Bandung, Global History, and International Law
Critical Pasts and Pending Futures
Herausgeber: Eslava, Luis; Nesiah, Vasuki; Fakhri, Michael
Bandung, Global History, and International Law
Critical Pasts and Pending Futures
Herausgeber: Eslava, Luis; Nesiah, Vasuki; Fakhri, Michael
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This study of the 1955 Bandung Conference is central to the history of international law and the post-colonial world order.
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This study of the 1955 Bandung Conference is central to the history of international law and the post-colonial world order.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 733
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Dezember 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 154mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 915g
- ISBN-13: 9781107561045
- ISBN-10: 1107561043
- Artikelnr.: 53774630
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 733
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Dezember 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 154mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 915g
- ISBN-13: 9781107561045
- ISBN-10: 1107561043
- Artikelnr.: 53774630
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
List of illustrations; List of contributors; Foreword; Acknowledgements;
Introduction: the Spirit of Bandung; Part I. Bandung Histories: 1.
Anti-imperialism: then and now; 2. Newer is truer: time, space, and
subjectivity at the Bandung Conference; 3. From Versailles to Bandung: the
interwar origins of anti-colonialism; 4. Bandung: reflections on the sea,
the world, and colonialism; 5. Nationalism, imperialism, and Bandung:
nineteenth-century Japan as a prelude; 6. Ghostly visitations: 'questioning
heirs' and the tragic tasks of narrating Bandung futures; 7. Bandung 1955:
the deceit and the conceit; 8. Not a place, but a project: Bandung, TWAIL,
and the aesthetics of Thirdness; Part II. Political Solidarities and
Geographical Affiliations: 9. Challenging the lifeline of imperialism:
reassessing Afro-Asian solidarity and related activism in the decade
1955-1965; 10. Bandung, China, and the making of world order in East Asia;
11. Decolonization as a Cold War imperative: Bandung and the Soviets; 12.
Central Asia as an object of Orientalist narratives in the age of Bandung;
13. Latin American anti-imperialist movements and anti-communist states
during the Bandung era; 14. Peripheral parallels? Europe's edges and the
world of Bandung; 15. The Bandung Conference and Latin America: a
decolonial dialogue with Oscar Correas; 16. A triple struggle:
non-alignment, Yugoslavia, and national, social and geopolitical
emancipation; 17. 'Let us first of all have unity among us': Bandung,
international law, and the empty politics of solidarity; Part III. Nations
and their Others: Bandung at Home: 18. The colonial debris of Bandung:
equality and facilitating the rise of the Hindu right in India; 19. From
Bandung 1955 to Bangladesh 1971: postcolonial self-determination and
Third-World failures in South Asia; 20. Reimagining Bandung for women at
work in Egypt: law and the woman between the factory and the 'social
factory'; 21. Rethinking the concept of colonialism in Bandung and its
African Union aftermath; 22. China and Africa: development, land, and the
colonial legacy; 23. Bandung's legacy for the Arab Spring; 24. Applying the
memory of the Bandung: lessons from Australia's negative case study; 25.
Bandung in the shadow: the Brazilian experience; Part IV. Post-Colonial
Agendas: Justice, Rights and Development: 26. The humanization of the Third
World; 27. Bandung's legacy: solidarity and contestation in global women's
rights; 28. Reflections on rhetoric and rage: Bandung and environmental
injustice; 29. From statesmen to technocrats to financiers: development
agents in the Third World; 30. Between Bandung and Doha: international
economic law and developing countries; 31. The Bandung ethic and
international human rights praxis: yesterday, today, and tomorrow; Part V.
Another International Law: 32. Bandung and the origins of Third World
sovereignty; 33. Letters from Bandung: encounters with another
international law; 34. Altering international law: Nasser, Bandung, and the
Suez Crisis; 35. Palestine at Bandung: the longwinded start of a
re-imagined international law; 36. 'Must have been love': the non-aligned
future of 'a warm December'; 37. The Bandung Declaration in the
twenty-first century: are we there yet?; 38. Virtue pedagogy and
international law teaching; Epilogue: the legacy of Bandung; Index.
Introduction: the Spirit of Bandung; Part I. Bandung Histories: 1.
