, 304-21
AFRICA, Southern Papers of UN officials relating to, 1949-82, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 109-62, 167-93, 201-9, 213-20, 227-64 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 89-94 MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 83-358 MSS. Eng. c. 4711-12
AGOSTINI (François) 1928- Papers concerning UN career, 1978-9
MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 1-24 ALEXANDER (Bernard) 1913-90
Papers concerning UN career, 1940s-50s MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 86-92
ALEXANDER-SINCLAIR (John Alexis Clifford Cerda) 1906-88 Papers concerning UN career, 1944-63
MSS. Eng. c. 4655-63 ALLEN (Mark Echalaz) 1917-
Material concerning UN career, 1978-92 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 23-31 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 7
ALVES (John) 1922- Papers concerning UN career, 1958-85
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 32-99 ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY
Papers of Col. J.R. Patrick Montgomery relating to, 1963-80 MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 1-59
APARTHEID
52
Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to, South Africa, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4712, fols. 240-80
AQABA, Gulf of Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning, 1965-7
MS. Eng. c. 4709, fols. 116-34, 312-29, 330-53 ARNE (Sigrid)
United Nations Primer (New York & Toronto, 1945) MS. Eng. c. 4666, item 1
ASIA, South Papers of H.S. Thriscutt concerning WB transport engineering in, 1977-83
MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 111-14 MS. Eng. c. 4705
ASIA, South-east Letters from, written by Antony Gilpin, 1949-52
MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 53-85 AUSTRALIA
Papers of UN officials relating to, 1948-69, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4671, fols. 171-94 MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 47-52 MSS. Eng. c. 4741-2
AUSTRIA Papers of J. Richard Symonds relating to work of UNRRA in, 1946-7
MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 11-27 BANGLADESH
Papers of UN officials relating to, 1971-5 MS. Eng. c. 4677, fols. 98-133 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 44-7
BEHANAN (K. T.) Realities and Make Believe - Personnel Policy in the United Nations Secretariat (New York, 1952)
MS. Eng. c. 4666, item 4 BENNETT (Eveline) [1914-]
Papers concerning UN career, 1950s-1975 MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 1-98 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 1-22
BERRY (Celia) 1938 Papers relating to UN career, 1964-87
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 100-11 BISHOP (Robert) 1921-
Papers relating to UN career, 1952-77 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 112-23
BOTSWANA Papers of Ernest Knew concerning, 1971-5
MS. Eng. c. 4699, fols. 8-10, 17 MS. Eng. c. 4700, item 3
BOTTOMLEY (Sir James Reginald (Alfred) 1920- Papers of, as member of UK Mission, UN, and UK Representative, UN (Geneva), 1959, 1976-8
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 5-10 BOYD ORR (John) 1st Baron Boyd Orr, 1880-1971
Memorial lecture concerning his life and the work of UNRRA, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4678, fols. 118-37
53
BRAZIL Memoirs of Patrick Guilbride, FAO official, 1973-6
MS. Eng. c. 4737, item 1 BRETTON WOODS
Papers of Hans Singer concerning, 1993-4 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 136-54
BRIGHTON, University of Sussex Papers of J. Richard Symonds concerning his work at the Institute of Development Studies, 1966-9
MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 95-109 BRITISH ASSOCIATION OF FORMER UNITED NATIONS CIVIL SERVANTS (BAFUNCS)
Cassette of address given at Reunion, 1995 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 20
BRITISH COUNCIL Papers of Charles Harris relating to its work in Somalia, 1963
MS. Eng. c. 4738, fols. 1-144 BROWN (Andrew) 1924-
Papers concerning UN career, 1946-8 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 124-45
BROWN (Arthur) 1917- Papers concerning UN career, 1954-1960s
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 99-262 MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 1-190
BROWNING (Rex Alan) 1930- Material as Alternate UK Executive Director, World Bank, 1973-6, 1991
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 11-62 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 8
BUIST (John Latto Farquharson 'Ian') 1930- Papers as member of ODA involved with UNCTAD, FAO, and IFAD, 1976-90
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 63-6 BURBIDGE (John)
Papers relating to UN career, 1962-77 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 1-5
BURMA Papers of Viola Fearne relating to her work in occupational therapy in, 1972-3
MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 172-9 CAIRNCROSS (Sir Alexander Kirkland) 1911-
Papers concerning UN career, 1955-6 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 146-67
CALLOW-MILES (Irene) 1917- Papers relating to UN career, 1945-50
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 168-82 CAMBODIA
Papers of UN officials relating to, 1954, 1979-84 MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 104-7, 131-50, 164-75, 177-85, 188-92, 200-1 MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 184-241 MS. Eng. c. 4701, fols. 175-269 MS. Eng. c. 4702, fols. 40-87
CAMEROON, British Papers of William Cottrell concerning UN visiting mission to, 1955
54
MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 205-32 CAMEROON, French
Papers of William Cottrell concerning UN visiting mission to, 1955 MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 205-32
CARADON, Baron, see Foot CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT ROUND TABLE
Papers of Michael Kaser concerning its work on the needs and resources of social investment, 1958-60, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4688, fols. 1-169 CARTER (Peers Lee) 1916-
Papers as member of UK Delegation, UN and Head of Permanent Mission, UN (Geneva), 1961
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 67-9 CARVER (Richard Michael Power) Baron Carver, 1915-
Papers concerning UN career, 1964 MS. Eng. c. 4731, fols. 1-115
CASSELL (Frank) 1930- Papers concerning UN career, 1988-90;
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 183-91 CASSIDY (Shelagh) 1924-
Papers concerning UN career, 1951-86 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 192-201
CAUSTIN (Harold) d.1980s Papers concerning UN career, 1944-66
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 94-116 CHILDREN, see UNICEF CHIVERS (Vernon) 1928-
Papers relating to UN career, 1954-88 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 202-69
CHURCHWARD (William) 1914- Papers concerning UN career, 1963-78
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 270-3 COHEN (Myer)
Papers concerning UN career, 1945-1960s MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 274-7
COLBORNE (Peter) 1921- Papers concerning UN career, 1966-81
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 279-87 COLES (Edwin Townsend) 1922-
Papers concerning UN career, 1971-82 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 244-59
COLOMBO PLAN Papers of J. Richard Symonds relating to the training of Pakistani workers in Britain, 1967
MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 214-65 COMMONWEALTH PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS
Papers of J. Richard Symonds concerning, 1980 MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 62-102
CONGO Papers of UN officials concerning, 1960s
MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 1-190 MS. Eng. c. 4674, fols. 244-324
55
MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 1-65, 73-95, 100-1, 107-8 MS. Eng. c. 4701, fols. 128-71, 282-334 MS. Eng. c. 4702, fols. 1-35
Papers of Winifred Turner (wife of UN Representative) concerning, 1960s MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 123-310
CONSTANTINESCO (Ian) 1918- Material concerning UN career, 1963-74, 1993
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 288-399 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 8 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 6-20
COOK (David) 1930- Papers concerning UN career, 1974-87
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 1-8 COOPER (Gerald) 1925-
Papers concerning UN career, 1965-85 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 9-19
COTTRELL (William) 1903- Papers concerning UN career, 1947-59
MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 191-269 MS. Eng. c. 4666
COUNCIL FOR MUTUAL ECONOMIC AID (CMEA) Correspondence between Michael Kaser and, 1963-73
MS. Eng. c. 4692, fols. 172-233 CRELLIN (Cecil) 1924-
Papers concerning UN career, 1968-85 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 20-93
CROCKER (Sir Walter Russell) 1902- Printed works by, concerning international relations, 1951, 1956
MS. Eng. c. 4666, items 1, 5 CUBA
Letters from, written by Antony Gilpin, 1947-8 MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 21-8
CULLEN (James) 1922- Papers relating to UN career, 1956-82
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 94-105 CYPRUS
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1959-68, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4731 MS. Eng. c. 4743
DAVIES (Sir David Arthur) 1913-90 Papers concerning UN career, 1951-85
MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 4-35, 118-223 DAVIES (T. Glanmor) 1913-
Material concerning UN career, 1949-80 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 106-19 MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 9-11 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 25-50
DE NOÜE (Jehan) 1907- Papers relating to UN career, 1946-67
MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 21-102 DEWIS (John) 1914-
Papers concerning UN career, 1958-72
56
MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 310-70 MSS. Eng. c. 4668-9
DEY (James) 1914- Papers concerning UN career, 1960-88
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 120-53 DISASTER RELIEF
Papers of Sir Robert Jackson concerning UN operation in Bangladesh, 1972-5 MS. Eng. c. 4677, fols. 98-133
DODD (William Atherton) 1923- Papers as UK Representative, UNESCO, 1983-5
MSS. Eng. c. 4725-8 DONAGHY (Elizabeth) 1918-
Papers relating to UN career, 1957-77 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 154-7
DUNNING (Harold) 1919- Papers relating to UN career, 1966-77
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 158-66 ECONOMIC ABSTRACTS
Papers of Michael Kaser concerning, 1961-3, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4690, fols. 163-251
ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR AFRICA (ECA), see United Nations Economic Commission for Africa ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR EUROPE (ECE), see United Nations Economic Commission for Europe ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE, see World Bank ECONOMIC SANCTIONS
Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning their application to Southern Rhodesia, 1970
MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 189-98 EDUCATION
Papers of UN officials relating to, 1953-69, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4671, fols. 229-54, 258-86 MS. Eng. c. 4673, fols. 31-41 MS. Eng. c. 4674, fols. 226-8 MS. Eng. c. 4688, fols. 170-256 MS. Eng. c. 4689 MS. Eng. c. 4692, fols. 242-329 MS. Eng. c. 4693 MS. Eng. c. 4694, fols. 1-86 MS. Eng. c. 4700, item 1 MS. Eng. c. 4708, fols. 141-75 MS. Eng. c. 4709, fols. 194-212
EGYPT Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning, 1949-53, 1967
MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 73-300 MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 1-44
ELKAN (Peter) Papers relating to UN career, 1970-82
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 167-74 ELLIOTT (Alan) 1919-
Papers relating to UN career, 1952-80 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 175-206
57
ELVIN (Lionel) 1905- Papers relating to UN career, 1950-6
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 207-13 ETHIOPIA
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1956-72 MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 122-5 MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 162-6, 221-7 MS. Eng. c. 4701, fols. 11-111 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 107-23
EUROPE, Eastern Papers of Michael Kaser concerning, 1974
MS. Eng. c. 4696, fols. 67-134 EUROPEAN COMMUNITY (EC)
Correspondence between Michael Kaser and, 1967-78 MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 259-84
EUROPEAN EXPERT GROUP ON SOCIAL PLANNING Papers of Michael Kaser concerning, UN Bureau of Social Affairs, 1958-64, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4687, fols. 148-231 EVANS (Archibald Allan Agard) 1906-
Papers concerning UN career, 1929-66 MS. Eng. c. 4723, fols. 102-5 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 23-62
EVANS (Lionel) 1916- Papers concerning UN career, 1961-3
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 214-49 FAINT (John Anthony Leonard) 1942-
Papers concerning UN career, 1986-9 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 250-72
FARR (William) 1924- Papers concerning UN career, 1957-82
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 273-96 FEARNE (Viola) 1916-
Papers concerning UN career, 1971-3 MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 1-198
FIJI ISLANDS Papers of Ernest Knew concerning hides and skins industry of, 1969-72
MS. Eng. c. 4697, fols. 8-9 FLETCHER (Granville) 1910-
Papers concerning UN career, 1946-71 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 297-313
FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION (FAO) Papers of UN officials concerning, 1940s-1993
MS. Eng. c. 4663, fols. 10-200 MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 318-29v, 334-63, 368-70 MSS. Eng. c. 4668-9 MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 147-75 MS. Eng. c. 4697, fols. 6-8, 10-12, 19-22 MS. Eng. c. 4698 MS. Eng. c. 4700, item 2 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 288-399 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 152-253, 295-372
58
MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 16-135, 179-221 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 139-200 MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 1-79 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 8 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 51-5 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 6-20, 103-10 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 63-108
FOOT (Hugh Macintosh) Baron Caradon, 1907-90 Obituary, 1990
