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  1. World Encyclopedia
  2. Bandung Conference - Wikipedia
Bandung Conference - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1955 meeting of Asian and African states

Asian–African Conference
Konferensi Asia–Afrika
Plenary session during the Bandung Conference
Host country Indonesia
Dates18 to 24 April 1955
CitiesBandung
Participants304 representatives
ChairRuslan Abdulgani
Foreign Minister of Indonesia
Merdeka Building, the main venue in 1955

The first large-scale Asian–African or Afro–Asian Conference (Indonesian: Konferensi Asia–Afrika), also known as the Bandung Conference, was a meeting of Asian and African states, most of which were newly independent, which took place on 18–24 April 1955 in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia.[1] The twenty-nine countries that participated represented a total population of 1.5 billion people, 54% of the world's population.[2] The conference was organized by Indonesia, Burma (Myanmar), India, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), and Pakistan and was coordinated by Ruslan Abdulgani, secretary general of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia.

The conference's stated aims were to promote Afro-Asian economic and cultural cooperation and to oppose colonialism or neocolonialism by any nation. The conference was a step towards the eventual creation of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) yet the two initiatives ran in parallel during the 1960s, even coming in confrontation with one another prior to the 2nd Cairo NAM Conference in 1964.[3]

In 2005, on the 50th anniversary of the original conference, leaders from Asian and African countries met in Jakarta and Bandung to launch the New Asian–African Strategic Partnership (NAASP). They pledged to promote political, economic, and cultural cooperation between the two continents.[citation needed]

Background

[edit]

Indonesian President Sukarno and Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru were key organizers in their quest to build a nonaligned movement that would win the support of the newly emerging nations of Asia and Africa. Nehru first got the idea at the Asian Relations Conference, held in India in March 1947, on the eve of India's independence. There was a second 19-nation conference regarding the status of Indonesia, held in New Delhi, India, in January 1949. Although Nehru initially attached relatively little importance to Indonesia's calls to convene the Bandung Conference, he showed increasing interest during and after late 1954 due to his concern about American foreign policy as it applied to Asia, his belief that he could secure a guarantee of peaceful coexistence with China, and his desire to avoid embarrassing Indonesia.[4] Decolonization was underway and an increasing number of new nations in Africa or Asia were emerging with, for the first time, their own diplomatic corps and need to integrate into the international system.[citation needed]

Chairman Mao Zedong of the Chinese Communist Party was also a key organizer, backed by his influential right-hand man, Premier and Foreign Minister Zhou Enlai. Mao believed that an anti-colonial nationalist and anti-imperialist agenda was underway in Africa and Asia, and he wanted to make China the leader of these forces.[5] In his efforts to present China as a model, Mao publicly maintained a friendly, conciliatory tone towards newly independent Asian nations,[6] while simultaneously denouncing the Western colonial empires.[7]

At the Colombo Powers conference in April 1954, Indonesia proposed a global conference. A planning group with the leaders of Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Burma, and Ceylon met in Bogor, West Java in late December 1954[8] and formally decided to hold the conference in April 1955. They had a series of goals in mind: to promote goodwill and cooperation among the new nations, to explore in advance their mutual interests, to examine social economic and cultural problems, to focus on problems of special interest to their peoples such as racism and colonialism, and to enhance the international visibility of Asia and Africa in world affairs.[9]

The Bandung Conference reflected what the organizers regarded as a reluctance by the Western powers to consult with them on decisions affecting Asia in a setting of Cold War tensions: their concern over tension between the People's Republic of China and the United States, their desire to lay firmer foundations for China's peace relations with themselves and the West, their opposition to colonialism (especially France's neocolonialism in North Africa and its colonial rule in Algeria), and Indonesia's desire to promote its case in the West New Guinea dispute with the Netherlands.[citation needed] One of Sukarno's primary goals with the conference was to build support for Indonesia's claim to West Papua and to prevent the Netherlands from transferring sovereignty of West Papua to indigenous Papuans.[10]

Sukarno portrayed himself as the leader of this group of states, which he later described as "NEFOS" (Newly Emerging Forces).[11]

On 4 December 1954, the United Nations announced that Indonesia had successfully gotten the issue of West New Guinea placed on the agenda of the 1955 General Assembly.[12][page needed] Plans for the Bandung conference were announced in December 1954.[13]

Discussion

[edit]
Delegations held a Plenary Meeting of the Economic Section during the Bandung Conference, April 1955.

