Skip to content
Register Sign in Wishlist

Bandung, Global History, and International Law
Critical Pasts and Pending Futures

Georges Abi-Saab, Luis Eslava, Michael Fakhri, Vasuki Nesiah, B. S. Chimni, Rose Sydney Parfitt, Fredrik Petersson, Samera Esmeir, Mohammad Shahabuddin, Adil Hasan Khan, Ibrahim J. Gassama, Vik Kanwar, Katharine McGregor, Vannessa Hearman, Chen Yifeng, Boris N. Mamlyuk, Akbar Rasulov, Liliana Obregón, John Reynolds, Germán Medardo Sandoval Trigo, Zoran Oklopcic, Umut Özsu, Ratna Kapur, Cyra Akila Choudhury, Mai Taha, Luwam Dirar, Sylvia Wairimu Kang'ara, Noha Aboueldahab, Rebecca La Forgia, Fabia Fernandes Carvalho Veçoso, Hani Sayed, Aziza Ahmed, Karin Mickelson, Usha Natarajan, Priya S. Gupta, Julio Faundez, Obiora Chinedu Okafor, Antony Anghie, Sundhya Pahuja, Charlotte Peevers, Nahed Samour, Anthony Paul Farley, Arif Havas Oegroseno, Hengameh Saberi, Partha Chatterjee
View all contributors
  • Date Published: December 2018
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781107561045

Paperback

Add to wishlist

Other available formats:
Hardback, eBook


Looking for an inspection copy?

Please email [email protected] to enquire about an inspection copy of this book

Description
Product filter button
Description
Contents
Resources
Courses
About the Authors
  • In 1955, a conference was held in Bandung, Indonesia that was attended by representatives from twenty-nine nations. Against the backdrop of crumbling European empires, Asian and African leaders forged new alliances and established anti-imperial principles for a new world order. The conference came to capture popular imaginations across the Global South and, as counterpoint to the dominant world order, it became both an act of collective imagination and a practical political project for decolonization that inspired a range of social movements, diplomatic efforts, institutional experiments and heterodox visions of the history and future of the world. In this book, leading international scholars explore what the spirit of Bandung has meant to people across the world over the past decades and what it means today. It analyzes Bandung's complicated and pivotal impact on global history, international law and, most of all, justice struggles after the end of formal colonialism.

    • The first sustained study of the 1955 Bandung Conference in international law and global history
    • Examines Bandung from multiple perspectives including international law, history, social theory, literature, philosophy, cinema, and art
    • Examines Bandung's implications for today's global order and an anti-imperial international law
    Read more

    Reviews & endorsements

    'This book is an incredibly rich tool to all those seeking to understand the paths towards the civilizational transitions needed to face the multiple crises of climate, food, poverty, and meaning. It should be of great interest to students and scholars in fields well beyond international law, including anthropology, geography, sociology, global studies, and cultural studies.' Arturo Escobar, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    'Until now, there has been no authoritative re-telling of the history of international law that de-centers the Westaphalian myth. Taking Bandung as its inspiration, this book critically engages the third world's resistance to the global north and examines the silences, blind spots and the underbelly of its decolonizing nationalism in re-writing and re-configuring mainstream accounts of the history of international law as well as its operative logics and normative commitments.' James Gathii, Loyola University, Chicago and Trade Policy Centre in Africa (TRAPCA), Arusha

    'For some time now, the Bandung conference is regarded as an event whose significance has come to pass along with the spirit of anti-imperial resistance it once symbolized. This book challenges such an assessment not only by revisiting the contested history of the conference but by analyzing its legacy for a rethinking of the international legal order, its past and present.' Saba Mahmood, University of California, Berkeley

    'The era of Bandung is over, and its spirit has dissipated. But that does not mean that the history that was made there is no longer relevant or that the spirit cannot be conjured to unimaginable feats in our present day. Bandung, Global History, and International Law mines that old history for nuggets that might inform our mapless present.' Vijay Prashad, Trinity College, Hartford

    See more reviews

    Customer reviews

    Not yet reviewed

    Be the first to review

    Review was not posted due to profanity

    ×

    , create a review

    (If you're not , sign out)

    Please enter the right captcha value
    Please enter a star rating.
    Your review must be a minimum of 12 words.

