A list of commissions and committees set up to deal with questions which will ar ise at the close of the war gathers the official groupings formed by the British government to plan postwar policy.
This volume provides a structured snapshot of who was appointed, their roles, and the broad questions they aimed to address as the war ended.
Readers get a window into postwar planning across trade, industry, demobilisation, labor, agriculture, public administration, housing, education, aliens, and legal matters. It shows how government intended to coordinate research, regulation, and reform through specialized committees and provisional bodies.
- Names of chairmen and members for key committees and boards
- Terms of reference and the scope of work for postwar issues
- Examples of the kinds of questions the committees aimed to resolve
- Organizational structure guiding policy development after the war
Ideal for readers of government history, policy studies, and anyone exploring how wartime planning translated into peacetime action.