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fol. 93 FOREIGN AFFAIRS COMMITTEE (UK)
Printed papers concerning the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 1985-90
MS. Eng. c. 4725, fols. 154-61 MS. Eng. c. 4728, items 2, 8
FRASER (Charles) 1922- Papers concerning UN career, 1970-82
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 314-23 FRITH (Anthony) 1925-
Papers concerning UN career, 1965-82 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 324-35
GALEA (Joseph) 1926- Material concerning UN career, 1965-82
MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 336-78 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 12
GANDHI (Mohandas Karamchand) 1849-1948 Papers of J. Richard Symonds concerning his recollections of, 1940s
MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 163-6, 170-1 GAZA
Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning, 1956 MS. Eng. c. 4707, fols. 94-114, 127-37, 142-65
GENERAL AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE (GATT) Papers of UN officials concerning, 1949-50, 1965-75
MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 247-58 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 278-87
GENEVA, Graduate Institute of International Studies Papers of Michael Kaser concerning, 1961-5, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4690, fols. 1-162 GENEVA, International Institute for Labour Studies
Correspondence between Michael Kaser and, 1964-73 MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 211-46
GENEVA, Switzerland Papers of UN officials relating to, 1947-90
MS. Eng. c. 4656, fols. 1-254 MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 151-233 MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 16-20 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 48-9, 70-8, 110-17 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 5-10, 67-9, 133-5, 249-54 MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 29-31, 204-10
GENEVA CONVENTION Papers concerning protection of civilians in wartime, 1949
MS. Eng. c. 4655, fols. 255-316
59
GILLETT (A. Nicholas) 1914- Papers concerning UN career, 1954-8, 1963-5, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 199-328 MSS. Eng. c. 4671-3 MS. Eng. c. 4674, fols. i-237
GILPIN (Antony) 1913- Papers concerning UN career, 1952-76, 1985
MS. Eng. c. 4674, fols. 238-324 MS. Eng. c. 4675 MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 1-88
GOAD (Sir Edward Colin Viner) 1914- Material concerning UN career, 1963-72
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 1-56 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 13
GODBER (Sir George Edward) 1908- Material as UK Representative, WHO, 1961-73, 1991
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 70-114 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 9
GOLT (Sidney) 1910- Papers as Leader of UK Delegation, UNCTAD, 1968
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 115-32 GOODIER (Brian) 1919-
Papers concerning UN career, 1964-76 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 57-71
GREECE Papers of UN officials concerning, 1945-6, 1972-5
MS. Eng. c. 4702, fols. 92-116 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 118-25 MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 48-57
GRIFFITH (Donald) 1918- Papers concerning UN career, 1961-76
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 72-128 GUILBRIDE (Patrick) 1919-
Papers concerning UN career, 1963-82 MS. Eng. c. 4723, fols. 139-41 MSS. Eng. c. 4735-7
GUILLEBAUD (Philomena) 1926- Papers concerning UN career, 1953-86
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 129-44 GUINEA
Papers of William Cottrell relating to UN visiting mission to, 1959 MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 233-62
GULLAND (John Alan) 1926-90 Papers concerning UN career, 1966-84
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 145-51 HALL (Alan) 1925-
Papers concerning UN career, 1963-80 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 152-253
HAMMERSKJÖLD (Dag Hjalmer Agne Carl) 1905-61 Material concerning, 1950s, 1993
MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 5-6 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 187-203
60
HARBOTTLE (Michael Neale) 1917- Papers concerning UN career, 1966-8
MS. Eng. c. 4731, fols. 116-56 HARRIS (Charles) 1917-88
Papers concerning UN career, 1959-73, n.d. MSS. Eng. c. 4738-48
HIGGINS (Michael) 1908- Papers concerning UN career, 1946-9
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 254-61 HILDYARD (Sir David Henry Thornton) 1916-
Papers as Alternate UK Representative, UN, and Permanent UK Representative, UN (Geneva), 1968-70, 1973-6
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 133-5 HILL (D.W.R.) 1922-
Papers concerning UN career, 1968-82 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 262-8
HILL (William Martin) 1905-76 Obituaries, 1976
MS. Eng. c.4732, fols. 121-7 HOMELESS EUROPEAN LAND PROGRAMME (HELP)
Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair concerning, 1957-60 MS. Eng. c. 4659
HOWSON (David) 1926- Papers concerning UN career, 1980-6
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 269-77 HULL (Eileen) 1920-
Papers concerning UN career, 1944-80 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 278-87
IANNACE (H. Vera Klein) 1924- Papers concerning UN career, 1951-84
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 70-81 IFE, Nigeria, university
Papers of Charles Harris concerning his work at the Institute of Administration, 1970-3, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4744, fols. 2-140 MSS. Eng. c. 4746-7 MS. Eng. c. 4748, fols. 1-167
INDIA Papers of UN officials concerning, 1949-89
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 6-20, 65-8 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 27-39, 47-50, 176-86
INDONESIA Note relating to the agreement between Indonesia and the Netherlands concerning New Guinea, 1962
MS. Eng. c. 4713, fols. 15-33 INSTITUTE OF ADMINISTRATION, see Ife INSTITUTE OF COMMONWEALTH STUDIES, see Oxford INSTITUTE OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, see Brighton INTERGOVERNMENTAL MARITIME CONSULTATION ORGANIZATION (IMCO), see International Maritime Organization INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AUTHORITY (IAEA)
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1959-80
61
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 134-45 MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 80-7
INTERNATIONAL CIVIL AVIATION ORGANIZATION (ICAO) Papers of UN officials concerning, 1945-51
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 181-214 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 134-47
INTERNATIONAL CIVIL SERVICE Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to, 1967
MS. Eng. c. 4713, fols. 249-73 INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION (ILO)
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1954-88 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 202-73, 279-87 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 9-19, 120-53, 158-66, 273-96, 314-23 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 278-87 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 146-58, 215-22 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 222-32 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 1-228 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 128-38, 201-32 MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 131-4 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 1-24 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 1-5 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 23-62
INTERNATIONAL MARITIME ORGANIZATION (IMO) Papers of UN officials concerning, 1955-95
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 1-56, 254-61 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 13 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 19 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 113-35
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND (IMF) Papers of UN officials concerning, 1958-90
MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 285-9 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 32-99, 183-91
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS Papers of UN officials concerning, 1969, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4678, fols. 138-315 MS. Eng. c. 4679 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 266-75
INTERNATIONAL REFUGEE ORGANIZATION (IRO) Papers of UN officials concerning, 1946-51
MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 168-82, 274-7 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 116-33, 181-214 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 317-62
INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE (IRC) Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair relating to, 1953-60
MS. Eng. c. 4658, fols. 234-362 MS. Eng. c. 4659
INTERNATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS UNION (ITU) Papers of UN officials relating to, 1946-80
MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 163-72 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 280-303
IRAN Papers of UN officials relating to, 1958-72
62
MS. Eng. c. 4660, fols. 166-351 MSS. Eng. c. 4661-2 MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 318-19, 334-54 MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 163-70 MS. Eng. c. 4673, fols. 43-208 MS. Eng. c. 4674, fols. i-216
IRWIN (Michael Henry Knox) 1931- Papers concerning UN career, 1957-89
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 288-94 ISRAEL
Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to, 1967-8 MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 1-65
ITALY Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair concerning refugees in, 1952-6;
MS. Eng. c. 4656, fols. 255-352 MS. Eng. c. 4657 MS. Eng. c. 4658, fols. 1-233
JACKSON (Sir Robert Gillman Allen) 1911-91 Material concerning UN career, 1945-90
MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 158-323 MS. Eng. c. 4677 MS. Eng. c. 4678, fols. 1-137 MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 1-4
JAMAICA Memoirs of Patrick Guilbride, Colonial Veterinary Service Official, in, 1948-58
MS. Eng. c. 4735, item 2 JAMES (Sir Robert Vidal Rhodes) 1933-
Material concerning UN career, 1972-6, 1993 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 17 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 153-72
JEBB (Hubert Miles Gladwyn) Baron Gladwyn, 1900- Interview with, 1983, concerning early days of UN
MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 89-157 JENKS (C. Wilfred)
Typescript of International Organisations in the Conflict of Laws, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4678, fols. 138-315 MS. Eng. c. 4679
JONES (Thomas Alun) 1919- Papers concerning UN career, 1967-80
MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 295-372 JORDAN
Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to Education Acts of, 1963-4 MS. Eng. c. 4708, fols. 141-75, 222-58
KASER (Michael Charles) 1926- Papers concerning UN and post-UN career, 1953-1980s
MSS. Eng. c. 4680-96 KASHMIR
Papers of J. Richard Symonds relating to his work in, 1947-9 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 28-42
KATZIN (Alfred) 1906-89 Obituary, 1989
63
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fol. 128 KEATING (Rex) 1910-
Papers concerning UN career, 1956-71 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 1-6
KENYA Papers of Ernest Knew concerning the hides and skins industry of, 1956-9
MS. Eng. c. 4697, fol. 7 KHAMIS (Salem) 1919-
Material concerning UN career, 1949-81, 1993 MS. Eng. c. 4723, fols. 193-6 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 14
KHAN (Riaz) 1924- Papers concerning UN career, 1972-86
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 7-15 KIRKBRIDE (Thomas) 1918-
Papers concerning UN career, 1945-6, 1964-74 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 16-69
KITSON (Sir Frank Edward) 1926- Papers concerning UN career, 1963-4
MS. Eng. c. 4731, fols. 157-60 KNEW (Ernest) 1908-
Papers concerning UN and pre-UN career, 1947-72, 1995, n.d. MSS. Eng. c. 4697-8 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 51-5 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 103-10 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 63-108
KNOWLES (Oliver) 1920- Papers concerning UN career, 1969-84
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 82-101 KOREA
Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair relating to work of UNICEF in, 1948 MS. Eng. c. 4655, fols. 209-17
KUENSTLER (Peter) 1919- Papers concerning UN career, 1964-79
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 102-15 LAM (Martin Philip) 1920-
Papers as Leader of UK Delegation, UNCTAD, 1972 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 136-8
LANDYMORE (Alec) Papers as UK Permanent Representative, FAO, WFP, 1966-71
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 139-41 LANE (Kenneth Winton) 1917-
Papers concerning UN career, 1947-9, 1966-80 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 116-33
LANGENHOWE (Fernand Van) The Idea of the Sacred Trust of Civilization with Regard to the Less Developed Peoples (New York, 1951)
MS. Eng. c. 4666, item 3 LANGLEY (Helen Margaret Lloyd) 1951-
Address to British Association of former UN Civil Servants (BAFUNCS) Reunion, 1995
MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 20
64
LEBANON Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to UNRWA and refugees in, 1949-53
MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 73-300 LEDWIDGE (Sir William Bernard John) 1915-
Papers of and concerning, 1950s, 1991 MS. Eng. c. 4702, fols. 90-1 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 142-53 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 10
LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES (LDCs) Papers of UN officials relating to, 1968-1980s
MS. Eng. c. 4696, fols. 67-261 MS. Eng. c. 4741, fols. 147-212
LIBYA Papers of Eveline Bennett relating to health services in, 1966-70
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 46-9, 73-7 LIE (Trygve Halvdan) 1896-1968
Papers of Sir Robert Jackson concerning, 1948 MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 194-333 MS. Eng. c. 4678, fols. 2-112, 116-17
LLOYD (Oliver) 1918- Papers concerning UN career, 1952-76
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 134-45 LOCKWOOD (Derek) 1925-
Papers concerning UN career, 1967-84 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 146-58
LOGAN (Sir Donald Arthur) 1917- Papers concerning Suez, 1956
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 154-90 LOROCH (Kim) 1923-
Papers concerning UN career, 1969-74 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 159-75
LOVERIDGE (E. Basil) 1918- Papers concerning UN career, 1953-78, 1995, n.d.
