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Anarchic armadas, Brussels bureaucrats, and the valiant maple leaf: sexuality, governance, and the construction of British nationhood through the Canada-Spain fish war

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Didi Herman
Affiliation:
Keele University
Davina Cooper
Affiliation:
University of Warwick*

Extract

In March 1995, amid ongoing Balkan conflict, Britain was forced to respond to hostilities emerging from a seemingly unlikely quarter. Angered by saturation fishing of Greenland halibut (turbot) in the North West Atlantic, especially by the Spanish, Canada dispatched warships to an area just beyond their 200 mile fishing zone. Guns were fired and one Spanish vessel was arrested in international waters and impounded. Spain, antagonised by Canadian actions and accusations, and with the backing of the European Union (EU), refused to withdraw from the area. They argued that their fishing practices, in contrast to Canada's actions, were internationally lawful. Conflict escalated, and media interest intensified on both sides of the Atlantic. The British government, facing increasing domestic support for Canada, attempted to steer a middle path. In particular, it tried to use its unique position, as a member of both Commonweulth and Common Market, to negotiate a compromise.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society of Legal Scholars 1997

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References

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63 Hansard, Lords, 30 March 1995, 1775.

64 While common-sense said that the Spanish lie, it was inconceivable Canadians could do the same: Lord Morris, Hansard, Lords, 30 March 1995, 1771: ‘I cannot believe that the Canadian Minister of Fisheries and Oceans is about lying in public.’.

65 See Mosse op cit p 20.

66 Austin Mitchell MP, Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 563.

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87 See generally Mosse op cit p 13.

88 In Canada, during the crisis, Brian Tobin, the Fisheries Minister, was referred to as ‘Captain Canada’. Thanks to René Provost for bringing this to our attention.

89 See John Wilkinson MP, Hansard, Commons, 18 April 1995, 23; Graham Riddick MP, ibid, 23 March 1995, 567; Lord Willoughby de Broke, Hansard, Lords, 22 March 1995, 1223; Lord Shaughnessy, ibid, 22 March 1995, 1224.

90 Michael Jack MP, Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 564.

91 See Davies and Redgwell op cit.

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99 We use this word deliberately to mean both loss of power/sovereignty, and demasculinisation.

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103 See eg Michael Jack MP, Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 565, 568; John Wilkinson MP, ibid, 18 April 1995, 23, 28 March 1995, 832; Hartley Booth MP, ibid, 13 March 1995, 570; Baroness Elles, Lords, 30 March 1995, 1765. See, generally, Gary R Johnson ‘In the name of the fatherland An analysis of kin term usage in patriotic speech and literature’ (1987) 8 International Political Science Review 165–174.

104 Hansard, Commons, 28 March 1995, 829.

105 Gary Streeter MP, ibid.

106 Baroness Elles, Hansard, Lords, 30 March 1995, 1765.

107 Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 568.

108 Allan Rogers MP, ibid.

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111 For instance, in relation to the US invasion of Grenada, and South African sanctions during the Thatcher years of the 1980s, Britain revealed a much more ambivalent relationship to the Commonwealth. Thanks to Carl Stychin for raising this point.

112 Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 562

113 For two alternative conceptions of European governance, arising out of an integration theory approach, see Marks, Gary, Hooghe, Liesbet, and Blank, KermitEuropean integration from the 1980s: State-centric v. Multi-level governance’ (1996) 34 Journal of Common Market Studies 341–376 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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120 Viscount Mountgarret, Hansard, Lords, 7 February 1995, 104.

121 Lord Stoddart, Hansard, ibid, 7 February 1995, 103–4.

122 Hansard, Lords, 30 March 1995, 1769–70.

123 ‘EU divided over how to tackle fish row with Canada’ (1995) European Report 8 April.

124 Hansard, Lords, 22 March 1995, 1225. See also, Lord McAvoy, ibid, 23 March 1995, 477.

125 See Peter Shore MP, Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 562; Vicount Mountgarret, Lords, 30 March 1995, 1770; Lord Stoddart, ibid, 7 February 1995, 103.

126 See generally, Anderson op cit p 26.

127 Case C-221/89 R v Secretary of State for Transport, exp Factortame (No 2) [1991] ECR 1–3905.

128 See Scheff op cit.

129 Lord Stoddart, Hansard, Lords, 30 March 1995, 1763.

130 Note that this is in some contrast to the usual depiction of the EU as the mediator, see eg Marks et al, Journal of Common Market Studies op cit p 365.

131 Baroness Chalker, Hansard, Lords, 16 March 1995, 52; Earl Howe, ibid, 22 March 1995, 1223; William Waldegrave MP, Commons, 28 March 1995, 827. See also Douglas Hurd MP, quoted in, ‘EU claims victory over Canada in halibut war’ (1995) The Times 16 March, p 10.

132 Hansard, Commons, 18 April 1995, 25.

133 See eg Allan Rogers MP, Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 568.

134 Earl Howe, Hansard, Lords, 22 March 1995, 1223.

135 ‘Both sides declare progress in fish talks’ (1995) European Report 1 April.

136 Despite a semblance of lack of self-interest, the episode had several economic benefits for Britain. It deflected attention from Spanish demands for more extensive fishing access in their own waters; while the focus on Spanish and Portuguese excesses also diverted notice away from Britain's own anti-conservationist practices, in particular, its use of drift-net fishing - see ‘Spain plans to end driftnets in EU waters’ (1995) European Report 5 July.

137 Hansard, Commons, 29 March 1995, 1014.

138 Michael Jack MP, Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 477; William Waldegrave, ibid, 28 March 1995, 827, 829.

139 Michael Jack MP, Hansard, Commons, 13 March 1995, 477.

140 William Waldegrave MP, Hansard, Commons, 18 April 1995, 21–22.

141 See Barber, LSpain faces pressure to soften stance in fish row’ (1995) Financial Times 11 April, p 18 Google Scholar.

142 See eg William Waldegrave MP, Hansard, Commons, 18 April 1995, 19–20.

143 Teddy Taylor MP, Hansard, 18 April 1995, 20.