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The non-aligned movement : genesis, organization and politics (1927-1992) / Jürgen Dinkel ; translated by Alex Skinner.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Dinkel, Jürgen, author.
Contributor:
Skinner, Alex, translator.
E.J. Brill (Firm)
Bruce Alan Miller Book Fund.
Series:
New perspectives on the Cold War ; volume 5.
New perspectives on the Cold War ; volume 5
Standardized Title:
Bewegung Bündnisfreier Staaten. English
Language:
English
German
Subjects (All):
Nonalignment--History.
Nonalignment.
Nonalignment--Developing countries--History.
World politics--20th century.
World politics.
History.
Developing countries.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xii, 354 pages.)
Place of Publication:
Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2019]
[Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], [2019]
Language Note:
In English, translated from the German.
System Details:
text file
Contents:
1 Brussels 1927 - the Globalization of Anticolonial Resistance p. 16
1 Anticolonial Movements and Organizational Activities in the Interwar Period p. 16
2 The Brussels Congress and the League against imperialism and for National Independence (1927-1937) p. 20
3 The Limits to Anticolonial Solidarity and the Dissolution of the League against Imperialism p. 29
4 The Results and Legacy of Anticolonial Conference Diplomacy p. 39
2 Bandung 1955 - a Moment of Transformation p. 42
1 The Asian-African Conference in Bandung p. 42
2 Bandung and the End of the Colonial Era p. 44
2.1 The Construction of the Asian-African Movement in Bandung p. 49
2.2 The Asian-African States' Demands and Performative, Symbolic and Argumentational Strategies p. 51
2.3 Media Strategies and Conferences as International Media Events p. 57
3 After the Bandung Conference p. 61
3.1 Reactions in the Postcolonial World p. 61
3.2 Reactions in East and West p. 68
4 Bandung, Decolonization and the Cold War p. 78
3 Belgrade 1961 - Focal Point of the East-West and North-South Conflicts p. 84
1 Non-Alignment as an Aspect of International Relations in the Late 1950s and Early 1960s p. 84
1.1 Domestic Political Reasons for a Policy of Non-Alignment p. 88
1.2 International Reasons for a Policy of Non-Alignment p. 92
2 In the Run-Up to the Belgrade Conference: Events, Expectations and the Participants' Motives p. 95
3 The Conference of Heads of State or Government of Non-Aligned Countries of 1961 p. 100
4 After the Belgrade Conference p. 103
4.1 Reactions in the Western World p. 103
4.2 Reactions at the United Nations p. 108
4.3 Reactions in the Non-Aligned World p. 112
4.3.1 The Non-Aligned States' Organizational Efforts in Belgrade (1961) and Cairo (1964) p. 112
4.3.2 The Tripartite Meeting between Indira Gandhi, Gamal Abdel Nasser and Josip Broz Tito in Delhi in 1966 p. 115
4.3.3 Yugoslav Conference Initiatives after the Prague Spring p. 118
5 Reasons for the Non-Emergence of Non-Aligned Institutions p. 122
5.1 Political Change in the Non-Aligned Countries p. 122
5.2 Shifts in International Relations p. 127
6 The Belgrade Conference in international Relations p. 128
4 The Formation of the Non-Aligned Movement in the 1970s and the North-South Conflict p. 132
1 Global Transformations - Opportunities and Risks from the Perspective of the Postcolonial Governments p. 134
2 Postcolonial Governments' Global Responses and Reactions p. 139
3 The Movement's Organizers and Their National Motives p. 142
3.1 Yugoslavia p. 143
3.2 Algeria p. 146
3.3 Sri Lanka p. 153
3.4 Interim Conclusion p. 156
4 The Institutionalization of the Non-Aligned Movement p. 159
4.1 The NAM's Alms and Objectives p. 159
4.2 The Organization as Institution p. 161
4.2.1 Membership Criteria and the Members of the Non-Aligned Movement p. 162
4.2.2 The Issues of a Permanent Secretariat and Financing Model p. 167
4.2.3 Non-Aligned Summit Conferences p. 169
4.2.4 The Chairman of the Movement p. 174
4.2.5 The Non-Aligned Movement's Preparatory Committee and Coordinating Bureau p. 175
4.2.6 Regional Groups and Representatives at the United Nations p. 178
4.2.7 Working Groups, Contact Groups and Solidarity Funds p. 179
4.2.8 Self-Descriptions and the Invention of NAM Traditions p. 181
4.2.9 Summary of the NAM's Institutional Structure p. 184
4.3 The NAM's Strategic Orientation p. 184
5 Consequences of the Non-Aligned Movement's Policies p. 190
5.1 The Non-Aligned Movement's Policy on Israel p. 190
5.2 The Demand for a New International Information Order p. 195
5.3 Demands for a New International Economic Order p. 201
6 Eastern and Western Responses to the Movement's Formation and Politics p. 210
6.1 The NAM and Media Coverage p. 211
6.2 Responses from Political Scientists p. 212
6.3 Responses from the Soviet Union, Western Governments and the United Nations p. 214
7 The NAM, the North-South Conflict and the 1970s in international Politics p. 225
5 The Non-Aligned Movement in the 1980s p. 227
1 Between the North-South and East-West Conflicts: The Sixth Summit Conference of Non-Aligned States in Havana p. 227
2 Divergences and Disagreements among the Non-Aligned Countries p. 229
2.1 The Non-Aligned World and the Cold War in the 1980s p. 229
2.2 Military Conflicts between Non-Aligned States p. 233
2.3 Setbacks in North-South Negotiations p. 235
2.4 Conference Fatigue and the Crisis of Multilateralism p. 242
3 Unifying Elements and Themes p. 246
3.1 The Movement's Organizational Structure p. 246
3.2 Substantive Consensus and Shared Goals p. 247
6 The Non-Aligned Movement after the East-West Conflict p. 253
1 The Tenth Summit Conference of Non-Aligned States in Jakarta, 1993 p. 253
2 "No One Pays Attention to Them Anymore": the Non-Aligned States in Western Analyses p. 254
3 The Non-Aligned States and the End of the East-West Conflict p. 259
3.1 The End of the Cold War as Interpreted by the Non-Aligned States p. 259
3.2 Institutional Reforms of the Non-Aligned Movement p. 261
3.3 Thematic Reforms of the Non-Aligned Movement p. 266
3.4 Consequences of the Reforms p. 269
4 The Non-Aligned Movement and the Historiographical Caesura of 1989/1991 p. 271
2 Future Prospects p. 286
Overview of Key Conferences p. 289
Arhiv Srbije Crne Gore (Arhiv Jugoslavije), Belgrade, Serbia (AJ) p. 294
Federal Archive (Bundesarchiv), Berlin (BArch) p. 294
Museum Konferensi Asia Afrika, Bandung (MKAA ) p. 295
National Library of Indonesia, Jakarta p. 295
The National Archives (Kew) p. 295
National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, USA (NARA) p. 296
Political Archive of the Federal Foreign Office (Politisches Archiv des Auswärtigen Amtes), Berlin (PAAA) p. 297
Rossijskij Gosudarstvennyj Archiv Social'no-Politiceskoj Istorii (Russian State Archive of Socio-Political History), Moscow, Russia (RGASPI) p. 298
United Nations Archives and Records Management Section, New York City, USA (UNA) p. 298.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 301-350) and index.
Electronic reproduction. Leiden, Netherlands Available via World Wide Web.
Description based on print version record.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Bruce Alan Miller Book Fund.
ISBN:
9789004336131
9004336133
Publisher Number:
99984945619
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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