MSS. Eng. c. 4699-700 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 109-10
LUARD (David Evan Trant) 1926-91 Obituary, 1991
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fol. 130 LUBBOCK (David) 1911-
Papers concerning UN career, 1946-51 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 176-80
LUCKETT (Joan) 1916- Papers concerning UN career, 1945-51
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 181-215 LUKE (Kenneth) 1912-
Papers concerning UN career, 1964-76 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 103-6
LUNT (George) 1912- Papers concerning UN career, 1960s-1970s
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 216-23 MACKENZIE (Archibald Robert Kerr) 1915-
Papers as member of UK Mission, UN, 1973-5
65
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fol. 191 McLEAN (Peter Standley) 1927-
Papers as Permanent UK Representative, FAO, 1980-5 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 192-208
McMILLAN (S. Ann) Papers concerning UN career, 1947-77
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 224-8 MAITLAND (Sir Donald James Dundas) 1922-
Material as Permanent UK Representative, UN, 1973-4, 1991 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 209-59 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 11
MARK (James) 1914- Papers as UK Representative, UNCTAD, 1960s
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 260-6 MARQUAND (Hilary Adair) 1901-72
Papers concerning UN career, 1961-5 MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 131-4
MARSHALL (Sir Peter Harold Reginald) 1924- Papers as UK Representative, ECOSOC, and Permanent UK Representative, UN (Geneva), 1975-83
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 267-70 MASON (Sir Frederick Cecil) 1913-
Papers as Permanent UK Representative, UN (Geneva), 1971-3 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 271-2
MATHIESON (William Allan Cunningham) 1916- Material as member of UK Delegation UN, and Consultant, UNDP, 1951-4, 1976-81, 1991
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 273-347 MS. Eng. c. 4734, items 12-13
MAWHOOD (Philip) 1924- Papers concerning UN career, 1964-7
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 229-99 MEDICINE
Papers of UN officials relating to healthcare 1956-76, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 6-49, 65-87 MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 1-190 MS. Eng. c. 4686 MS. Eng. c. 4687, fols. 1-109 MS. Eng. c. 4694, fols. 87-376 MS. Eng. c. 4701, fols. 11-111 MS. Eng. c. 4743, fols. 1-99 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 1-22
MEECHAM (Keith) 1930- Papers concerning UN career, 1967-89
MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 300-13 MIDDLE EAST
Papers of UN officials relating to, 1948-70 MS. Eng. c. 4655, fols. 218-43 MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 36-300 MS. Eng. c. 4707-9 MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 1-82
MIDWINTER-VERGIN (Kathleen) 1909-95
66
Material concerning UN career, 1946-69, 1990-5 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 1-91 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 15 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 111-12
MILLARD (Sir Guy Elwin) 1917- Papers as Private Secretary to the Prime Minister, 1955-6
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 348-85 MILLS (A. Raymond) 1916-
Papers concerning UN career, 1969-77 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 92-5
MOLLETT (Geoffrey) 1911-89 Papers concerning UN career, 1953-73
MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 96-100 MOLLETT (Imogen) 1925-
Papers concerning UN career, 1953-73 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 96-131
MONTGOMERY (John Rupert Patrick) 1913- Papers concerning his work with the Anti-Slavery Society, 1963-80
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 1-59 MOROCCO
Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair relating to work of FAO in, 1960-3 MS. Eng. c. 4663, fols. 10-200
MORSE (David Abner) 1907-90 Obituaries, 1990
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fol. 136 MOSER (Sir Claus Adolf) 1922-
Material as UK Representative, UN Statistics Commission, 1960s-1970s, 1992 MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 1-28 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 14
MOZAMBIQUE Memoirs of Patrick Guilbride, FAO official in, 1976-82
MS. Eng. c. 4737, item 2 MURDOCH (Dame Jean Iris) 1919-
Material concerning UN career, 1945-6, 1991 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 132-62 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 16
MURRAY (Sir James) 1919- Papers as Deputy Permanent UK Representative, UN, and Permanent UK Representative, UN (Geneva), 1974-9
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 29-31 MUSK (Dennis) 1920-
Papers concerning UN career, 1946-80 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 163-72
NAMIBIA Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning, 1961, 1970-82
MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 92-105, 203-21, 243-51, 256-64, 285-90, 302-58 MS. Eng. c. 4711, fols. 94-110, 242-6, 268-77, 282-8, 290-317 MS. Eng. c. 4712, fols. 13-78, 81-239
NASH (Nina) Papers concerning UN career, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 173-81
67
NAURU Papers of William Cottrell relating to UN visiting mission to, 1959
MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 233-62 NEATH (Ronald) 1921-
Papers concerning UN career, 1963-81 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 182-219
NETHERLANDS Note by the UN Secretary-General relating to the agreement between the Netherlands and Indonesia concerning New Guinea, in the papers of D. Burnell Vickers, 1962
MS. Eng. c. 4713, fols. 15-33 NEWBURY (Colin) 1929-
Papers concerning UN career, 1959 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 220-316
NEWTON (Donald) 1912-93 Papers concerning UN career, 1944-74
MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 317-62 NICOL (Davidson Sylvester Hector Willoughby) 1924-
Papers concerning UN career, 1970-82 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 1-15
NIGERIA Papers of UN officials relating to, 1962-75, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 78-87 MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 319v-20, 355-8 MSS. Eng. c. 4744-7 MS. Eng. c. 4748, fols. 167-214 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 1-22
NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION (NATO) Correspondence between Michael Kaser and, 1970-9
MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 298-323 NOVE (Alexander) 1915-
Correspondence with Michael Kaser mainly concerning Soviet economics, 1953-62
MS. Eng. c. 4680, fols. 1-189 NOVI (Carlos) 1926-
Material concerning UN career, 1958-95 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 19 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 113-35
NURSING Papers of Eveline Bennett relating to her work in, India, 1962-6
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 6-20, 65-8 OIL
Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair relating to, Iran, 1958-61 MS. Eng. c. 4660, fols. 166-351 MSS. Eng. c. 4661-2
OLSEN (Karl) 1914-90 Papers concerning UN career, 1940s-1980
MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 16-135 OPIUM
Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair concerning UNTAA's work suppressing opium trade in Thailand, 1957-9
MS. Eng. c. 4660, fols. 1-165
68
ORBANEJA (Antonio) 1912- Papers concerning UN career, 1945-50
MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 134-47 ORGANIZATION FOR ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT (OECD)
Correspondence between Michael Kaser and, 1965-70, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 1-81
OWEN (Sir Arthur David Kemp) 1904-70 Obituary, 1970
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 137-8 OXFORD, university
Papers of J. Richard Symonds concerning his work at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, 1963-5
MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 78-89 PACIFIC ISLANDS
Papers of William Cottrell relating to UN visiting mission to, 1959 MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 233-62
PACIFISM Paper of Antony Gilpin concerning, 1985
MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 294-8 PALESTINE LIBERATION ORGANIZATION (PLO)
Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning (and the Palestine National Congress), 1965
MS. Eng. c. 4709, fols. 57-61, 75-81, 146-59, 309 PALMIER (Leslie) 1924-
Papers relating to UN career, 1962-7 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 148-58
PAPUA NEW GUINEA Papers of UN officials concerning, 1960-8, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4713, fols. 1-248 MS. Eng. c. 4740-2
PARIS, International Institute for Educational Planning Papers of Michael Kaser concerning, 1963-9, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4692, fols. 242-329 MS. Eng. c. 4693 MS. Eng. c. 4694, fols. 1-86
PARSONS (Sir Anthony Derrick) 1922- Papers as Permanent UK Representative, UN, 1979-82
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 32-90 PASCOE (Sir Robert Alan) 1932-
Papers concerning UN career, 1967 MS. Eng. c. 4731, fols. 161-84
PECKHAM (Arthur John) 1920- Papers as Permanent UK Representative, FAO, 1977-80
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 91-102 PERFREMENT (Denis) 1926-
Papers concerning UN career, 1973-89 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 159-78
PERU Memoirs of Patrick Guilbride, FAO official, in, 1963-73
MS. Eng. c. 4736, item 2 PHILIPPINES
69
Papers of UN officials relating to, 1954-6 MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 158-63, 176, 193-9 MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 237-44, 261-327 MS. Eng. c. 4671, fols. 1-169 MS. Eng. c. 4672, fols. i-156 MS. Eng. c. 4674, fols. 218-25
PICKERING (Donald) 1931- Material concerning UN career, 1967-88
MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 179-221 PICKERING (Susan)
Cassette, The Work of the World Bank, broadcast on US radio, 1978 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 17
PICKETT (Liam) 1924- Papers concerning UN career, 1963-86
MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 222-32 PILKINGTON (Maurice) 1925-
Papers concerning UN career, 1950-82 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 233-46
PITT (David) Papers concerning UN career, 1979-83
MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 56-152 PLEASE (Stanley) 1923-
Papers concerning UN career, 1963-83 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 247-315
POPULATION Papers of J. Richard Symonds concerning issues related to, 1967-9
MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 101-9, 293-310 PORTUGAL
Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to dispute between World Bank and UN concerning, 1960s
MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 117-88 QUAKER INTERNATIONAL SEMINARS
Papers of Michael Kaser concerning, 1956-64 MS. Eng. c. 4685, fols. 205-93
QUAKERS Papers of Duncan Wood, Quaker Representative, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 60-85 RAINEY (Reginald Charles) 1913-90
Obituary, 1990 MS. Eng. c. 4732, fol. 139
REDCLIFFE-MAUD COMMISSION Papers of Charles Harris concerning, 1969-70, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4748, fols. 167-93 REFUGEES
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1949-66 MSS. Eng. c. 4655-9 MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 73-300 MS. Eng. c. 4707, fols. 40-68 MS. Eng. c. 4709, fols. 283-91
REID (Sir John James Andrew) 1925- Material as member of WHO's Executive Board, 1973-92
70
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 103-60 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 15
RHODESIA, Northern, see Zambia RHODESIA, Southern, see Zimbabwe RICHARD (Ivor Seward) Baron Richard, 1932-
Material as Permanent UK Representative, UN, 1974-9, 1993 MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 161-84 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 16
ROBERTSON (James) 1926- Papers concerning UN career, 1986-9
MS. Eng. c. 4724, fols. 73-6 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 173-86
RUSSELL (Hugh) 1916- Papers concerning UN career, 1956-7
MS. Eng. c. 4701, fols. 1-113 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 107-23
RUSSELL (John) 1938- Papers concerning UN career, 1972-88
MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 316-22 SAMSON (Klaus) 1926-
Papers concerning UN career, 1956-87 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 1-228
SANKEY (John Anthony) 1930- Papers as Permanent UK Represent-ative, UN (Geneva), 1985-90
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 185-8 SARDINIA
Papers concerning refugees in, 1953-60 MS. Eng. c. 4658, fols. 234-362 MS. Eng. c. 4659
SARGENT (Kenneth) 1924- Papers concerning UN career, 1969-83
MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 229-35 SAUDI ARABIA
Papers of Charles Harris relating to UN in, 1963-70, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4738, fols. 186-395 MS. Eng. c. 4739
SAUNDERS (Christopher Thomas) 1907- Papers concerning UN career, 1965-73
MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 236-43 SAUNDERS (John) 1916-
Papers concerning UN and post-UN career, 1945-92 MS. Eng. c. 4701, fols. 114-334 MS. Eng. c. 4702, fols. 1-131
SCHOOLS, Community Papers of A. Nicholas Gillett relating to, the Philippines, 1954-6
MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 237-44 MS. Eng. c. 4672, fols. i-156
SCOTT (Sir Charles Peter) 1917- Papers as Head of UK Permanent Mission, UN (Geneva), 1963
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 189-91 SEAGER (Andrew) 1920s-
Papers concerning UN career, 1960-3, 1973-85
71
MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 244-57 SEN (Sudhir)
Papers concerning UN career, 1956-61 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 258-74
SHANGHAI China Letters from, written by Antony Gilpin, 1948
MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 29-46 SHARIF (Mohammed) 1912-
Papers concerning UN career, 1963-77 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 275-87
SINGAPORE Papers of UN officials concerning, 1948-55
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 247-56 MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 47-52
SINGER (Sir Hans) 1910- Papers concerning UN career, 1947-68, 1993-5
MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 288-327 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 20 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 136-54
SKOUMAL (Stanislav) 1920- Papers concerning UN career, 1970-80
MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 328-38 SLAVERY
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1963-80 MS. Eng. c. 4713, fols. 280-4, 288-311 MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 1-59
SMIETON (Dame Mary Guillan) 1902- Material concerning UN career, 1946-8, 1990
MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 1-28 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 1
SMITH (George Ivan) 1916-95 Papers of and concerning, 1945-93
MS. Eng. c. 4702, fols. 125-8, 132-225 MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 5-6 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 187-203
SMITH (William Jeffrey) 1916- Papers as UK Representative, UNESCO, 1969-72
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 192-5 SNELSON (Kenneth) 1924-
Papers concerning UN career, 1964-83 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 29-39
SOMALIA Papers of Charles Harris relating to British Council in, 1963
MS. Eng. c. 4738, fols. 1-144 SPENCER (Jack) 1916-
Papers concerning UN career, 1967-78 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 40-3
SRI LANKA Papers of UN officials relating to, 1953-5, 1973
MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 179-83 MS. Eng. c. 4700, item 1 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 50-9
72
STARK (Sir Andrew Alexander Steel) 1916- Material concerning UN career, 1968-71, 1991
MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 44-79 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 2
STEWART (Elsie) Lady Stewart, née Pyre, 1914- Papers concerning UN career, 1951-7
MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 80-2 STEWART (Sir Herbert Ray) 1890-1989
Papers concerning UN career, 1949-62 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 83-127
STUART-WILLIAMS (D. ) 1926-. Papers concerning UN career, 1972-81
MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 128-38 SUDAN
Papers of Ernest Knew concerning hides and skins industry of, 1947-56, 1959-69
MS. Eng. c. 4697, fols. 6-8, 10-12, 19-22 MS. Eng. c. 4698, items 3-4 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 51-5 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 103-10
SUEZ Egypt Papers of Donald Logan concerning, 1956
MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 154-90 SYKES (Alan) 1923-
Papers concerning UN career, 1967-81 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 139-200
SYMONDS (John Richard Charters) 1918- Papers concerning UN career, 1946-80
MS. Eng. c. 4703 MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 1-107
SYRIA Papers of D. Burrell Vickers relating to, 1949-53, 1965
MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 73-300 MS. Eng. c. 4709, fols. 194-212
TANZANIA Papers of John Dewis concerning FAO in, 1965-6
MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 321-2, 359-60 TANZER (William)
Papers concerning UN career, 1994 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 155-6
TAYLOR (James) 1930- Papers concerning UN career, 1966-78
MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 132-3 THAILAND
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1954-72 MS. Eng. c. 4660, fols. 1-165 MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 130, 202 MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 322-8, 361-3 MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 251-9 MS. Eng. c. 4672, fols. 157-316 MS. Eng. c. 4673, fols. 1-41
THANT (U Maung) 1909-74
73
Correspondence and notes, 1962 MS. Eng. c. 4713, fols. 11-33
THIRD WORLD, see Less Developed Countries THRISCUTT (H. S.) 1921-
Material concerning UN career, 1966, 1977-83 MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 108-22 MS. Eng. c. 4705
TICKELL (Sir Crispin Charles Cervantes) 1930- Papers as Permanent UK Representative, UN, 1987-90, 1994
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 196-232 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 157-68
TICKNER (Winifred) Papers, including 'A Spectator in the Congo, Memories from the Diary of an Onlooker at the Violent Birth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo', 1960s
MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 123-313 TIDMARSH (Kyril) 1931-
Papers concerning UN career, 1955-93 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 201-32
TIRAI, Straits of Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning, 1965-7
MS. Eng. c. 4709, fols. 116-34, 312-29, 330-53 TOWNSEND (Charles) 1927-
Papers concerning UN career, 1961-8 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 233-43
TRIESTE Italy A history of Trieste (c. 1900-50) by Sir Edgar Williams
MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 142-62 TUNISIA
Papers of J. Richard Symonds relating to UNDP in, 1975-8 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 126-33 MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 58-61
TURKEY Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to UNRWA and refugees in, 1949-53
MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 73-300 UGANDA
Memoirs of Patrick Guilbride, Colonial Veterinary Service official, in, 1958-63
MS. Eng. c. 4736, item 1 UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (USSR)
Papers of Michael Kaser relating to economy of, 1953-63, n.d. MSS. Eng. c. 4680-4 MS. Eng. c. 4685, fols. 1-96
UNITED KINGDOM (UK) Papers of UN officials relating to, 1972-90, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 222-42, 254-5, 270-84 MS. Eng. c. 4711, fols. 135-41, 246 MS. Eng. c. 4712, fols. 304-21 MS. Eng. c. 4725, fols. 41-61, 138-61 MSS. Eng. c. 4726-7 MS. Eng. c. 4728, items 2-3
UNITED NATIONS (UN) Material of UN officials relating to, 1945-95, n.d.