    How do you rate this item?

    ×

    Product details

    • Date Published: December 2018
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781107561045
    • length: 733 pages
    • dimensions: 228 x 151 x 37 mm
    • weight: 1kg
    • contains: 2 b/w illus.
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    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.

  • Editors

    Luis Eslava, University of Kent, Canterbury
    Luis Eslava is Senior Lecturer in International Law and Co-Director of the Centre for Critical International Law at Kent Law School. He is also a Senior Fellow at Melbourne Law School, International Professor at Universidad Externado de Colombia and core faculty member of the Institute for Global Law and Policy, Harvard Law School. He is the author of Local Space, Global Life: The Everyday Operation of International Law and Development (2015) and the co-editor of Imperialismo y Derecho Internacional (with Liliana Obregón and René Urueña, 2016). He is an active member of the Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) network.

    Michael Fakhri, University of Oregon
    Michael Fakhri teaches in the areas of international economic law, law and development, and food and agriculture at the University of Oregon. His research interests include Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL), international legal history, and legal accounts of imperialism. He has given talks at Harvard Law School, Princeton University, New Jersey, Brown University, Rhode Island, Cornell University, New York, London School of Economics and Political Science, University of Cambridge, the American University of Beirut, and the American University in Cairo. He is the author of Sugar and the Making of International Law (Cambridge, 2014).

    Vasuki Nesiah, New York University
    Vasuki Nesiah teaches human rights, legal and social theory at New York University and at the Institute for Global Law and Policy at Harvard Law School. She has published widely on the history and politics of human rights, humanitarianism, international criminal law, international feminisms and colonial legal history. A founding member of Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL), she continues as an active participant in this network. She serves on the international editorial committees of Feminist Legal Studies and the London Review of International Law.

    Contributors

    Georges Abi-Saab, Luis Eslava, Michael Fakhri, Vasuki Nesiah, B. S. Chimni, Rose Sydney Parfitt, Fredrik Petersson, Samera Esmeir, Mohammad Shahabuddin, Adil Hasan Khan, Ibrahim J. Gassama, Vik Kanwar, Katharine McGregor, Vannessa Hearman, Chen Yifeng, Boris N. Mamlyuk, Akbar Rasulov, Liliana Obregón, John Reynolds, Germán Medardo Sandoval Trigo, Zoran Oklopcic, Umut Özsu, Ratna Kapur, Cyra Akila Choudhury, Mai Taha, Luwam Dirar, Sylvia Wairimu Kang'ara, Noha Aboueldahab, Rebecca La Forgia, Fabia Fernandes Carvalho Veçoso, Hani Sayed, Aziza Ahmed, Karin Mickelson, Usha Natarajan, Priya S. Gupta, Julio Faundez, Obiora Chinedu Okafor, Antony Anghie, Sundhya Pahuja, Charlotte Peevers, Nahed Samour, Anthony Paul Farley, Arif Havas Oegroseno, Hengameh Saberi, Partha Chatterjee

also by this author

Sorry, this resource is locked

Please register or sign in to request access. If you are having problems accessing these resources please email [email protected]

Register Sign in
Please note that this file is password protected. You will be asked to input your password on the next screen.

» Proceed

You are now leaving the Cambridge University Press website. Your eBook purchase and download will be completed by our partner www.ebooks.com. Please see the permission section of the www.ebooks.com catalogue page for details of the print & copy limits on our eBooks.

Continue ×

Continue ×

Continue ×
warning icon

Turn stock notifications on?

You must be signed in to your Cambridge account to turn product stock notifications on or off.

Sign in Create a Cambridge account arrow icon
Ă—

Find content that relates to you

Join us online

This site uses cookies to improve your experience. Read more Close

Are you sure you want to delete your account?

This cannot be undone.

Cancel

Thank you for your feedback which will help us improve our service.

If you requested a response, we will make sure to get back to you shortly.

×
Please fill in the required fields in your feedback submission.
×