Major debate centered on the question of whether Soviet policies in Eastern Europe and Central Asia should be censured along with Western colonialism. A memo was submitted by 'The Moslem Nations under Soviet Imperialism', accusing the Soviet authorities of massacres and mass deportations in Muslim regions, but it was never debated.[14] A consensus was reached in which "colonialism in all of its manifestations" was condemned, implicitly censuring the Soviet Union, as well as the West.[15] China played an important role in the conference and strengthened its relations with other Asian nations. Having survived an assassination attempt on the way to the conference, the Chinese premier, Zhou Enlai, displayed a moderate and conciliatory attitude that tended to quiet fears of some anticommunist delegates concerning China's intentions.[who?]

Later in the conference, Zhou Enlai signed an agreement on dual nationality with Indonesian foreign minister Sunario. World observers closely watched Zhou. He downplayed revolutionary communism and strongly endorsed the right of all nations to choose their own economic and political systems, including even capitalism. His moderation and reasonableness made a very powerful impression for his own diplomatic reputation and for China.[who?] By contrast, Nehru was bitterly disappointed at the generally negative reception he received. Senior diplomats called him arrogant.[who?] Zhou said privately, "I have never met a more arrogant man than Mr. Nehru."[16][17][18][19]

China began voicing support for Palestine at Bandung, with Zhou stating, "[T]here was a parallel between the problems of Palestine and Formosa; neither could be solved peacefully unless intervention by outside forces was excluded; China was suffering from the same problem as the Arab countries."[20]: 61 

The 29 countries attending the Asia-Africa Conference.
Member states of the Non-Aligned Movement (2012). Light blue states have observer status.

Declaration

[edit]

A 10-point "declaration on promotion of world peace and cooperation", called Dasasila Bandung (Bandung's Ten Principles, or Bandung Spirit, or Bandung Declaration; styled after Indonesia's Pancasila; or Ten Principles of Peaceful Coexistence[21]), incorporating the principles of the United Nations Charter as well as Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence was adopted unanimously as item G in the final communiqué of the conference:[22]

  1. Respect for fundamental human rights and for the purposes and principles of the charter of the United Nations
  2. Respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all nations
  3. Recognition of the equality of all races and of the equality of all nations large and small
  4. Abstention from intervention or interference in the internal affairs of another country
  5. Respect for the right of each nation to defend itself, singly or collectively, in conformity with the charter of the United Nations
  6. (a) Abstention from the use of arrangements of collective defence to serve any particular interests of the big powers
    (b) Abstention by any country from exerting pressures on other countries
  7. Refraining from acts or threats of aggression or the use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any country
  8. Settlement of all international disputes by peaceful means, such as negotiation, conciliation, arbitration or judicial settlement as well as other peaceful means of the parties own choice, in conformity with the charter of the United Nations
  9. Promotion of mutual interests and cooperation
  10. Respect for justice and international obligations

The final Communique of the Conference underscored the need for developing countries to loosen their economic dependence on the leading industrialised nations by providing technical assistance to one another through the exchange of experts and technical assistance for developmental projects, as well as the exchange of technological know-how and the establishment of regional training and research institutes.[citation needed]

United States involvement

[edit]
Press pin issued to American journalist Ethel Lois Payne for the conference.