74
MSS. Eng. c. 4665-748 passim; MS. Eng. c. 4797 MS. Eng. c. 5229 MS. Eng. c. 5778
UNITED NATIONS, General Assembly Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to, 1961
MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 92-105 UNITED NATIONS, Security Council
Papers of Davidson Nicol, relating to, 1970 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 1-15
UNITED NATIONS CHILDREN'S FUND (UNICEF) Material of UN officials concerning, 1947-91
MS. Eng. c. 4655, fols. 188-243, 246-7 MS. Eng. c. 4692, fols. 1-81 MS. Eng. c. 4701, fols. 175-269, 272-80 MS. Eng. c. 4702, fols. 40-87 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 106-19 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 288-94 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 317-62 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 142-53 MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 9-11 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 10 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 25-50
UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE ON TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT (UNCTAD)
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1960s-1990 MS. Eng. c. 4696, fols. 67-134 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 32-99 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 167-74 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 82-101 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 63-6, 115-32, 136-8, 260-6 MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 261-77
UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME (UNDP) Material of UN officials concerning, 1954-91
MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 109-209, 213-64 MS. Eng. c. 4677, fols. 41-68 MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 50-89, 118-38 MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 48-61 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 129-44 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 102-33 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 273-347 MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 1-4 MS. Eng. c. 4734, items 12-13 MS. Eng. c. 4746, fols. 62-101
UNITED NATIONS ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR AFRICA (ECA) Papers of UN officials relating to, 1959-79, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4692, fols. 234-41 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 262-8 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 288-328
UNITED NATIONS ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR EUROPE (ECE) Papers of UN officials relating to, 1953-82, n.d.
75
MS. Eng. c. 4680, fols. 190-332 MSS. Eng. c. 4681-4 MS. Eng. c. 4685, fols. 1-204 MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 82-146 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 167-74 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 236-43
UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION (UNESCO)
Material of UN officials relating to, 1940s-1991 MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 199-209, 231-328 MSS. Eng. c. 4671-3 MS. Eng. c. 4674, fols. i-237 MS. Eng. c. 4687, fols. 110-47 MS. Eng. c. 4695, fols. 176-210 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 20-93, 175-206 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 228-98 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 220-316 MSS. Eng. c. 4725-8 MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 233-60 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 17
UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES (UNHCR) Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair concerning work of in Geneva and Rome, 1950-6
MSS. Eng. c. 4656-7 MS. Eng. c. 4658, fols. 1-233
UNITED NATIONS INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATION (UNIDO) Papers of UN officials concerning, 1964-80
MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 317-62 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 288-338
UNITED NATIONS OFFICE OF LEGAL AFFAIRS Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to its work concerning South Africa, 1949, 1960-82, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 83-358 MS. Eng. c. 4711
UNITED NATIONS OPERATION IN THE CONGO (ONUC) Letters relating to, written by Antony Gilpin, 1960-5
MS. Eng. c. 4674, fols. 244-324 MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 1-65, 73-95, 100-1, 107-8
UNITED NATIONS RELIEF AND REHABILITATION ADMINISTRATION (UNRRA)
Material of UN officials, 1944-51, 1991 MS. Eng. c. 4655, fols. 11-187 MS. Eng. c. 4676, fols. 194-333 MS. Eng. c. 4678, fols. 2-112, 116-37 MS. Eng. c. 4702, fols. 92-116 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 124-45 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 16-69, 181-214 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 132-62, 317-62 MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 94-116 MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 1-4, 16
UNITED NATIONS RELIEF AND WORKS AGENCY (UNRWA) Papers of UN officials relating to, 1948-70
76
MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 36-300 MS. Eng. c. 4707-9 MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 1-82 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 317-62 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 83-127, 233-63
UNITED NATIONS RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT (UNRESD)
Papers of UN officials concerning, 1962-5, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4692, fols. 120-71 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 288-328
UNITED NATIONS SEMINAR ON PLANNING TECHNIQUES Papers of Michael Kaser concerning, 1964
MS. Eng. c. 4690, fols. 252-329 MS. Eng. c. 4691
UNITED NATIONS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION (UNTAA) Papers of John Alexander-Sinclair relating to, 1957-9
MS. Eng. c. 4660, fols. 1-165 UNITED NATIONS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE BOARD (UNTAB)
Material of UN officials concerning, 1958-70 MS. Eng. c. 4660, fols. 166-351 MSS. Eng. c. 4661-2 MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 210-310 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 120-53 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 116-33
UNITED NATIONS TEMPORARY EXECUTIVE AUTHORITY (UNTEA) Papers of D. Burnell Vickers relating to, Papua New Guinea, 1960-8, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4713, fols. 1-248 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Letters from, written by A. Nicholas Gillett, 1955 MS. Eng. c. 4671, fols. 196-228
UNIVERSAL POSTAL UNION (UPU) Papers of John Willmott relating to, 1971-4
MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 280-303 UNWIN (Thomas) 1923-
Papers concerning UN career, 1964-83 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 260-6
VICKERS (D. Burnell) 1922-83. Papers concerning UN career, 1948-82
MSS. Eng. c. 4706-13 VICKERS (Jeanne) 1924-
Articles written by, concerning development education, 1984 MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 17, 20-2
VIETNAM Papers of Arthur Brown relating to WHO in, 1954-5
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 108-9, 151, 186-7, 203-46, 257-61 WALDHEIM (Kurt) 1918-
Material of Sir Robert Rhodes James relating to, 1972-6, 1993 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 17 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 153-72
WALSH (Nigel) 1925- Papers concerning UN career, 1967-79
77
MS. Eng. c. 4724, fols. 146-51 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 134-6
WARD (William Ernest Frank) 1900- Papers as member of UK Delegation, UNESCO, 1940s-1950s
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 233-53 WEST INDIES
Letters from written by Antony Gilpin, 1959 MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 338-40
WESTERN SAMOA Papers of Eveline Bennett, relating to rural health services in, 1967-9
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 21-45, 69-72 WHITAKER (Benjamin Charles George) 1934-
Material as member of UK National Commission for UNESCO, 1978-91 MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 254-60 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 17
WILLIAMS (Douglas) 1917- Papers as UK Representative, UNCTAD, 1970s
MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 261-77 WILLIAMS (Sir Edgar Trevor) 1912-
Papers concerning UN career, 1946-7 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 267-79 MS. Eng. c. 5229, fols. 137-62
WILLMOTT (John) 1917- Papers concerning UN career, 1964-74
MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 280-303 WILSON (Fergus) 1908-
Papers concerning UN career, 1964-70 MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 1-79
WILSON (Sir James) 1921- Material concerning UN career, 1964-6, 1991
MS. Eng. c. 4731, fols. 185-336 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 18
WINTERINGHAM (F. Peter) 1918-. Papers concerning UN career, 1961-80
MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 80-7 WOMEN
Papers of women in UN agencies, 1944-91, n.d. MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 1-98 MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 1-198 MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 123-313 MS. Eng. c. 4706, fols. 17, 20-2 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 100-11, 168-82, 192-201 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 154-7 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 129-44, 278-87 MS. Eng. c. 4717, fols. 70-81, 181-214 MS. Eng. c. 4718, fols. 1-91, 96-162 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 1-28, 80-2 MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 15-17 MS. Eng. c. 4734 item 1 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 1-22
WOOD (Duncan) Papers concerning his work as Quaker Representative, n.d.
78
MS. Eng. c. 4732, fols. 60-85 WORLD BANK
Material of UN officials concerning, 1951-91 MS. Eng. c. 4704, fols. 111-14 MS. Eng. c. 4705 MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 117-88 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 146-67 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 214-72 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 288-372 MS. Eng. c. 4719, fols. 179-221, 247-322 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 244-57 MS. Eng. c. 4721, fols. 80-127, 244-59 MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 116-51 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 11-62 MS. Eng. c. 4733, item 17 MS. Eng. c. 4734, item 8
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION (WHO) Material of UN officials, 1947-92, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4664, fols. 1-262 MS. Eng. c. 4665, fols. 1-190 MS. Eng. c. 4670, fols. 1-198 MS. Eng. c. 4686 MS. Eng. c. 4687, fols. 1-109 MS. Eng. c. 4694, fols. 87-376 MS. Eng. c. 4701, fols. 1-113 MS. Eng. c. 4714, fols. 124-45 MS. Eng. c. 4715, fols. 336-78 MS. Eng. c. 4716, fols. 72-128 MS. Eng. c. 4720, fols. 275-87 MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 107-15 MS. Eng. c. 4729, fols. 70-114 MS. Eng. c. 4730, fols. 103-60 MS. Eng. c. 4733, items 9-12 MS. Eng. c. 4734, items 3-7, 9, 15 MS. Eng. c. 4797, fols. 56-144 MS. Eng. c. 5778, fols. 1-22
WORLD METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION (WMO) Papers of Sir Arthur Davies relating to, 1951-79
MS. Eng. c. 4667, fols. 118-223 WREN (E. G. Christopher) 1921-.
Material concerning UN career, 1958-69 MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 107-14 MS. Eng. c. 4734, items 3-7
WYATT (Gavin Edward) 1914- Papers concerning UN career, 1965-76
MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 116-47 YORUBALAND Nigeria
Papers of Charles Harris concerning School of Oriental and African Studies expedition to, 1971
MS. Eng. c. 4744, fols. 143-277 YUGOSLAVIA
Papers of J. Richard Symonds relating to UNDP in, 1955-8
79
MS. Eng. c. 4703, fols. 59-69 ZAGNI (Anthony) 1933-
Papers concerning UN career, 1979-89 MS. Eng. c. 4722, fols. 148-51
ZAMBIA Memoirs of Patrick Guilbride, Colonial Veterinary Service official, in, 1945-8
MS. Eng. c. 4735, item 1 Papers of UN officials concerning, 1965-78
MS. Eng. c. 4675, fols. 109-62, 167-93, 201-9, 213-20, 227-64 MS. Eng. c. 4677, fols. 143-82
ZIMBABWE Papers of D. Burnell Vickers concerning, 1970-3, n.d.
MS. Eng. c. 4710, fols. 189-98 MS. Eng. c. 4711, fols. 14-93, 111-27, 142-58, 163 MS. Eng. c. 4712, fols. 322-60
Transformation from XML to HTML by Lawrence Mielniczuk
29 April 2003
PART 3. LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS TO STAGE I, THROUGH QUESTIONNAIRES 3.1 Note for readers of the database of contributions to UNCRP Stage 1 (Bill Jackson, Oxford Region, March 2008) At the request of the Executive Committee of BAFUNCS, I prepared this database in early 2008. The main purpose was to extract key information from those contributions (approximately 130) which had been in the form of response to the original Questionnaire only – i.e. with no subsequent depositing of papers, publications or whatever by the respondent. The Bodleian has done a very good job of cataloguing what was received by way of papers and cassettes, and the resultant catalogue is instantly available online, by entering http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/uncrp/uncrp.html
This yields an alphabetical listing of depositors, within categories such as ‘Major’, Minor’, ‘UK Representatives’ and Miscellaneous; and there is an Index of all such names, indeed also of main topics or subjects represented. However, aside from the fact that, understandably, the material deposited is not itself online (to access it, one has to have a reader’s card for the Bodleian, with permission to read manuscript material), there are some drawbacks to this arrangement for BAFUNCS members who may be especially interested in the UNCRP. The catalogue does not give the position/s which the respondent held in the UN or agency concerned. The listing of topics/subjects is rather restricted. And, so far, the category ‘Questionnaires’ does not list the individual names of those who responded by completing the Questionnaire only – they are simply indicated as ‘Alagiah to Muth’ and ‘Naylor to Wright’.
In those circumstances I judged it worth the extra effort to list all contributors, irrespective of category. That said, the following comments are necessary:
1) BAFUNCS members are required scrupulously to respect the privacy undertakings given to the Bodleian for the purpose of our making this database: (please read the attached declaration).
2) The year of birth (and occasionally death) as indicated in the online catalogue is included. Where such figures are in italics it means that I have established a date or dates independently of the catalogue. Likewise, additional information which I have included in italics under other columns has also been gleaned elsewhere (e.g. from the Internet), is not to be found in the papers in the Bodleian and is therefore solely my responsibility.
