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Socialist internationals - a bibliography : publications of the social-democratic and socialist internationals 1914 - 2000 ; a project by the International Association of Labour History Institutions
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61 Socialist Information and Liaison Office, SILO; International Socialist Conference The outbreak of the Second World War in Western Europe in May 1940 destroyed the basis of the Labour and Socialist International which was not able to resume its functions. National groups of exiled Socialists were formed in London during the war, and their representatives frequently met under the auspices of the British Labour Party. In September 1944, its National Executive decided to study problems concerning"the future international association of democratic Labour and Socialist parties". After the end of the war, an informal international conference convened at Clacton-on-Sea in May 1946,"to re-establish contacts broken by the war, to exchange information and to work out, if possible, common policies on problems of common interest". The conference was attended by representatives of 19 Socialist/Social-Democratic parties. It set up aSocialist Information and Liaison Office, attached to the secretariat of the British Labour Party. Six months later, in November 1946, a second conference was held(Bournemouth), which established a Consultative Committee to act as a clearing-house for information, and to prepare future conferences. The third conference, held in Zurich in June 1947, was mainly devoted to a discussion of admission criteria. The fourth conference (Antwerp, November 1947) transformed the Consultative Committee into a more representative body called the Committee of theInternational Socialist Conference(C.O.M.I.S.C.O.) composed of one representative from each member party. Some material concerning the Socialist Information and Liaison Office was integrated into the records concerning the Socialist International that are kept in the IISG in Amsterdam The most important archival material on this episode in the reconstruction of the Socialist International is to be found in the Special Collections of the Labour Party archives(National Museum of Labour History- Labour History Archive& Study Centre). They contain Morgan Philips files; he played a prominent role in theSocialist Information and Liaison Office. See also Richard A. Storey: Labour Party archives: Labour and Socialist International, listed by R.A. Storey and T.W.M. Jaine, Historical Manuscripts Commission, London 1973. 1946-1949 1948 Summary of Proceedings. International Socialist Conference Antwerp 28 November ­2 December 1947, Socialist Information& Liaison Office, London 1948, 28 p. [Circular 88] LHASC, SAPMO Periodicals Bulletin International des Femmes Socialistes/International Socialist Women's Bulletin/Internationales sozialistisches Frauenblatt, Bruxelles 1947 no. 1. ABA, FES(microfilm), IEV, IISG S.I.L.O. Bulletin. Circulated by the Socialist Information& Liaison Office, London, 1946­1947, no. 1-3. ABA, ARAB(icpl.), FES(microfilm), IISG, SAPMO(icpl.), SSA(icpl.) S.I.L.O. Newsletter(Circular).Circulated by the Socialist Information& Liaison Office, London, 1947-48. ABA(icpl.), ARAB, FES(microfilm), IISG[no. 6, 84, 94, 110, 116], SSA Socialist World. An International Socialist Quarterly. Official Organ of the International Socialist Conference. Published by the Socialist Information and Liaison Office, London, vol. 1, no. 1-7, 1947-1949. ABA, ARAB, FES, FF, IISG, SHC(icpl.), TAM