Imperial Conference

This article is about meetings in the British Empire. For the Japanese imperial meetings, see Gozen Kaigi.
King George V (front, centre) with his prime ministers in 1926. Standing (left to right): Walter Stanley Monroe (Newfoundland), Gordon Coates (New Zealand), Stanley Bruce (Australia), J. B. M. Hertzog (Union of South Africa), W.T. Cosgrave (Irish Free State). Seated: Stanley Baldwin (United Kingdom), King George V, William Lyon Mackenzie King (Canada).

Imperial Conferences (Colonial Conferences before 1907) were periodic gatherings of government leaders from the self-governing colonies and dominions of the British Empire between 1887 and 1937, before the establishment of regular Meetings of Commonwealth Prime Ministers in 1944. They were held in 1887, 1894, 1897, 1902, 1907, 1911, 1921, 1923, 1926, 1930, 1932 and 1937.

All the conferences were held in London, the United Kingdom, the seat of the Empire, except for the 1894 and 1932 conferences which were held in Ottawa, the capital of the most senior dominion. The 1907 conference changed the name of the meetings to Imperial Conferences and agreed that the meetings should henceforth be regular rather than taking place while overseas statesmen were visiting London for royal occasions (e.g. jubilees and coronations).

List of conferences

Year Date Location Notes
1887 4 April – 6 May London Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria
1894 28 June – 9 July Ottawa, Canada
1897 24 June – 8 July London Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria
1902 30 June – 11 August London Coronation of Edward VII
1907 15 April – 14 May London First Imperial Conference
1911 23 May – 20 June London Coronation of George V
1917 21 March - 27 April London First Imperial War Conference held during World War I.
1918 12 June - July 26 London Second Imperial War Conference held during World War I.
1921 20 June – 5 August London
1923 1 October – 8 November London Formally the Imperial Economic Conference
1926 19 October – 22 November London
1930 1 October – 14 November London
1932 21 July – 18 August Ottawa British Empire Economic Conference
1937 14 May – 24 June London Coronation of George VI

Notable meetings

Originally instituted to emphasise imperial unity, as time went on, the conferences became a key forum for dominion governments to assert the desire for removing the remaining vestiges of their colonial status.[1] The conference of 1926 agreed the Balfour Declaration, which acknowledged that the dominions would henceforth rank as equals to the United Kingdom, as members of the 'British Commonwealth of Nations'.

The conference of 1930 decided to abolish the legislative supremacy of the British Parliament as it was expressed through the Colonial Laws Validity Act and other Imperial Acts. The statesmen recommended that a declaratory enactment of the Parliament, which became the Statute of Westminster 1931, be passed with the consent of the dominions, but some dominions did not ratify the statute until some years afterwards. The 1930 conference was notable, too, for the attendance of Southern Rhodesia, despite it being a self-governing colony, not a dominion.[2]

The 1932 British Empire Economic Conference held in Ottawa discussed the Great Depression, and the governments agreed to institute 'Imperial Preference': a system of protectionist tariffs on imports from non-imperial countries.

Towards Commonwealth meetings

As World War II drew to a close, Imperial Conferences were replaced by Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conferences, with 17 such meetings occurring from 1944 until 1969, all but one of the meetings occurred in London. The gatherings were renamed Commonwealth Heads of Government Meetings (CHOGM) in 1971 and were henceforth held every two years with hosting duties rotating around the Commonwealth.

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Imperial Conferences.

Footnotes

  1. Mole, Stuart (September 2004). "Seminars for statesmen': the evolution of the Commonwealth summit". The Round Table 93 (376): 533–546. doi:10.1080/0035853042000289128.
  2. Brides, Lord Saint (April 1980). "The Lessons of Zimbabwe-Rhodesia". International Security (The MIT Press) 4 (4): 177–84. doi:10.2307/2626673. JSTOR 2626673.