3) The terms ‘Major’ and ‘Minor’ as applied to contributions represent simply two categories used by the Bodleian and are not intended as any reflection whatsoever on the intrinsic value, as distinct from quantity, of the papers in question;
4) The necessarily very summary details of post/s held is my own, and I apologise for any inadequacies or inaccuracies which it may contain..
5) The word ‘Report’ is used to indicate that (very brief) reference to the material of the given depositor was made in the booklet “The United Nations Career Records Project – Final Report on First Stage 1989-92” dated St. Antony’s College, Oxford, September 1992.;
6) The letter ‘Q’ denotes that the listed person completed a Questionnaire only.
7) ‘***’ signifies that further research of the holdings is needed in order to fill the blank.
8) The penultimate column is entitled ‘Questionnaire respondent intends completing Part 1 also?’ This is designed to allow EXCO to formulate plans for follow-up to Questionnaire-only respondents where judged appropriate and desirable, in order to encourage depositing of papers, cassettes, etc. To this end, I had intended to include postal address, phone number and e-mail address. However, this seemed unnecessary because the BAFUNCS Membership List can readily provide these, and undesirable in view of privacy considerations. In any case, sadly, a significant proportion of Stage 1 respondents will have died since the early 1990s: BAFUNCS archives will doubtless yield several additional death years not available to me.
9) The UNCRP is already a valuable resource. Members, whether modest or distinguished, who have not yet contributed are most warmly encouraged to do so at their earliest convenience!
3.2 Database of contributors to UNCRP Stage 1, prepared for BAFUNCS by Bill Jackson, February 2008
Num
ber
Nam
e
Birt
h/D
eath
yea
rs
Nat
iona
lity
UN
/Age
ncie
s se
rved
in
Year
/s s
erve
d
Posi
tion/
s he
ld
Stat
us/lo
catio
n of
co
ntrib
utio
n to
UN
CR
P,
per B
odle
ian
Libr
ary
Que
stio
nnai
re
resp
onde
nt in
tend
s co
mpl
etin
g Pa
rt 1
als
o?
Key
wor
ds &
sub
ject
ar
eas
for r
esea
rche
rs
001 Abhyankar, M.G. ?
UN
1960
s Major (military) See under DBH Vickers papers
UN military operations, Congo, 1960-61
002 Agostini, Francois 28-
ILO
61-8
6 *** Miscellaneous
ILO decentralisation; Latin America
003 Alagiah, D.R. 25-
WH
O
71-8
4 Public Health Engineer Q Wrote on the Int'l Drinking Water & Sanitation Decade
004 Alexander, Bernard
1913
-90
UN
; U
NH
CR
40s,
50s
*** NGOs & obituaries
Refugees
005 Alexander-Sinclair, John
A.C.C.
1906
-88
UN
HC
R
50-5
3 UNHCR Rep. to ITA Major; Report
Refugees
006 Allan, T.G. 27-
FAO
70-8
6 Forester Q Yes Tropical forest management
007 Allen, Mark Echalaz
1918
-200
3
UN
78-8
4 Inspector, Joint Inspection Unit Minor; Report
Joint Inspection Unit
82
008 Allen, Yvonne 20-
CAN
WB
63-8
4 Secretary & Admin Sec. Q 00
9 Alves, John 22-
IMF;
U
ND
P
58-8
5 IMF 58-79, UNDP 85 Minor; Report
International finance; Saudi Arabia
010 Anson, Sir John 30-
IMF,
WB
80-8
3 Executive Director of IMF& WB Q No because not staff
011 Anstee, Dame Margaret
J. 26-
UN
DP;
U
NTA
B; U
N
52-8
8 Res. Rep., Deputy Asst. and then Asst. Administrator; ASG in DTCD; USG i/c Vienna, &c
Q World Food Council, etc etc
012 ap Rees, Garth 34-
UN
TAB,
U
ND
P
64-8
7 Asst. Res Rep, BOT, LES, SWZ; Res Rep MRT, S Pacific, SUD; Dir, Policy Co-ord'n & Procedures, BPPE, HQ; Dep Asst Administrator
Q Yes St Helena
013 Ashford, Oliver M. 15-
WM
O
52-7
7 Chief, Research Section; Chief Programme Planning; Dir of Prog, Plg and UN Affairs
Q Yes World Weather Watch; Global Atmospheric Research Programme
014 Bagshaw, Peter 23-
FAO
69-8
3 Principal, BOT Agric College; Rural Institutions Office
Q Agricultural education
015 Baster, Nancy 13-
UN
; UN
ECA;
U
NR
ISD
57-6
1; 6
1-65
; 65
-68 Research Officer, Social Affairs Q Yes -
short Development indicators & measurement
016 Beach, Jack
20-2
002
WB
65-8
1 Sen Power Engineer; Chief, Power Sec, Chief, Energy Div for E Asia and Pacific
Q Deceased
017 Belcher, Ernest Hugh 20-
IAEA
63-8
1 Medical Applications Sec; Dir, Div of Life Sciences
Q Yes Radio-isotopes in medical diagnosis
018 Bennett, Arthur A. 18-
ILO
52-6
5 Chief, Vocational Rehabilitation Section
No
83
019 Bennett, Eveline 14-
WH
O
54-7
4 Nurse Major; Report
AFG; IND; LBY; WSM; NGA; Nursing
020 Berrie, Thomas W.
24-2
002
WB
68-7
6 Sen Economist; Econ Adviser; Chief, Operations Evaluation Dept
Q Deceased
021 Berry, Celia 38-
UN
ESC
O;
UN
64-8
7 *** Minor
022 Bishop, Robert 21-
FAO
52-7
7 FAO Rep. TUR Minor; Report
TUR
023 Bolt, Cecil 22-
WB
63-8
3 Sen Irrigation Engineer Q Yes Irrigation; drainage; flooding
024 Bottomley, Sir James R. 20-
59; 7
6- 8 UK Mission to UN; UK Rep., Geneva
UK Reps. UK policy towards UN
025 Boyd Orr, Lord John
1880
-197
1
FAO
First Director General of FAO See under
Jackson, Sir Robert - Memorial Lecture
026 Brackenbury, C.E. 10-
UN
; UN
HC
R
45-5
5; 5
5-70
Admin/Internal Audit Q No
027 Brown, Andrew 24-
UN
RR
A;
WH
O
46; 4
7-8 Chief Medical Officer, HUN Minor Same
person as Brown, Arthur?
028 Brown, Dr. Arthur F. 17-
WH
O
1960
s Health Adviser; WHO Country Rep.; Reg. Office Alexandria
Major; Report
Same person as Brown,
Health; CMB, LAO, VIE, ETH, Congo DRC; Health Africa
84
Andrew?
029 Browning, Rex Alan 30-
73-6
Alternate UK Director, World Bank UK Reps. WB
030 Buist, J.L.F. 30-
1976
-90
Under-Sec FCO (ODA) UK Reps. UNCTAD, FAO, IFAD
031 Burbidge, John ?
ILO
62-7
7 ILO Training Centre, Turin Miscellaneous
Training
032 Burgess, H.J.L. 30-
WH
O;
FAO
65-7
8; 7
8- 81
Consultant & Reg Adviser, Nutrition; Exec Sec UN A.C.C. Sub-Committee on Nutrition
Q No
033 Burke, Victor 20-
WB
Agric. Dev. Service; Proj Off NGA Desk, HQ
Q No
034 Burley, Jeffrey 36-
UN
ESC
O
65-6
8 Expert in Forestry Q Done' (?)
President, Int'l Union of Forestry Research Organisations
035 Bush, John G. 36-
WB
77-8
5 Fin. Controller, Cotton Lint & Seed Mktg. Board, KEN
Q
087 Cairncross, Sir
Alexander
1911
-98
WB
55-6
Director, Economic Development Institute
Minor; Report
Economics
036 Callow-Miles, Irene 17-
UN
RR
A
IRO
45-5
0 *** Minor GER; AUS; Displaced persons
037 Carter, Peers Lee
16-2
001
61-3
UK Delegate to UN; UK Permanent Rep to UN Geneva
UK Reps.; Report
UN
038 Carver, Richard M.P.,
Lord
15-2
001
UN
FIC
YP
64
Field Marshal Report CYP; Peace-keeping
85
039 Cassell, Frank 30-
IMF;
W
B
88-
90
An Executive Director Minor Central Banking Journal, vol xiii, 2003 etc
040 Cassidy, Shelagh 24-
WH
O; F
AO;
WFP
51-5
; 55-
86
Secretary Minor BGD; Disaster relief
041 Caustin, Harold
Die
d 19
80s
UN
RR
A; U
NR
WA;
U
NIC
EF; U
NID
O
44-7
; 47-
66
UNDP Res. Rep, LBY NGOs & obituaries
LBY; technical co-operation
042 Chamberlin, R.E. 20-
ILO
66-8
7 Expert in Soc. Security Law & Admin, 9 countries
Q No
046 Chapman, Joyce 20-
WH
O
49-6
3 Clerical & Sec, Admin Off, Copenhagen
Q
043 Chivers, Vernon 28-
ILO
1954
-88 Clerk; Secretary to Staff Insurance
Fund Minor ILO administration
044 Churchward, William 14-
ILO
63-7
8 Expert in Vocational Training Minor; Report
KUW; Africa
045 Cockrill, W. Ross
1913
-99
FAO
53-7
5 Veterinary Adviser; Chief, Vet Med Section HQ
Q Deceased
Wrote The Health and Husbandry of the Domestic Buffalo
047 Cohen, Myer
Ret
ired
1972
USA
UN
RR
A; IR
O;
UN
DP
45-6
; 46-
51;
52-6
0s
Deputy Administrator UNDP Minor; Report
YUG
048 Colborne, Peter 00-
ILO
68-8
1 Expert in Industrial Training Minor; Report
BGD; LBR; MYS; THA; Industrial training
86
049 Coles, Edwin K.
Townsend
22-2
003
UN
ESC
O;
WB
71-8
2; 7
5- 7 Adult Education specialist ???; Report AFG; BOT; GRE; Adult Education; obit. 07/08/2003 Oxford Mail
050 Collins, John Clive 26-
WB
72-8
8 Sen Agric Adviser, Principal Agriculturalist
Q No
051 Constantinesco, Ian 05-
FAO
63-7
4 Engineering Branch? Minor, cassette; Report
052 Cook, David 30-
WB
74-8
7 Minor
053 Cook, Raymond 24-
WB
74-8
0 Engineer Q No
054 Cooper, Gerald 25-
ILO
65-8
3 Minor
055 Cottrell, William 03-
UN
47-6
4 Trusteeship Council Major; Report
CMR, NRU, PNG; Lake Success; Trusteeships
056 Crellin, Cecil 24-
UN
ESC
O
68-8
5 Minor Asia
057 Cullen, James 22-
WH
O
56-8
2 Minor; Report
Congo DRC; THA; Malaria
058 David, Adrian G. 12-
UN
; ITU
48-6
0; 6
0-74
Econ. Affairs Off.; Asst to DG, UNOG; Sec to UN Narcotics Commission; i/c Conferences & Gen Services & Legal Adviser, HQ
Q No
059 Davies, Barrie 14-
UN
; U
NEC
E
48-5
3;
53-7
8 Sen Statistician, UN Stats Office; Dir Stats Unit, Section, Branch, Div
Q No
87
060 Davies, Sir D. Arthur
1913
-90
WM
O
51-7
9 Secretary General WMO Major; Report
East Africa; Meteorology; WMO 06
1 Davies, T. Glanmor 13-
UN
ICEF
49-8
0 UNICEF Rep. in India Minor; cassette
BGD; IND; East and Southern Africa; UNICEF
062 Davis, Terence 22-
FAO
&
UN
DP
69-8
2 Hydrological Engineer; Sen Hydrologist
Q Possibly'
Water; International rivers
088 De Noue, Jehan 07-
UN
Ag
enci
es
46-6
7 Chief of Protocol, UN Wrote "Indiscretions diplomatiques"; also "Notes et anecdotes d'un international au Xxme siecle"
063 Delavenay, Emile 05- FRE
UN
Pre
p C
omm
issi
on;
UN
; UN
ESC
O
45-4
6; 4
6-50
; 50-
66
Editor, Journal of UN G.A., 1946; Dir, Official Records Div, HQ; Dir Docs and Pubn's Service & Chief Editor
Q Wrote his memoirs?