Anti-imperialism: then and now; 2. Newer is truer: time, space, and
subjectivity at the Bandung Conference; 3. From Versailles to Bandung: the
interwar origins of anti-colonialism; 4. Bandung: reflections on the sea,
the world, and colonialism; 5. Nationalism, imperialism, and Bandung:
nineteenth-century Japan as a prelude; 6. Ghostly visitations: 'questioning
heirs' and the tragic tasks of narrating Bandung futures; 7. Bandung 1955:
the deceit and the conceit; 8. Not a place, but a project: Bandung, TWAIL,
and the aesthetics of Thirdness; Part II. Political Solidarities and
Geographical Affiliations: 9. Challenging the lifeline of imperialism:
reassessing Afro-Asian solidarity and related activism in the decade
1955-1965; 10. Bandung, China, and the making of world order in East Asia;
11. Decolonization as a Cold War imperative: Bandung and the Soviets; 12.
Central Asia as an object of Orientalist narratives in the age of Bandung;
13. Latin American anti-imperialist movements and anti-communist states
during the Bandung era; 14. Peripheral parallels? Europe's edges and the
world of Bandung; 15. The Bandung Conference and Latin America: a
decolonial dialogue with Oscar Correas; 16. A triple struggle:
non-alignment, Yugoslavia, and national, social and geopolitical
emancipation; 17. 'Let us first of all have unity among us': Bandung,
international law, and the empty politics of solidarity; Part III. Nations
and their Others: Bandung at Home: 18. The colonial debris of Bandung:
equality and facilitating the rise of the Hindu right in India; 19. From
Bandung 1955 to Bangladesh 1971: postcolonial self-determination and
Third-World failures in South Asia; 20. Reimagining Bandung for women at
work in Egypt: law and the woman between the factory and the 'social
factory'; 21. Rethinking the concept of colonialism in Bandung and its
African Union aftermath; 22. China and Africa: development, land, and the
colonial legacy; 23. Bandung's legacy for the Arab Spring; 24. Applying the
memory of the Bandung: lessons from Australia's negative case study; 25.
Bandung in the shadow: the Brazilian experience; Part IV. Post-Colonial
Agendas: Justice, Rights and Development: 26. The humanization of the Third
World; 27. Bandung's legacy: solidarity and contestation in global women's
rights; 28. Reflections on rhetoric and rage: Bandung and environmental
injustice; 29. From statesmen to technocrats to financiers: development
agents in the Third World; 30. Between Bandung and Doha: international
economic law and developing countries; 31. The Bandung ethic and
international human rights praxis: yesterday, today, and tomorrow; Part V.
Another International Law: 32. Bandung and the origins of Third World
sovereignty; 33. Letters from Bandung: encounters with another
international law; 34. Altering international law: Nasser, Bandung, and the
Suez Crisis; 35. Palestine at Bandung: the longwinded start of a
re-imagined international law; 36. 'Must have been love': the non-aligned
future of 'a warm December'; 37. The Bandung Declaration in the
twenty-first century: are we there yet?; 38. Virtue pedagogy and
international law teaching; Epilogue: the legacy of Bandung; Index.
List of illustrations; List of contributors; Foreword; Acknowledgements;
Introduction: the Spirit of Bandung; Part I. Bandung Histories: 1.
Anti-imperialism: then and now; 2. Newer is truer: time, space, and
subjectivity at the Bandung Conference; 3. From Versailles to Bandung: the
interwar origins of anti-colonialism; 4. Bandung: reflections on the sea,
the world, and colonialism; 5. Nationalism, imperialism, and Bandung:
nineteenth-century Japan as a prelude; 6. Ghostly visitations: 'questioning
heirs' and the tragic tasks of narrating Bandung futures; 7. Bandung 1955:
the deceit and the conceit; 8. Not a place, but a project: Bandung, TWAIL,
and the aesthetics of Thirdness; Part II. Political Solidarities and
Geographical Affiliations: 9. Challenging the lifeline of imperialism:
reassessing Afro-Asian solidarity and related activism in the decade
1955-1965; 10. Bandung, China, and the making of world order in East Asia;
11. Decolonization as a Cold War imperative: Bandung and the Soviets; 12.
Central Asia as an object of Orientalist narratives in the age of Bandung;
13. Latin American anti-imperialist movements and anti-communist states
during the Bandung era; 14. Peripheral parallels? Europe's edges and the
world of Bandung; 15. The Bandung Conference and Latin America: a
decolonial dialogue with Oscar Correas; 16. A triple struggle:
non-alignment, Yugoslavia, and national, social and geopolitical
emancipation; 17. 'Let us first of all have unity among us': Bandung,
international law, and the empty politics of solidarity; Part III. Nations
and their Others: Bandung at Home: 18. The colonial debris of Bandung:
equality and facilitating the rise of the Hindu right in India; 19. From
Bandung 1955 to Bangladesh 1971: postcolonial self-determination and
Third-World failures in South Asia; 20. Reimagining Bandung for women at
work in Egypt: law and the woman between the factory and the 'social
factory'; 21. Rethinking the concept of colonialism in Bandung and its
African Union aftermath; 22. China and Africa: development, land, and the
colonial legacy; 23. Bandung's legacy for the Arab Spring; 24. Applying the
memory of the Bandung: lessons from Australia's negative case study; 25.
