Showing 1 - 13 results of 13 for search '"Bandung Conference"', query time: 0.13s Refine Results
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    The Manila conference, 1954 versus the Bandung conference,1955: the United States, the cold war and the challenge of non-alignment by Mason, Richard

    Published 2011
    “…Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, impressed with Chinese moderation at the Geneva, attempted to use the Bandung Conference to lay firmer foundation for the PRC’s relations with its Asian neighbours and to affect a rapprochement between China and the United States. …”
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    Article
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    Bandung And The Political Economy of North-South Relations: Sowing The Seeds For Revisioning International Society by Nesadurai, Helen E. S.

    Published 2016
    “…This paper revisits the 1955 Bandung Conference in an effort to identify and evaluate the legacy of Bandung for the international political economy. …”
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    Working Paper
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    Internationalizing colonial war: On the unintended consequences of the interventions of the International Committee of the Red Cross in South-East Asia, 1945–1949 by van Dijk, B

    Published 2020
    “…This article seeks to solve this puzzle by drawing attention to the ICRC’s critical part in reshaping the international legal system regarding colonial war in the critical years before the Algerian War of Independence (1954–62) and the Bandung Conference (1955). In this formative period, the organization, together with anti-colonial activists, played a transformative role in contesting accepted ideas of global governance and international law while providing a new stage for anti-colonial resistance, with far-reaching consequences, not just for the ICRC’s own institutional future, but also for the legitimization of (post-)colonial sovereignty in the twentieth century.…”
    Journal article
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    China engages the Global South: from Bandung to the Belt and Road Initiative by Liu, Hong

    Published 2022
    “…It argues that China’s active participation in the Bandung Conference constituted historical capital in legitimating its (leadership) role in the Global South and as an alternative modernity. …”
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    Journal Article
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    Global reporting from the Third World : the Afro-Asian Journalists’ Association, 1963–1974 by Zhou, Taomo

    Published 2020
    “…Originating from the 1955 Bandung Conference, the Afro-Asian Journalists’ Association (AAJA) promoted international collaboration among journalists in newly independent countries. …”
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    Journal Article
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    Themes in literary criticism in Sarawakian literature in Chinese (1959-2002) by Thian, Fung Che

    Published 2017
    “…In 1955, the Afro-Asian Conference (also known as Bandung Conference) was held and thereafter the third world countries responded enthusiastically to the slogans of anti-colonialism, anti-imperialism and peaceful self-government. …”
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    Thesis
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    China-India rivalry and the border war of 1962: PRC perspectives on the collapse of China-India relations, 1958-62 by Ward, J

    Published 2016
    “…<p>After Indian Independence in 1947 and the founding of the People's Republic of China (PRC) in 1949, China and India began a period of friendship and cooperation, leading to the Bandung Conference in 1955 and the declaration of the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence in 1954. …”
    Thesis
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    Malayanized Chinese-language Cinema: On Yi Shui’s Lion City, Black Gold, and Film Writings by Hee, Wai Siam

    Published 2018
    “…This article discusses how the Singaporean Chinese director, Yi Shui, created a Malayanized Chinese-language cinema during the 1950s and 1960s, and offers a retrospective of the way people in Malaya and Singapore framed their nation-building discourse in terms of anti-colonialism and anti-imperialism after the Bandung Conference in 1955. This article holds that the term huayu dianying (Chinese-language cinema) was not first used in the 1990s by scholars in Hong Kong and Taiwan, but that its origins can be traced to Singapore and Malaya in the 1950s where Yi Shui promoted Malayanized Chinese-language cinema in the Nanyang Siang Pau. …”
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    Journal Article
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    SOUTH-SOUTH COOPERATION IN THE CHÁVEZ ERA IN VENEZUELA by José Briceño-Ruiz

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…Initiatives of political cooperation, economic and technical assistance can be traced back to the 1960’s, for example the Bandung Conference of non-aligned countries or the creation of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) under Ra ú l Prebisch’s aegis [Braveboy-Wagner 2009; Prebisch 1954, 1969]. …”
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    Article
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