Translation methodology; machine translation
064 Deveria, Noe 15-
FAO
68-7
6 Expert, Plantation mechanisation Q No
065 Dewar, Robert J. 23-
WB
69-8
4 Sen Agriculturist; Civ Chief, Agriculture, E Africa
Q No
066 Dewis, John 14-
FAO
58-7
2 Major; Report
IRN; NGA; THA; TZA; Agriculture; FAO
067 Dey, James 14-
UN
TAB;
IL
O
60-4
; 64
-88 Management Development
Branch, ILO Minor; Report
KOR; TUR; management
068 Dodd, William A. 23-
83-5
UK Rep to UNESCO Executive Board
UK Reps.; Report
UNESCO, inc. UK withdrawal from
88
070 Donaghy, Elizabeth 18-
WB
57-7
7 Records management Minor; Report
08
9 Douglas, James 13-
UN
&
UN
ESC
O
46-5
7 Editor, Info Off; Political Affairs Office
Q No
071 Dunning, Harold 19-
ILO
66-7
7 Chief, Workers Relations Branch Minor; Report
072 Elkan, Peter ?
UN
CTA
D;
UN
ECE
70-4
; 74-
82
*** Minor Industrial growth; world trade
073 Elliott, Alan 19-
UN
ESC
O
52-8
0 HQ; Chief of Mission ETH Minor; Advisory Committee on UNCRP
Comparative education
074 Elter, Ann Margaret 27-
WH
O
51-8
7 Editor; Editor & Mgt Officer Q No
075 Elvin, Lionel
1905
-200
5
UN
ESC
O
50-5
6 Director, Education Dept. Minor Education
076 Evans, Archibald A.A.
1906
-198
8
ILO
29-4
0; 4
7-66
Unemployment Sec; Liaison with UN; Chief, Industrial workers Div; first Chairman of Federation of Int' Civil Servants' Assocs
Index only; and Q
Biographical notes were in preparation
Europe federalism
078 Evans, Lionel 16-
WB
61-7
3 Head, Agricultural Dept. Minor; Report
Lecture Forty Years of Development
IBRD re-organisation
89
Aid", 1988
079 Faint, J. A. l. 'Tony' 42-
86-9
Alternative UK Executive Director, IBRD; International Director, Department for International Development
UK Reps.; Report
IBRD re-organisation
080 Farr, William 24-
ILO
57-8
2 Chief, Personnel Dept. Minor ILO, the International civil service
081 Fearne, Viola 16-
WH
O
71-7
3 Occupational Therapist Major; Report
IRN; LKA; MMR
082 Fishwick, Robert W. 26-
FAO
; WB
66-7
7; 7
7- 84
Forester; Sen For Specialist W. Africa Div
Q No Wrote 'Fuelwood Consumption and Deforestation in Developing Countries' for FAO
083 Fishwick, Wilfred 18-
UN
ESC
O
72-7
7 CTA in KEN, UGA Q No Edited Structures of Technological Education and Contributing Social Factors for UNESCO
084 Fletcher, H. Granville
1910
-200
7
UN
46-7
1 Many positions: translator 1946; Chief English Editor; Chairman, Staff Association; Director UNIC London, later Rome; Chef de Cabinet, Director of Protocol, UN Office, Geneva
Minor; Advisory Committee on UNCRP
085 Flexner, Elizabeth 17-
UN
RR
A
44-4
6 Admin Officer Q No
086 Forrest, Ronald W. 34-
UN
ESC
O
63-7
3 Expert, Englist Teaching & Trg, NGA, ETH, PNG, YEM
Q Yes
090 Foster, P.V.D. 17-
FAO
63-8
0 Agric Adviser Q No
90
091 Franklin, Norton N.
1915
-90
ILO
48-7
3 Head, Econ Research & Planning Dept.; Econ Adviser to DG
Q Deceased
09
2 Fraser, Charles 22-
ILO
70-8
2 *** Minor
093 Fraser, Ian 18-
UN
; UN
ECA
57-6
5; 6
5-76
Dir & Chief of Mission, Imp Inst of Public Admin, ETH; UN HQ; Chief of Mission to SUR
Q ?' Public Administration
094 Frith, Anthony 25-
FAO
65-8
2 Project Manager, Expert in Forestry
Minor; Report
FJI; Latin America; Forestry
095 Galea, Joseph 26-
WH
O
62-8
6 Senior Public Health Administrator; WHO Country Rep.
Minor; Report
Public health
096 Garret-Jones, Charles 12-
WH
O
51-5
; 58
-70 Entomologist, Malaria teams Q No Malaria - many articles written
097 Gervais-MacWilliam,
Ginette 38- CAN
WB
70-8
6 Admin; Procurement Q No
098 Gillett, A. Nicholas 14-
UN
ESC O
54-6
5 Teacher Training Major; Report
IRN; PHL; THA; Teacher training; Quakerism; Abolition of war
099 Gilpin, Antony 13-
UN
TAB;
U
ND
P
57-7
4 Regional Rep. in Southern Africa Major; Report
Southern Africa; pacifism; international aid, etc, etc
100 Goad, Sir Colin 14-
IMC
O/IM
O
63-7
2 Secretary General IMCO Minor Shipping; Pollution; the International civil service
101 Godber, Sir George 14-
60-7
3 Member of WHO Executive board, UK Representative to WHO.
UK Reps. Malaria; family planning; smoking
102 Goddard, Thomas 20-
ILO
63-7
7 Expert in Carpentry & Joinery, 6 countries
Q No
91
103 Golt, Sidney
1910
-95
68
Leader, UK delegation to UNCTAD UK Reps. Obituary, The Independent, June 19, 1995
104 Goodier, Brian 19-
FAO
64-
76
Project Manager, Expert in Land and Water Use
Minor; Report
IDN; PER; VEN
107 Gray, Brian S. 31-
WB
70-
87
Sen Tree Crops Adviser, Specialist, CMR, LBR
Q No
108 Green, Alan H. 24- W
B
77-
84
Agriculturist, W Africa Reg Q No
109 Green, George, D. 32-
ILO
bet.
66 &
87
Expert, Bldg. & construction, Reg Adviser & CTA, E Africa
Q Yes
110 Griffith, Donald 00-
WH
O
61-7
6 *** Minor
111 Guilbride, Patrick 19-
FAO
63-
81
Proj Mgr PER, BRA, MOZ, Veterinary Officer
Q Wrote "Far Away Cows"; BRA, JAM, MOZ, UGA, ZMB
112 Guillebaud, Philomena 26-
UN
; U
ND
P
53-8
; 59- 86
Project Officer HQ, Dep. Res. Rep. ANG
Minor; Report
113 Gulland, John A.
26-9
0
FAO
66-8
4 Fishery Resources & Environment Division
Minor Fishery Resources
105 Hall, Alan 25-
FAO
63-
80
Marketing Adviser, Project Manager
Minor; Report
Cultural assimilation; technical assistance; FAO
106 Hall, John M. 29-
WB
75-8
9 Proj Off/Mgr/Sen Prog Off, NGA, BGD, IND
Q No
114 Hammersley, Arthur 23-
FAO
; U
ND
P
70-8
3 Sen Agric Adviser, Proj Mgr, Proj Co-ord, ETH, SYR
Q No
115 Hansom, Edward P.K. 14-
ILO
64-7
1 Expert in Industrial Engineering Q No
116 Harbottle, Michael
17-9
7
UN
FIC YP
66-8
Brigadier, Chief of Staff of UNFICYP
Report Peace-keeping
92
117 Harris, Charles
17-9
8
UN
59-7
3 Consultant in local government and administration
Report CYP; NGA; PNG; SAU 11
9 Harrop, J.R.G. 18-
FAO
; U
NO
TC
65-7
; 67- 76
Expert in Land Registration & Surveying, NEP, LBR
Q No
120 Hartnell, Diana 31-
ILO
; UN
DP;
U
NH
CR
;
60-7
1; 7
1-9;
79
-87 Sec, Admin Sec, LES, ETH, MRT;
Sen Admin Sec, UNHCR HQ Q Yes Worked with Richard Symonds on
UNCRP
121 Hastings, Harold 16-
ILO
64-
72
Adviser in Engineering & Trg, MMR, EGY, ZAM
Q Doubtful'
122 Havord, Gordon 24-
UN
DP
66-8
5 Dir, Div for Prog Dev, Support & Evaluation, BPPE
Q Will try'
123 Heathcote, Ethel 11-
ILO
38-5
9 Secretary Q No
124 Heber, Elizabeth 24-
WH
O
67-7
2;
74-7
8 Nursing educ & pub. Health nursing, LBY, AFG, YEM
Q
125 Henry, R.N.
1899
-
FAO
51-6
0 Co-operatives Expert; Hd Rural Institutions & Services Branch
Q
126 Henwood, Daphne 31-
ILO
62-3
&
65-7
5 Industrial committees Branch; Editing & Translation Branch
Q Possibly'
127 Higgins, Michael 08-
IMC
O/I
MO
46-4
9;
59-6
3 *** Minor; Report
128 Hildyard, Sir David
16-9
7
68-7
0 Permanent UK Rep., UN Geneva UK Reps. UN
129 Hill, D.W.R.
1922
-
UN
ECA;
U
ND
P
68-7
9;79
-82
Regional Adviser on Economic Surveys, UNECA
Report
93
130 Hoggart, Richard 18-
UN
ESC
O
70-5
Asst Director General Q and Report No Wrote 'An Idea and its Servants', 'UNESCO and NGOs - A Memoir', etc
131 Holder Michael W. 26- IL
O
62-5
, 69- 81
Expert, Motor Vehicle, Diesel & Electrical, IND, SUD, IRQ, LBY
Q No
132 Holliman, E.S. 15-
FAO
61-7
7 Chief, Fishery Econ Branch; Proj Mgr Fish Dev Projs
Q No Wrote 'Financial Assistance Policies and Administration for Fishery Industries' for FAO
133 Howson, David 26-
ESC
AP;
FAO
80-1
; 81-
6 Expert in Agicultural Machinery Minor; Report
134 Hughes, Richard D.B. 30-
FAO
; W
B
75-6
; 77
-81 Tropical Agronomist; Agric Projs
Adviser Q Possibl
y'
135 Hull, Eileen 20-
UN
RR
A; U
N;
ICIT
O/G
ATT;
ILO
44-8
; ILO
55-
80
Personnel, Field and Human Resources Depts.; Director, Bangladesh Office
Minor BGD
136 Iannace, H. Vera K. 24-
FAO
51-8
4 Statistician & Commodity Specialist
Minor; Report
137 Irwin, Michael H. K. 00-
UN
; UN
DP;
U
NIC
EF; W
B
57-9
0 ov
eral
l
Medical Director, UN; Director of Personnel, UNDP; Director of Medical Services, World Bank
Minor Wrote "Banking on Poverty: An Insider's Look at the World Bank"
138 Jackson, Sir Robert
1911
-91
UN
RR
A;
UN
; UN
DP
45-7
1 ov
eral
l
Under Secretary General Major; Report
BGD; CVP; KHM
94
139 James, Sir Robert
Rhodes 33-9
9
UN
72-7
6 Consultant , UN Conf. On Human Environment; UK member, UN Sub-commission on Prev. of Discrimination and Prot. of Minorities
Wrote "Staffing the United Nations" (1970)
140 Jebb, Sir Gladwyn
00-9
6
UN
46-5
4 ov
eral
l
Executive Secretary, Preparatory Commission of the UN, 1945
Report UN Earliest days
141 Jenks, C. Wilfred
1909
-73
ILO
45-7
3 Director General ILO Major; Report
ILO
142 Jones, Hugh S. 29-
ILO
60-
78
Translator, Interpreter Q No
143 Jones, Huw M.
32-7
8
ILO
69-7
0;
70-8
8 Population Prog Off., W. Asia; Sen Pop'n Specialist
Q Wrote 'Population Geography', etc; SWZ
144 Jones, Lawrence R. J. 31-
ITU
71-7
8 Expert in Admin & Tariffs Mgt, Caribbean
Q Don't know'
145 Kaser, Sir Michael 26-
UN
ECE
51-6
3 *** Major; Report; Advisory Committee on UNCRP
Soviet economics etc etc
146 Katzin, Alfred
1906
-198
9
UN
RR
A;
UN
40s
- 50s
***
147 Keating, Rex 10-
UN
ESC
O
56-7
1 *** Minor Nubian monuments; wrote The Trumpets of Tutankhamun
148 Khamis, Salem
19-2
005
LEB/
PAL
UN
; FAO
49-5
3; 5
8- 81
Chief, Statistical Development Service, FAO
Cassette Hope to make an attempt'
Food and agriculture statistics
149 Khan, Riaz 24-
WH
O
72-8
4 *** Minor
95
150 Kidd, Joan D. 21-
UN
ESC
O
47-8
1 Translator, Reviser; Dir English Translation Service
Q Very possibly'
15
1 Kirkbride, Thomas 18-
UN
RR
A;
UN
45-6
; 64- 74
Responsible for UN budget; later Director of Admin. & Budget, UN Office, Geneva
Minor; Report
UN budget; BAFUNCS Newsletter 41
152 Kitson, Sir Frank 26-
UN
FIC
YP
63-4
; 67-
8 General, Chief of Staff Report Peace-keeping
153 Knew, Ernest
1908
-200
3
FAO
; U
NID
O
59-6
9; 7
0-2 Hides and Skins specialist Major FJI; SDN
154 Knowles, Oliver 20-
UN
CTA
D
62-8
2;
82-4
*** Minor UNECAFE, UNECA, ECOWAS
155 Knox, Alexander 25-
WB
63-8
7 Vice-Pres, Lat Am. & Caribbean; V-P W. Africa
Q Yes Latin America; Debt
156 Kuenstler, Peter 19-
UN
; UN
DP
64-7
9; 7
4-6 Division of Social Affairs Minor;
Report Community development; Youth
157 Lam, Martin P.
1920
-
72
Leader, UK Delegation to UNCTAD
UK Reps.