For the US, the Conference accentuated a central dilemma of its Cold War policy; by currying favor with Third World nations by claiming opposition to colonialism, it risked alienating its colonialist European allies.[23] The US security establishment also feared that the Conference would expand China's regional power.[24] In January 1955, the US formed a "Working Group on the Afro-Asian Conference" that included the Operations Coordinating Board (OCB), the Office of Intelligence Research (OIR), the Department of State, the Department of Defense, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the United States Information Agency (USIA).[25] The OIR and USIA followed a course of "Image Management" for the US, using overt and covert propaganda to portray the US as friendly and to warn participants of the Communist menace.[26]

The United States, at the urging of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, shunned the conference and was not officially represented. However, the administration issued a series of statements during the lead-up to the Conference. These suggested that the US would provide economic aid and attempted to reframe the issue of colonialism as a threat by China and the Eastern Bloc.[27]

Representative Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (D-N.Y.) attended the conference, sponsored by Ebony and Jet magazines instead of the U.S. government.[27] Powell spoke at some length in favor of American foreign policy there which assisted the United States's standing with the Non-Aligned. When Powell returned to the United States, he urged President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Congress to oppose colonialism and pay attention to the priorities of emerging Third World nations.[28]

African American author Richard Wright attended the conference[29] with funding from the Congress for Cultural Freedom. Wright spent about three weeks in Indonesia, devoting a week to attending the conference and the rest of his time to interacting with Indonesian artists and intellectuals in preparation to write several articles and a book on his trip to Indonesia and attendance at the conference. Wright's essays on the trip appeared in several Congress for Cultural Freedom magazines, and his book on the trip was published as The Color Curtain: A Report on the Bandung Conference. Several of the artists and intellectuals with whom Wright interacted (including Mochtar Lubis, Asrul Sani, Sitor Situmorang and Beb Vuyk) continued discussing Wright's visit after he left Indonesia.[30][31][page needed] Wright extensively praised the conference.[29]

Outcome and legacy

[edit]

The conference was later followed by the Afro-Asian People's Solidarity Conference held in Cairo[32] in September 1957 and subsequently by the Belgrade Summit in 1961, which resulted in the formation of the Non-Aligned Movement.[33]

In the early 1960s, China sought to mobilize support of the Arab countries for a second Bandung Conference, proposed to be held in Algiers.[34]: xxvi  The effort failed as a result of events including the 1965 Algerian coup d'état, the ouster of Sukarno in Indonesia, the 1966 Ghanaian coup d'état, and Egypt growing closer to the Soviet Union.[34]: xxvi 

Asian-African Summit of 2005

[edit]

To mark the 50th anniversary of The Summit, Heads of State and Government of Asian-African countries attended a new Asian-African Summit from 20 to 24 April 2005 in Bandung and Jakarta hosted by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. Attended by Prime Minister of Japan, Junichiro Koizumi; President of China, Hu Jintao; United Nations Secretary General, Kofi Annan; President of Pakistan, Pervez Musharraf; President of Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai; Prime Minister of Malaysia, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi; Sultan of Brunei, Hassanal Bolkiah and President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, some sessions of the new conference took place in Gedung Merdeka (Independence Building), the venue of the original conference.

Of the 106 nations invited to the historic summit, 89 were represented by their heads of state or government or ministers.[35] The Summit was attended by 54 Asian and 52 African countries.

The 2005 Asian African Summit yielded, inter-alia, the Declaration of the New Asian–African Strategic Partnership (NAASP),[36] the Joint Ministerial Statement on the NAASP Plan of Action, and the Joint Asian African Leaders' Statement on Tsunami, Earthquake and other Natural Disasters. The conclusion of aforementioned declaration of NAASP is the Nawasila (nine principles) supporting political, economic, and socio-cultural cooperation.

