Have a breaker, but...
A few questions.
1) How many amp hookup? 15? 20? 30???
2) other circuits than listed? I saw GFI outlet circuit and air conditioner circuit.
It is possible to make your own main breaker panel with 1 to 4 branch circuits, and fit it into a standard 4" x 4" x 4" plastic electrical box. For 4 and 5 branch circuits it may get hard to fit all the wires inside the box, but with careful placement it should be possible.
I'd use marine circuit breakers like these:
http://www.amazon.com/Blue-Sea-7220-Magnetic-Circuit/dp/B000MMDM06/ref=sr_1_cc_3?s=aps&ie=UTF8&qid=1356061871&sr=1-3-catcorr&keywords=Magnetic+Circuit+breakers+30+AmpsOne for the incoming power. One for each branch circuit if there are more than one circuit. Obviously with one circuit you only need the incoming main breaker. Size the circuit breaker for the wiring or devices it will be protecting.
http://bluesea.com/productdocs/7220 < dimension drawings and cutout templates for the above circuit breaker. The Blue Sea circuit breaker is a standard one that is made by a number of manufacturers. I'd bet $$$ that the Blue Sea ones are one of the others relabelled.
For your simple setup, you could have a 20Amp inlet tied to a single breaker. From that single breaker run the wires to both the GFI outlet, and the outlet you will plug the air conditioner into. Note: Make sure both the GFI outlet, and the air conditioner outlets are 20 Amp rated, and not 15 Amp rated. Doing this you could fit both the breaker and GFI outlet into a single 4x4 inch box that is deep enough.
There are less expensive breakers out there, but I recommend using magnetic or magnetic hydraulic because they have a stable current breaking amperage over a very wide temperature range. You can look through the circuit breakers that Mouser and Digikey sell to find cheaper and smaller ones, but you may pay the price for easy availability of spares going that way. Make sure you pay attention the the method of connecting the wires to them. For the higher amp breakers you will want screw terminals, and you could use 1/4" quick connects for the smaller ones. I know Digikey sells small switch type thermal breakers which are much like the ones used in some power strips. They could be used to cheaply protect and control single loads.
In the box I did for my 4runner I stuffed in a couple extra unassigned breakers for future expansion. I also used smaller breakers and put it into an even smaller project box. There is also a break before make DPDT switch in it to switch between the inverter and the AC inlet. That switch switches both the line and neutral wires.