158 Landymore, Alec ?
66-7
1 UK Permanent Rep. to FAO, WFP UK Reps. ***
96
159 Lane, Kenneth W. 17-
IRO
, UN
TAB,
U
ND
P, U
NFP
A
47-9
; 66-
80
UNFPA Rep. to THA; TUN & MOR Minor; Report
Population; the International civil service
160 Lankester, Sir Timothy 42-
WB;
IMF
66-7
3; 8
5- 88
Economist; Exec Dir, WB & IMF Q No
161 Latham, Richard S.
24-9
1
IMF,
WB
67-8
7 Assistant Director Q Deceased
162 Ledwidge, Sir Bernard 15-
1950
s UK Rep. to UNICEF UK Reps; Report
AFG; UN technical assistance
163 Leeks, Anthony G. 27-
FAO
52-8
3 Chief, Rice Sec; Grains Branch; Cereals & Livestock Service; Dir Commodities & Trade Div
Q Yes
164 Lithgow, John C. 16- AUS
WB
59-7
5 Consultant Engineer, Procurement Off
Q No
165 Little, Ian Malcolm David 18-
WB
76-8
, 84-
5 Special Adviser, Small & Medium Enterprises
Q No Author of many works - see Internet
166 Lloyd, Oliver 18-
FAO
; IAE
A
52-5
9; 5
9- 76
Assistant to Deputy DG Minor; Report
FAO under B.R. Sen; IAEA's technical assistance; technical assistance in general
167 Lockwood, Alwyn 16-
IMF,
W
B
66-7
3 Adviser/Sen Adv on Taxation, PAK, SOM, IDN
Q No
168 Lockwood, Derek 25-
ILO
67-8
4 *** Minor Disability
97
169 Logan, Sir Donald 17-
76-7
Ambassador & Perm. Leader, UK Delegation to Law of the Sea Conference
UK Reps. Suez Crisis 1956 17
0 Loroch, Kim 23-
FAO
; IA
EA
69-7
4 Chief of the Transport Branch of the World Food Programme
Minor ***
171 Lovedee, Ilfra M. 20-
WH
O
55-8
0 IND, NEP, BHU, MMR, LKA Q Possibly'
172 Loveridge, E. Basil 18-
ILO
; FA
O
52-8
1;
66-7
0 Expert; Project Manager Major; Report
BOT; LKA; Co-operative education; Co-operative management
173 Lowes, Peter D. 26-
UN
RW
A, U
N,
U
ND
P W
HO
bet.
55 7
86 Proj. Off., JOR; Soc. Affairs Office
(Narcotics Board); Res Rep LES, SWZ, MWI, MAR; Chief, Pension Admin Services; Co-ord'r, Int'l Drinking Water Supply & Sanitation Decade
Q No Wrote 'The Genesis of International Narcotics Control'
174 Lubbock, David 11-
FAO
; IAE
A
46-5
1 *** Minor ***
077 Luckett, Joan 16-
UN
RR
A;
ICAO
45-5
1;
51
*** Minor; Report
UNRRA camps
175 Luke, Kenneth 12-
?
64-
76
? ? Q only
176 Lunt, George 12-
ILO
; U
NES
CO
60s
- 70s
*** Minor ***
177 Mackenzie, Archibald
R.K. 15-
73-5
Member of UK Mission, UN UK Reps. Universal Declaration of Human Rights
178 Maitland, Sir Donald 22-
&3-4
Perm. UK Rep. to UN UK Reps.; Report
Yom Kippur War
179 Manning, Raymond
14-9
1
ILO
38-7
5 Registrar & Chief, Records Mgt & Communications Div; Archivist
Q Deceased
98
180 Mark, James 14-
60s
- 70
s UK Rep. to UNCTAD UK Reps. *** 18
1 Marquand, Hilary
1901
-72
ILO
61-5
Director of the International Institute for Labour Studies, in Geneva
NGOs & obituaries
***
182 Marshall, Sir Peter 24-
75-9
; 79
-83 UK Rep. to ECOSOC, UN Office
Geneva UK Reps. ***
183 Martin, Cyril John 19-
FAO
; U
NEC
A; W
B
61-8
0 Economist, Loan Off & Adviser; UNECA Rep to KEN
Q Yes re UN, no re WB
184 Mason, Sir Frederick 05-
71-3
UK Rep. to UN Office, Geneva UK Reps. ***
185 Mathieson, William 16-
51-4
; 76- 81
Deputy Sec., UK Min. of Overseas Development1964-75; UK delegations to FAO
UK Reps.; Report
Elections to FAO Secretary-General; CGIAR?
069 Mawhood, Philip 24-
UN
ESC
O
64-7
*** Minor;
Report CAFRAD, Tangiers
186 McAfee, Miss M.A. 16-
UN
ECE;
U
N
47-5
1;
51-7
7 Librarian, UNIC, London 62-77 Q No
187 McCallum, Alexander 26-
FAO
66-8
6 Rural Institutions Off; Sen Off, Rural Dev Organisations
Q No
188 McLean, Peter S. 27-
80-5
Perm. UK Rep. to FAO UK Reps. ***
189 McLean, Ronald George 25-
UN
DTC
68-7
6 Proj Mgr Potassium Exploration, Int'l Dir Petroleum Explor'n
Q No
190 McMillan, S. Ann
UN
; U
ND
P
47-7
7;
56-9
*** Minor ***
99
191 McWilliam, Robert G. 27-
WB
73-8
6 Sen Sanitary Enginneer, 9 countries
Q No 19
2 Meecham, Keith 30-
FAO
67-8
9 Fisheries Officer, Project manager Minor; Report
***
193 Melmoth, Christopher
17-2
006
WB
62-7
5 Div Chief, Far E and Asia; Asst to Dir, Asia Dept. Investment/Sen Investment Officer
Q Deceased
194 Midwinter-Vergin,
Kathleen
01/0
9/19
95
UN
46-6
9 Social Affairs Dept; Rep of UNRWA in Geneva
Minor; Report
Founding conferences UN, UNRRA, FAO; Social affairs; UNRWA
195 Millard, Sir Guy 17-
55-6
Private Sec. to UK Prime Minister UK Reps. Suez, 1956
196 Miller, Dudley 15-
ILO
; W
B
67-7
9 UK rep. to ILO Turin Int'l Centre Q Yes
197 Mills, A. Raymond 16-
WH
O
69-7
7 WHO Rep. to NEP; Regional Medical Adviser
Minor; Report
Emeritus, University of Edinburgh?
198 Mollett, Geoffrey
1911
-89
UN
53-7
3 *** Minor ***
199 Mollett, Imogen
1925
-200
7
UN
47-7
6 Translator; precis writer; Secretary to Publications Board; Recruitment
Minor; Report; Advisory Committee on UNCRP
***
200 Montgomery, John 13-
63-8
0 Anti-Slavery Society, UK NGOs & obituaries
118 Morse, David A.
1907
-90
USA
ILO
48-7
0 US delegate to, later Director-General, ILO
NGOs & obituaries
Accepted the Nobel Peace Prixe awarded to ILO, 1969
201 Moser, Sir Claus 22-
60s
- 70
s UK Rep. to UN Statistics Commission
UK Reps. Social statistics
100
202 Murdoch, Dame Iris
19-9
9
UN
RR A
45-4
6 *** Minor; Report
Displaced persons 20
3 Murray, Sir James
1909
-200
7
78-9
Dep. Perm. Rep. to UN NY, later Perm. Rep, UN Office, Geneva
UK Reps.
204 Musk, Dennis 20-
ITU
46-8
0 Technical staff, then Editor; Personnel; Chair of Staff Association
Minor; Report
205 Muth, Hanns Peter 39- GER
WB
67-7
1 &
74-6
Investment/Sen Inv Off & Mgr, IDN, TUR, GRE
Q
206 Nash, Nina ?
UN
? *** Minor; Report
***
207 Naylor, Peter 29-
WB
67-8
4 Agric Econ, based New Delhi; Dep. Div. Chief; HQ; Econ Adviser
Q Maybe' EGY
208 Neath, Ronald 21-
UN
63-8
1 ECA; later Public Admin. Division and Personnel, NY; then ECE in Geneva
Minor; Report; Advisory Committee on UNCRP
BAFUNCS Newsletter 41
20- Newbury, Colin
1929
-
UN
ESC
O
59
Research Officer, Social Sciences Minor; Report
210 Newton, Donald
1912
-93
CAN
UN
RR
A; U
NR
WA;
U
NIC
EF; U
NID
O
44-5
1; 5
2-57
; 57-
68;6
8-74
*** Minor; Report
Displaced persons
211 Nicol, Davidson 24-
SLE
UN
70
President of the UN Security Council, 1970; USG & Exec. Dir. UNITAR 1979-82
***
101
212 Novi, Carlos 26-
? ? ? 21
3 Olsen, Karl
14-9
0
USA
FAO
40s
- 80s
Minor; Report
FAO Online Catalogues - Selected Writings of Karl Olsen
214 Orbaneja, Antonio
ICAO
; FAO
45-5
0; 5
0-72
Sec. Gen. of the FAO Conference and Council
Minor
215 Overton, John
20-9
2
UN
ESC
O
66-8
0 Textbook Production Mgr, ETH, PAK; Dir, Reg Office for Culture & Book Promotion, Asia
Q Co-author of 'Towards Sustainable Development in the Pacific'
216 Owen, Sir David
01/0
4/19
70
UN
; UN
TAB;
U
ND
P
45-5
1; 5
1-65
; 66
-69 ASG & Chairman of UNTAB NGOs &
obituaries Technical assistance
217 Palmer, John M. 31-
ILO
69-8
2 Proj Mgr, CTA; Sen Vocational Trg Adviser
Q
218 Palmier, Leslie 24-
UN
ESC
O; U
N
62-5
; 66- 7 Research Centre for Social &
Econ. Dev. in Sn. Asia; UNRISD, Geneva
Minor; Report
IDN; Corruption (UNCRP material embargoed)
219 Park, Peter O. 26-
FAO
71-8
2 Pest Control Ops Specialist, Entomologist, Phytopharmacien, TCH, NER, ALG
Q Not immediately'
220 Parsons, Sir Anthony
22-9
6
79-8
2 UK Perm. Rep to UN UK. Reps. IRN; Arab world; Falklands War
221 Pascoe, Sir Robert 32-
UN
FIC
YP
67
General; Company Commander Military UNFICYP
102
222 Paterson, William 23-
UN
CH
S (H
abita
t) Physical Plg Expert; Soc Affs Off, HQ; Expert JAM, UGA, PHI, NGA, SOI
Q Not at this time may later'
22
3 Pearson, Donald 27-
UN
IDO
; WB;
U
ND
P
75-7
; 77-
84; 8
4- 6 Econ Adviser, NEP; Chief Econ Adv, SUD; Agric Plg Adv, LKA; Macro Econ Plan Adv
Q No
224 Peckham, Arthur 20-
77-8
0 UK Perm. Rep. to FAO UK Reps. ***
225 Perfrement, Denis 26-
WB
73-8
9 *** Minor ***
226 Phillips, Norman 15-
ILO
bet.
62 7
85 Expert, 19 countries; Reg Adviser
Lat. Am., later Caribbean Q No
227Denton, Christopher
Pickering, Donald 05-
WB;
WB/
FAO
67-8
8 ov
eral
l
Agriculture Dept. Minor; Report
WB
228 Pickering, Susan
78
*** Cassette WB
229 Pickett, Liam 24-
ILO
63-8
6 Expert & Regional Adviser on co-operatives, in Africa, Middle East and at HQ
Minor; Report
Co-operatives; wrote Organizing Development Through Participation (ILO)
103
230 Pilkington, Maurice 25-
UN
50-8
2 UN Field Service Minor; Report
*** 23
1 Pitt, David ?
WH
O
79-8
3 *** Miscellaneous
Social and educational study of WHO; International civil service
232 Please, Stanley 23-
WB
63-8
3 Economist; Regional Director Minor; Report
Wote The Hobbled Giant; Economic & fiscal policy
233 Pourtauborde, J.E. 13- FRE
FAO
; UN
DP;
U
NTC
DC
54-7
0; 7
0-80
Irrigation Expert; Tech Advice Proj Mgr; Water Resources, Lat. Am.
CHl, MAR
234 Prandle, Arthur 13-
ILO
49-7
3 Admin, Purchasing Off Q No
235 Rainey, Reginald C.
13-9
0
FAO
; WM
O;
WH
O
60-7
etc
*** NGOs & obituaries
Locust migration
236 Reid, Sir John 05-
73-9
2 Member, WHO Executive Board UK Reps. ***
237 Rennie, Sir John 17-
UN
RW
A
68-7
7 Dep Commissioner-General, later Comm-Gen, ASG then USG
Q See Book 'Refugees Unto the Third Generation' by Prof. Benjamin Schiff
238 Richard, Lord Ivor 32-
74-9
UK Rep. to the UN, NY UK Reps. ***
239 Richards, Hamish 33-
UN
; ILO
61-3
; 75-
88
Assoc Statistician, Head, Population Education Unit
Q Eventually?
Statistics; Population
240 Riddlesdell, Dame
Mildred
13-2
006 UN
53-6
Sec to UN Joint Staff Pension Fund
Q No
104
241 Rison, Stuart 18-
UN
/TAA
; IAE
A;
UN
CTA
D/G
ATT?
ITC
51-9
; 59-
71; 7
1-9 Prog Off; Chief, Programming
Dept, Tech Assistance; Dir, Div of Admin & Common Services
Q Hopefully, yes!'