Other geopolitical impacts

[edit]

During the conference Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser met with Zhou Enlai regarding Egypt obtaining arms from the Soviet Union.[34]: xxiv  Zhou stated that China would intercede with the Soviet Union on this issue, and later in 1955, Egypt obtained Soviet arms via Czechoslovakia.[34]: xxiv  This was a milestone of the Soviet Union's increased diplomatic presence in the Middle East.[34]: xxiv 

Other anniversaries

[edit]

On the 60th anniversary of the Asian-African Conference and the 10th anniversary of the NAASP, a 3rd summit was held in Bandung and Jakarta from 21 to 25 April 2015, with the theme Strengthening South-South Cooperation to Promote World Peace and Prosperity. Hosted by President Joko Widodo of Indonesia, delegates from 109 Asian and African countries, 16 observer countries, and 25 international organizations participated,[35] including Prime Minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe; President of China, Xi Jinping; Prime Minister of Singapore, Lee Hsien Loong; King Abdullah II of Jordan; Prime Minister of Malaysia, Najib Tun Razak; President of Myanmar, Thein Sein; King Mswati III of Swaziland and Prime Minister of Nepal, Sushil Koirala.[37][38]

On the 70th anniversary of the first African-Asian (Bandung) conference, Bharat Summit was organized by the Telangana government from April 24–26, 2025 in Hyderabad, India. Theme of the summit was ‘Delivering Global Justice’.[39]

Participants

[edit]
  • Kingdom of Afghanistan
  • Union of Burma
  • Kingdom of Cambodia
  • Dominion of Ceylon
  • People's Republic of China1
  • Cyprus2
  • Republic of Egypt
  • Ethiopian Empire
  • Gold Coast
  • Republic of India
  • Republic of Indonesia
  • Imperial State of Iran
  • Kingdom of Iraq
  • Japan
  • Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
  • Kingdom of Laos
  • Lebanese Republic
  • Liberia
  • Kingdom of Libya
  • Kingdom of Nepal
  • Dominion of Pakistan
  • Republic of the Philippines
  • Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
  • Syrian Republic
  • Sudan3
  • Kingdom of Thailand
  • Republic of Turkey
  • Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North)
  • State of Vietnam (South)
  • Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen

1 Partially recognized state. The Republic of China was internationally recognized as the legitimate government of China by most of the international community at the time.

2 A pre-independent colonial Cyprus was represented by [the] eventual first president, Makarios III.[40]

3 Pre-independence Anglo-Egyptian Sudan was represented by Chief Minister Ismail al-Azhari and used a provisional flag.

Some nations were given "observer status". Such was the case of Brazil, who sent Ambassador Bezerra de Menezes.[41][42]

See also

[edit]
  • Cairo Conference
  • Afro-Asian People's Solidarity Organisation
  • Asian–African Legal Consultative Organization
  • Conference of the New Emerging Forces
  • Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence
  • Jakarta–Peking Axis
  • Non-Aligned Movement
  • Sino–Third World relations
  • Sino-Indonesian Dual Nationality Treaty
  • Third World

