ABSTRACT

The idea of non-alignment and peaceful coexistence was not new when Yugoslavia hosted the Belgrade Summit of the Non-Aligned in September 1961. Freedom activists from the colonies in Asia, Africa, and South America had been discussing such issues for decades already, but this long-lasting context is usually forgotten in political and historical assessments of the Non-Aligned Movement.

This book puts the Non-Aligned Movement into its wider historical context and sheds light on the long-term connections and entanglements of the Afro-Asian world. It assembles scholars from differing fields of research, such as Asian Studies, Eastern European and Southeast European History, Cold War Studies, Middle Eastern Studies and International Relations. In doing so, this volume looks back to the ideological beginnings of the concept of peaceful coexistence at the time of the anticolonial movements, and at the multi-faceted challenges of foreign policy the former freedom fighters faced when they established their own decolonized states. It analyses the crucial role Yugoslav president Tito played in his determination to keep his country out of the blocs, and finally examines the main achievement of the Non-Aligned Movement: to give subordinate states of formerly subaltern peoples a voice in the international system.

An innovative look at the Non-Aligned Movement with a strong historical component, the book will be of great interest to academics working in the field of International Affairs, international history of the 20th century, the Cold War, Race Relations as well as scholars interested in Asian, African and Eastern European history.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part |60 pages

Afro-Asian solidarity

chapter |20 pages

International events, national policy

The 1930s in India as a formative period for non-alignment

chapter |19 pages

‘The Asiatic hour'

New perspectives on the Asian Relations Conference, New Delhi, 1947

chapter |19 pages

Prolegomena to non-alignment

Race and the international system

part |66 pages

Cold War entanglements

chapter |17 pages

The non-aligned

Apart from and still within the Cold War

chapter |29 pages

Between idealism and pragmatism

Tito, Nehru and the Hungarian crisis, 1956 1

part |65 pages

A voice in the international system

chapter |21 pages

‘Fighting colonialism' versus ‘non-alignment'

Two Arab points of view on the Bandung Conference

chapter |23 pages

Between Great Powers and Third World neutralists

Yugoslavia and the Belgrade Conference of the Non-Aligned Movement, 1961 1

chapter |19 pages

‘To grab the headlines in the world press' 1

Non-aligned summits as media events