Watt served as a Professor of International History at the
London School of Economics,[2] where he served as the Head of the Department and Stevenson Chair of International History from 1981 to 1993.[1]
Watt edited Survey of International Affairs at
Chatham House from 1962 to 1971.[1] He was the author or co-author of 25 books.[1] He won the
Wolfson History Prize in 1990.[1]
Personal life and death
Watt was married twice. He first married Marianne Grau in 1951, and they had a son.[1] After she died in 1962, he married Felicia Stanley. She predeceased him in 1997.[1]
Watt died on 30 October 2014.[1] He was 86 years old.[1]
Works
Watt, Donald Cameron (1957). Documents on the Suez Crisis, 26 July to 6 November 1956. London, U.K.: Royal Institute of International Affairs.
OCLC818220.
Mayall, James; Navari, Cornelia; Watt, Donald Cameron (1973). Documents on International Affairs, 1963. London, U.K.: Oxford University Press.
OCLC1331464.
Watt, Donald Cameron (1965). Personalities and Policies: Studies in the Formulation of British Foreign Policy in the Twentieth Century. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press.
OCLC404671.
Brown, Neville; Spencer, Frank; Watt, Donald Cameron (1968). A History of the World in the Twentieth Century. New York: Scott Foresman.
OCLC6536389.
Watt, Donald Cameron (1969). Contemporary History in Europe: Problems and Perspectives. New York: Praeger.
OCLC11705.
Mayall, James; Watt, Donald Cameron (1973). Current British Foreign Policy: Documents, Statements, Speeches, 1971. London, U.K.: Temple Smith.
ISBN9780851170411.
OCLC55644303.
Watt, Donald Cameron (1975). Too Serious a Business: European Armed Forces and the Approach to the Second World War. Berkeley, California: University of California Press.
ISBN9780520028296.
OCLC1370478.