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Final Communiqué of the Asian-African conference of Bandung (24 April 1955)" (PDF). Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l'Europe. 3 January 2017.
  2. ^ Bandung Conference of 1955 and the resurgence of Asia and Africa Archived 13 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Daily News, Sri Lanka
  3. ^ Bogetić, Dragan (2017). "Sukob Titovog koncepta univerzalizma i Sukarnovog koncepta regionalizma na Samitu nesvrstanih u Kairu 1964" [The Conflict Between Tito's Concept of Universalism and Sukarno's Concept of Regionalism in the 1964 Summit of Non-Aligned Countries in Cairo]. Istorija 20. Veka. 35 (2). Institute for Contemporary History, Belgrade: 101–118. doi:10.29362/IST20VEKA.2017.2.BOG.101-118. S2CID 189123378.
  4. ^ Benvenuti, Andrea (6 July 2022). "Nehru's Bandung moment: India and the convening of the 1955 Asian-African conference". India Review. 21 (2): 153–180. doi:10.1080/14736489.2022.2080489. hdl:1959.4/unsworks_82484. S2CID 250340538. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  5. ^ Jung Chang and John Halliday, Mao: The Unknown Story, pp. 603–604, 2007 edition, Vintage Books
  6. ^ Zhang, Shu Guang (8 October 2007). "Constructing 'Peaceful Coexistence': China's Diplomacy toward the Geneva and Bandung Conferences, 1954–55". Cold War History. 7 (4): 509–528. doi:10.1080/14682740701621846. S2CID 154232267. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  7. ^ Jian, Chen (19 July 2013). "Bridging Revolution and Decolonization: The "Bandung Discourse" in China's Early Cold War Experience". The Chinese Historical Review. 15 (2): 207–241. doi:10.1179/tcr.2008.15.2.207. S2CID 143652969. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  8. ^ Haddad-Fonda, Kyle (9 August 2017). "The Asian-African (Bandung) Conference: Fact and Fiction". BlackPast.org. Retrieved 22 June 2025.
  9. ^ M.S. Rajan, India in World Affairs, 1954–1956 (1964) pp 197–205.
  10. ^ McNamee, Lachlan (2023). Settling for Less: Why States Colonize and Why They Stop. Princeton University Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-0-691-23781-7.
  11. ^ Cowie, H.R. (1993). Australia and Asia. A changing Relationship, 18.
  12. ^ United Nations General Assembly, Report of the First Committee A/2831[page needed]
  13. ^ Parker, "Small Victory, Missed Chance" (2006), p. 156.
  14. ^ Schindler, Colin (2012). Israel and the European Left. New York: Continuum. p. 205. ISBN 978-1441150134.
  15. ^ "Bandung Conference – Asia-Africa [1955]". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
  16. ^ H.W. Brands, India and the United States (1990) p. 85.
  17. ^ Sally Percival Wood, "'Chou gags critics in BANDOENG or How the Media Framed Premier Zhou Enlai at the Bandung Conference, 1955" Modern Asian Studies 44.5 (2010): 1001–1027.
  18. ^ Sarvepalli Gopal, Jawaharlal Nehru: A Biography, Volume 2: 1947–1956 (1979), pp 239–44.
  19. ^ Dick Wilson, Zhou Enlai" A Biography (1984) pp 200–205
  20. ^ Murphy, Dawn C. (2022). China's Rise in the Global South: the Middle East, Africa, and Beijing's Alternative World Order. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-1-5036-3060-4. OCLC 1249712936.
  21. ^ Bandung Principles - Bandung Spirit
  22. ^ Jayaprakash, N D (5 June 2005). "India and the Bandung Conference of 1955 – II". People's Democracy. XXIX (23). Archived from the original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved 7 February 2007.
  23. ^ Parker, "Small Victory, Missed Chance" (2006), p. 154. "... Bandung presented Washington with a geopolitical quandary. Holding the Cold War line against communism depended on the crumbling European empires. Yet U.S. support for that ancien régime was sure to earn the resentment of Third World nationalists fighting against colonial rule. The Eastern Bloc, facing no such guilt by association, thus did not face the choice Bandung presented to the United States: side with the rising Third World tide, or side with the shaky imperial structures damming it in."
  24. ^ Parker, "Small Victory, Missed Chance" (2006), p. 155.
  25. ^ Parker, "Small Victory, Missed Chance" (2006), pp. 157–158.
