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Seventy years ago, in the verdant highlands of West Java, a political earthquake shook the foundations of the post-war world. From April 18-24, 1955, leaders and delegates from twenty-nine newly independent Asian and African nations gathered in Bandung, Indonesia. They represented over 1.5 billion people—a majority of the world’s population—who had, for centuries, been subjects of colonial empires. They came not as supplicants, but as sovereign actors, determined to carve out a new path in a world increasingly defined by the bipolar, nuclear-armed antagonism of the United States and the Soviet Union. The Bandung Conference was a spectacular declaration of…
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Introduction: Culture as a Front in the Global Struggle When the leaders of 29 Asian and African nations met in Bandung, Indonesia, in April 1955, their discussions were not limited to diplomacy, trade, or military alliances. Beneath the political agenda lay another, quieter revolution — a cultural one. The Bandung Conference signalled the arrival of the Global SouthGlobal South Full Description:The Global South is a term that has largely replaced “Third World” to describe the nations of Africa, Latin America, and developing Asia. It is less a geographical designator (as it includes countries in the northern hemisphere) and more a political…
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When leaders of 29 newly independent Asian and African states met at Bandung in April 1955, they proclaimed a shared commitment to anti-colonial solidarity, economic cooperation, and peace. This “Bandung spirit” – later institutionalized as the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) – promised a third way between the U.S. and Soviet blocs. Yet many historians and theorists have since noted sharp gaps between Bandung’s rhetoric and the political realities. Critics from Marxist, postcolonial, and realist perspectives highlight tensions and contradictions at Bandung that limited its impact. In practice, national interests, ideological rifts, and Cold War pressures often outweighed unity. As we will…
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In April 1955, representatives of twenty-nine Asian and African nations gathered in Bandung, Indonesia for the first Afro-Asian Conference. They hailed from newly independent states and colonial territories alike, meeting to assert a common voice against colonialism and great-power rivalry. As historian Jason Parker notes, the Bandung agenda mixed “economic development, trans-racial unity and uplift among Third WorldThird World Full Description: Originally a political term—not a measure of poverty—used to describe the nations unaligned with the capitalist “First World” or the communist “Second World.” It drew a parallel to the “Third Estate” of the French Revolution: the disregarded majority that…
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The 1955 Bandung Conference brought together 29 Asian and African countries – most newly independent – to assert a “new spirit of solidarity” against colonialism . Delegates (almost all men) reaffirmed the sovereign equality of all nations and pledged to support self-determinationSelf-Determination Full Description:Self-Determination became the rallying cry for anti-colonial movements worldwide. While enshrined in the UN Charter, its application was initially fiercely contested. Colonial powers argued it did not apply to their imperial possessions, while independence movements used the UN’s own language to demand the end of empire. Critical Perspective:There is a fundamental tension in the UN’s history regarding this…
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The 1955 Asian–African (“Bandung”) Conference brought 29 newly independent countries together for a historic summit in Bandung, Indonesia (April 18–24, 1955). In the shadow of recent decolonization and an intensifying Cold War, these leaders collectively condemned colonialism and racial discrimination, pledged support for anti-colonial struggles, and agreed on economic and cultural cooperation . They adopted a ten‐point declaration calling for world peace and collaborationCollaboration Full Description:The cooperation of local governments, police forces, and citizens in German-occupied countries with the Nazi regime. The Holocaust was a continental crime, reliant on French police, Dutch civil servants, and Ukrainian militias to identify and…
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In April 1955, representatives from twenty-nine Asian and African nations – together representing roughly two-thirds of humanity – gathered in the Indonesian city of Bandung to reshape world politics . These delegates, including leaders like Indonesia’s Sukarno, India’s Jawaharlal Nehru and China’s Zhou Enlai, met in the art-deco Gedung Merdeka to articulate a new vision for postcolonial sovereignty and cooperation . For many delegates, Bandung was not just a conference, but a declaration that former colonies would no longer be relegated to the sidelines of international diplomacy. From Empire to Asia-Africa Solidarity By the mid-1950s, an unprecedented wave of decolonization…
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In April 1955, representatives from twenty-nine Asian and African nations – together representing roughly two-thirds of humanity – gathered in the Indonesian city of Bandung to reshape world politics . These delegates, including leaders like Indonesia’s Sukarno, India’s Jawaharlal Nehru and China’s Zhou Enlai, met in the art-deco Gedung Merdeka to articulate a new vision for postcolonial sovereignty and cooperation . For many delegates, Bandung was not just a conference, but a declaration that former colonies would no longer be relegated to the sidelines of international diplomacy. From Empire to Asia-Africa Solidarity By the mid-1950s, an unprecedented wave of decolonization…
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The world of the 1950s was defined by two simultaneous upheavals: the end of colonial empires across Asia and Africa, and the growing confrontation of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. Hundreds of millions of people in newly independent countries found themselves caught between rival superpowers. These nations sought an “alternative multilateral model” in which they could cooperate on their own terms, rather than serve as proxies for Washington or Moscow . In this context the 1955 Bandung Conference – often called the Asia–Africa Conference – was a watershed. Bandung united 29 Asian and African…