24
2 Ritchie, Jean 13-
UN
RR
A;
FAO
44-6
, 46-
63,
63-6
9, 6
9-78
Nutritionist; [UNICEF proj based Ibadan Univ.]; Proj Mgr TZA, UGA, ETH; Reg Nutrit Off, Europe, Asia & Far E
Q I hope to'
Author of 'Nutrition and Families'
243 Robertson, James 26-
UN
DTC
D
86-8
Water Resources Planner, Acting CTA
Q and Under Rhodes-James, Robert
Hopefully, yes'
***
245 Russell, Frank Thomas 06-
UN
DP;
U
NES
CO
65-7
2 OPEX Dir of Statistics, LES, SWZ; Adviser in Statistics, Caribbean; Consultant, Sn Africa
Q Yes See also his UN experience under Colonial Records Project, Rhodes House, Oxford
246 Russell, Hugh 16-
?
56-7
Health Services, ETH Miscellaneous
***
247
Russell, John 38-
WB
72-8
8 *** Minor ***
248 Samii, Cyrus 27- IRN
WB
62-6
9 Loan Officer & Deputy Chief of Mission, E Africa; Agriculturist
Q No
249 Samson, Klaus 26-
ILO
56-8
7 *** Minor ILO standard-setting
250 Sankey, John 30-
85-9
0 Perm. UK. Rep. to UN Geneva UK Reps. Decolonisation; NGOs and the UN
251
Sargent, Kenneth 24-
FAO
69-8
3 Forester Minor MYS; winner of B.R. Sen Award
105
252 Sasson, Harry 32-
WB
83-8
6 Co-financing Adviser Q No 25
3 Saunders, Christopher T.
1907
-200
0
UN
ECE
65-7
3 Economic Research Division; see Oxford Dictionary of Biography (subscription)
Minor; Report
Wrote Economics and Politics of Transition? Central and Eastern Europe
254 Saunders, John 16-
UN
RR
A; U
NIC
EF; U
NES
CO
; U
NTA
B; U
N; U
ND
P
45-8
1 ov
eral
l
Deputy UNTAB Rep., Congo DRC 64-65
Major; Report
UNRRA, GRE; UN Congo DRC; UNICEF KHM, all embargoed
255 Scott, Sir Peter 17-
63-6
6 Perm. UK Rep. UN Geneva UK Reps. ***
256 Seager, Andrew
20s-
FAO
; WB
60-6
3; 7
3- 85
Agricultural consultant Minor; Report
***
257 Seal, Kenneth Stanley 10-
WH
O
64-7
1 Medical Off, Leprologist, THA; Asst Dir, Health Services, S E Asia Reg
Q Yes, in due course'
Biodeterioration
258 Sen, Sudhir
1907
-89
UN
; U
ND
P
56-6
1 UNDP Res. Rep. GHA, YUG Minor Economics; agricultural development; rural electrification
259 Sharif, Mohammed 12-
WH
O;
WH
O/U
NR
WA
63; 6
4-75
; 75-
7 *** Minor ***
106
260 Shepherd, Bernard
Louis 16-
ILO
&
UN
IDO
72-8
; 82
-3
Expert in Mgt Consultancy and Co-operatives
Q No 26
1 Sherman, Peter John 28- IL
O
70-8
; 86-
7 Expert in Construction Occupations, KEN, JAM, SLE; Expert Bldg Civil Technology, SUD
Q No
262 Singer, Sir Hans
1910
-200
6
UN
; UN
ECA;
U
NR
ISD
; UN
IDO
47-6
2;59
-62;
62-
63; 6
4-68
Established UN Dept. of Econ. Affairs
Minor; Report
Development economics; Trade; Poverty; Unemployment
263 Skoumal, Stanislav 20-
UN
IDO
70-8
0 Senior Industrial Dev. Field Adviser; Expert
Minor; Report
***
264 Smart, John Kenneth 23-
FAO
68-7
9;
83-6
Fish Mktg Econ, Expert & Proj Mgr, EGY, PAK, NGA, TZA, LBR, YEM
Q Yes
265 Smieton, Dame Mary
1902
-200
5
UN
46-8
Director of Personnel, UN; later member of UNESCO Board
Minor; Report
Early UN staffing
266 Smith, Alec 27-
WH
O
73-8
8 Entomologist, ZAF, NGA and HQ Q Perhaps'
Author of 'Insect Man: A Fight against Malaria in Africa"
267 Smith, George Ivan
16-9
5
AUS
UN
45-8
0s
Director of External Affairs, DPI; Director UNIC, London; Congo DRC; Personal rep. of SG in E and Central Africa
Major; Report
UN politics; UN social & econ. activities; UN public information
268 Smith, William J. 16-
69-7
2 UK Rep. to UNESCO UK Reps. ***
269 Smyth, Anthony John 27-
FAO
62-7
4 Soil Correlator; Tech Off, Land Classification, HQ
Q Possibly'
107
270 Snelson, Kenneth 24-
FAO
64-8
3 Irrigation Officer, FAO/WB Co-operative Programme
Minor; Report
*** 27
1 Solis, Peggy E. 27-
UN
ESC
O
58-8
3 Secretary, General services Q No
272 Spall, William 17-
FAO
; WB
62-8
; 68-
79
Agric Credit Specialist, Country Rep. to Zanzibar; also Div Chief and Adviser
Q No
273 Spencer, Jack 16-
WB
67-7
8 Financial Analyst Minor; Report
Transport
274 Spinage, Clive 33-
FAO
71-8
5 Forestry Off (Sen Wildlife Adviser), TZA, CAF, BFA
Q No Various books and reports
275 Stark, Sir Andrew
16-2
006
UN
68-7
1 UK Ambassador to the UN then Under Sec. Gen for Admin & Management
Minor; Report
International civil service
276 Stewart, J.M. 20-
UN
; IAE
A;
UN
ESC
O
Reviser, Translator Q No
277
Stewart, Lady Elsie 14-
WB
51-7
Minor; Report
***
278 Stewart, Sir Herbert
1890
-198
9
UN
; UN
RR
A; W
B
49;5
0-51
; 55-
62
Headed WB agricultural missions to COL etc
Minor; Report
***
279 Storrar, Alexander 21-
WB
64-8
3 Head, Agric Dev Service, E Africa; Proj off, HQ; Agric. Adviser, IDN; Chief of Mission BGD; Sen Adviser, HQ
Q No
108
280 Strudwick, Richard
Harold 21-
WH
O
63-8
0 Pub Health Adviser, GHA, AFG; Reg Adviser, Asst Dir, Health Services, S E Asia
Q Yes, later
28
1 Stuart-Williams, D. (Bill) 26-
ILO
72-8
1 Expert & Project Manager, Social Studies
Minor; Report
Technical assistance
282 Sykes, Alan 23-
FAO
67-8
1 *** Minor Trade & trades standards?
283 Symonds, Richard 18-
UN
RR
A; U
N; U
NTA
B;
UN
DP;
UN
FPA;
UN
ITAR
46-7
1 ov
eral
l
UN Commission for IND & PAK; UNTAB/UNDP Rep. in LKA, YUG, GRE, TUN; etc
Major; Report
***
284 Szczepanik, Edward
15-2
005
FAO
63-7
7 Agric Policies, Plg Q No [Last Prime Minister of the Polish Government in Exile and Rep. to The Vatican]
285 T. Alun Jones 19-
FAO
; WB
67-8
0 Agricultural Adviser Minor
286 Tanner, John W. 23-
UN
RW
A
55-8
3 Architect Planner; Chief, Tech Div; Dir in JOR
Q No Internet references
287 Tanzer, William
? 94
? ?
288 Taylor, Desmond 23-
WFP
76-8
6 Adviser, Sen Adv, Dir of Operations, BOT, ZWE, ETH
Q Did not follow up
289 Taylor, James 30-
ILO
66-7
8 ? Miscellaneous
109
290 Thant, U Maung
1909
-74
UN
Secretary General Under D.B.H. Vickers
29
1 Thomas, D.M.I. 25-
WB
70-8
8 Loan Off, Sen Loan Off, Res Rep NEP, LKA, SEN
Q No VNM
292 Thompson, Cecil Harry 18-
WB
60-7
9 Sen Country Econ; Econ Adviser; Chief Econ, Europe, Med & Near E, also IDN
Q Circumstances changed
293 Thriscutt, H.S. 21-
WB
77-8
3 Senior Highway Engineer Major; Report
Roads
294 Tickell, Sir Crispin 30-
87-9
0 Perm. UK Rep. to the UN UK Reps. Security Council
295 Tickner, Winifred
61
Wife of UN Rep. Kasai, Congo DRC
Major; Report
UN and Congo 1961
296 Tidmarsh, Kyril 31-
ILO
55-9
3 ov
eral
l
*** Minor Soviet Union
297 Townsend, Charles 27-
UN
ESC
O
61-8
1 Education specialist, Arab States Minor; Report
298 Turvey, Ralph 27-
ILO
75-8
9 Econ Adviser; Chief Statistician; Dir, Dept of Info & Stats
Q No Authored several books
299 Unwin, Thomas 23-
UN
DP;
U
NH
CR
64-8
1;
81-8
3 UNDP Res. Rep. MWI, TUR, PHI, PNG; UNHCR in UGA
Minor; Report
300 Vickers, D. Burnell
22-8
3
UN
RR
A; U
NH
CR
; U
NR
WA;
UN
45-5
1; 5
1; 5
5-66
; 60
-63&
66-
80
Legal Counsel to the UN Major; Report
Refugees in the Middle East; West Irian; South Africa; Rhodesia
110
301 Vickers, Jeanne 24-
See under Vickers, DBH
Development Education 30
2 W. Martin Hill
1905
-197
6
UN
46-7
0 Asst Sec Gen, UN; Rep. of SG on UN Conciliation Commission for Palestine, 1947
Minor Co-ordination of UN economic and social work
303 Waide, Bevan
36-2
003
WB;
IFC
62-6
9; 7
3;
76-8
8 Econ, Sen Econ; Consultant to IFC; Chief Econ; Dir, Dev Policy; dir, Country Policy Dept; Dir, New Delhi office
Q Yes Deceased
304 Wait, Reginald ?
IMF,
U
ND
TC
69-8
6 IMF Panel of Fiscal Experts, LBR, SLE, SUD, UGA, LKA
Q Hope to produce a memoir'
305 Waldheim, Kurt
18-2
007
UN
Secretary General Under Rhodes-James, Sir Robert
306 Walsh, Nigel 25-
WB
67-7
9 *** Minor ***
307 Walsh, Nigel 25-
WB
67-7
9 Agric, KEN; Land Use Planner, SUD, ETH, NGA
Q may have time'
308 Walton, Christopher
Henry 30-
WB
69-8
7 Div Chief Q No, writing book on IBRD'
309 Ward, William E.F. 00-
40s,
50
s Member UK Delegation to UNESCO
UK Reps.
310 Wertheim, Ludwig 23-
WH
O
75-8
3 Pub Health Admin, BHU, NEP, THA, BGD
Q No
311 Whitaker, Ben 34-
78-8
5 Member, UK National commission for UNESCO and of UN Human Rights Sub-committee
UK Reps.
111
312 White, Charles Henry 06-
WB
58-7
2 Engineer, Tech Ops Dept; Div Chief; Engineering Adviser
Q No 31
3 Williams, Allen 17-
UN
DP Survey, Topography Q Q
completed by his widow?
314 Williams, Douglas 17-
70s UK Rep. to UNCTAD UK Reps.
315 Williams, Eric R. 19-
UN
DP;
W
B
65-9
; 69- 78
Expert, Municipal finance, UGA; Fin Analyst, Sen, Div Chief, HQ and 16 countries
Q No
316 Williams, Sir Edgar
1912
-199
5
UN
46-4
7 Security Council Affairs Dept. Minor; Report
317 Willmott, John 17-
ITU
; IT
U/U
PU
64-7
1; 7
1- 4 *** Minor KOR
318 Wilson, Fergus 08-
FAO
64-7
0 Chief, Agricultural Education Branch, later Chief of the Agricultural Education, Extension and Rural Youth Service
Minor Agricultural education
319 Wilson, Sir James
21-2
004
UN
FIC
YP
64-6
6 Lieut. General; Chief of Staff Military
320 Winter, David 23-
FAO
66-7
6 Rural Institutions Off, IRN; Sen Agric Adviser, BGD and Country Rep.
Q Perhaps'
321 Winteringham, Peter 18-
WH
O; F
AO;
FAO
/IAEA
61-2
; 67-
9;
69-8
0 *** Minor; Report
Chernobyl
112
322 Wood, Duncan
d. 2
006
to 9
7 Quaker Rep. to the UN, Geneva NGOs & obituaries
32
3 Wood, William
UN
70-8
1 Expert in Public Admin. In DOM, IND, IRN, COL, LBR
Minor
324 Woolman, Aubrey 16-
WH
O
55-7
5 Editor/Sen Editor, Publications Q No
325 Wren, Christopher 21-
WH
O
58-6
9 Malaria Eradication in Zanzibar, LBR, Southern Rhodesia, COL, DUR
Minor; Report
Malaria
326 Wright, Norine 24-
WH
O
68-7
2 Community Health Nurse, LBY, BGD, SOM, IRQ, W Pacific
Q No
327 Wyatt, Gavin 14-
WB
65-7
6 Public Utilities and Projects Depts. Minor
328 Zagni, Antonio 33-
WB;
FAO
; W
B
79-8
1; 8
1-4;
84-
9 Irrigation Engineer Minor
329 25-
WB
67-8
4 Personnel Dept; Chief, Recruitment; Chief, Staff Dev.
Q No