Bandung in the shadow: the Brazilian experience; Part IV. Post-Colonial
Agendas: Justice, Rights and Development: 26. The humanization of the Third
World; 27. Bandung's legacy: solidarity and contestation in global women's
rights; 28. Reflections on rhetoric and rage: Bandung and environmental
injustice; 29. From statesmen to technocrats to financiers: development
agents in the Third World; 30. Between Bandung and Doha: international
economic law and developing countries; 31. The Bandung ethic and
international human rights praxis: yesterday, today, and tomorrow; Part V.
Another International Law: 32. Bandung and the origins of Third World
sovereignty; 33. Letters from Bandung: encounters with another
international law; 34. Altering international law: Nasser, Bandung, and the
Suez Crisis; 35. Palestine at Bandung: the longwinded start of a
re-imagined international law; 36. 'Must have been love': the non-aligned
future of 'a warm December'; 37. The Bandung Declaration in the
twenty-first century: are we there yet?; 38. Virtue pedagogy and
international law teaching; Epilogue: the legacy of Bandung; Index.
Introduction: the Spirit of Bandung; Part I. Bandung Histories: 1.
Anti-imperialism: then and now; 2. Newer is truer: time, space, and
subjectivity at the Bandung Conference; 3. From Versailles to Bandung: the
interwar origins of anti-colonialism; 4. Bandung: reflections on the sea,
the world, and colonialism; 5. Nationalism, imperialism, and Bandung:
nineteenth-century Japan as a prelude; 6. Ghostly visitations: 'questioning
heirs' and the tragic tasks of narrating Bandung futures; 7. Bandung 1955:
the deceit and the conceit; 8. Not a place, but a project: Bandung, TWAIL,
and the aesthetics of Thirdness; Part II. Political Solidarities and
Geographical Affiliations: 9. Challenging the lifeline of imperialism:
reassessing Afro-Asian solidarity and related activism in the decade
1955-1965; 10. Bandung, China, and the making of world order in East Asia;
11. Decolonization as a Cold War imperative: Bandung and the Soviets; 12.
Central Asia as an object of Orientalist narratives in the age of Bandung;
13. Latin American anti-imperialist movements and anti-communist states
during the Bandung era; 14. Peripheral parallels? Europe's edges and the
world of Bandung; 15. The Bandung Conference and Latin America: a
decolonial dialogue with Oscar Correas; 16. A triple struggle:
non-alignment, Yugoslavia, and national, social and geopolitical
emancipation; 17. 'Let us first of all have unity among us': Bandung,
international law, and the empty politics of solidarity; Part III. Nations
and their Others: Bandung at Home: 18. The colonial debris of Bandung:
equality and facilitating the rise of the Hindu right in India; 19. From
Bandung 1955 to Bangladesh 1971: postcolonial self-determination and
Third-World failures in South Asia; 20. Reimagining Bandung for women at
work in Egypt: law and the woman between the factory and the 'social
factory'; 21. Rethinking the concept of colonialism in Bandung and its
African Union aftermath; 22. China and Africa: development, land, and the
colonial legacy; 23. Bandung's legacy for the Arab Spring; 24. Applying the
memory of the Bandung: lessons from Australia's negative case study; 25.
Bandung in the shadow: the Brazilian experience; Part IV. Post-Colonial
Agendas: Justice, Rights and Development: 26. The humanization of the Third
World; 27. Bandung's legacy: solidarity and contestation in global women's
rights; 28. Reflections on rhetoric and rage: Bandung and environmental
injustice; 29. From statesmen to technocrats to financiers: development
agents in the Third World; 30. Between Bandung and Doha: international
economic law and developing countries; 31. The Bandung ethic and
international human rights praxis: yesterday, today, and tomorrow; Part V.
Another International Law: 32. Bandung and the origins of Third World
sovereignty; 33. Letters from Bandung: encounters with another
international law; 34. Altering international law: Nasser, Bandung, and the
Suez Crisis; 35. Palestine at Bandung: the longwinded start of a
re-imagined international law; 36. 'Must have been love': the non-aligned
future of 'a warm December'; 37. The Bandung Declaration in the
twenty-first century: are we there yet?; 38. Virtue pedagogy and
international law teaching; Epilogue: the legacy of Bandung; Index.