  26. ^ Parker, "Small Victory, Missed Chance" (2006), p. 161. "An OCB memorandum of March 28 [...] recounts the efforts by OIR and the working group to distribute intelligence 'on Communist intentions, and [on] suggestions for countering Communist designs.' These were sent to U.S. posts overseas, with instructions to confer with invitee governments, and to brief friendly attendees. Among the latter, 'efforts will be made to exploit [the Bangkok message] through the Thai, Pakistani, and Philippine delegations.' Posts in Japan and Turkey would seek to do likewise. On the media front, the administration briefed members of the American press; '[this] appear[s] to have been instrumental in setting the public tone.' Arrangements had also been made for USIA coverage. In addition, the document refers to budding Anglo-American collaboration in the 'Image Management' effort surrounding Bandung."
  27. ^ a b Parker, "Small Victory, Missed Chance" (2006), p. 162.
  28. ^ "Adam Clayton Powell Jr". United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
  29. ^ a b Gao, Yunxiang (2021). Arise, Africa! Roar, China! Black and Chinese Citizens of the World in the Twentieth Century. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. 38. ISBN 9781469664606.
  30. ^ Roberts, Brian Russell (2013). Artistic Ambassadors: Literary and International Representation of the New Negro Era. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. pp. 146–172. ISBN 978-0813933689.
  31. ^ Roberts, Brian Russell; Foulcher, Keith (2016). Indonesian Notebook: A Sourcebook on Richard Wright and the Bandung Conference. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0822360667.[page needed]
  32. ^ Mancall, Mark (1984). China at the Center: 300 Years of Foreign Policy. Free Press. p. 427.
  33. ^ Choucri, Nazli (March 1969). "The Nonalignment of Afro-Asian States: Policy, Perception, and Behaviour". Canadian Journal of Political Science. 2 (1): 1–17. doi:10.1017/S0008423900024574. hdl:1721.1/141521. S2CID 153424926.
  34. ^ a b c d e Har-El, Shai (2024). China and the Palestinian Organizations: 1964–1971. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-3-031-57827-4.
  35. ^ a b "Asian-African Conference timeline". The Jakarta Post. 23 April 2015. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  36. ^ "Seniors official meeting" (PDF). MFA of Indonesia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 December 2013. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  37. ^ "Xi Jinping Attends Activities Commemorating the 60th Anniversary of the Bandung Conference_Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China". www.mfa.gov.cn. Retrieved 20 June 2025.
  38. ^ "In Bandung, Leaders Slam Imperialist West". Voice of America. 24 April 2015. Retrieved 20 June 2025.
  39. ^ Reddy, Manda Ravinder (15 April 2025). "Telangana to host Bharat Summit-2025 on April 25". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 20 June 2025.
  40. ^ Cyprus and the Non–Aligned Movement Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, (April 2008)
  41. ^ Palacios, Marco; Weinberg, Gregorio, eds. (1999). Historia general de América Latina (in Spanish). Madrid: Editorial Trotta. pp. 341–2. ISBN 9789233031579.
  42. ^ Seibert, Gerhard (2019). Visentini, Paulo Fagundes; Seibert, Gerhard (eds.). Brazil-Africa relations : historical dimensions and contemporary engagements, from the 1960s to the present. Oxford: James Currey. p. 18. ISBN 9781847011954.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Acharya, Amitav. "Studying the Bandung conference from a Global IR perspective." Australian Journal of International Affairs 70.4 (2016): 342–357. Online Archived 1 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Acharya, Amitav. "Who are the norm makers? The Asian-African conference in Bandung and the evolution of norms." Global Governance 20.3 (2014): 405–417. Online
  • Asia-Africa Speaks From Bandung. Jakarta: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of Indonesia, 1955.
  • Ampiah, Kweku. The Political and Moral Imperatives of the Bandung Conference of 1955 : the Reactions of the US, UK and Japan. Folkestone, UK : Global Oriental, 2007. ISBN 1-905246-40-4
  • Brown, Colin. 2012. "The Bandung Conference and Indonesian Foreign Policy", Ch 9 in Anne Booth, Chris Manning and Thee Kian Wie, 2012, Essays in Honour of Joan Hardjono, Jakarta: Yayasan Pustaka Obor Indonesia.
  • Burke, Roland. "The compelling dialogue of freedom: Human rights at the Bandung Conference." Human Rights Quarterly 28 (2006): 947+.
  • Dinkel, Jürgen, The Non-Aligned Movement. Genesis, Organization and Politics (1927–1992), New Perspectives on the Cold War 5, Brill: Leiden/Boston 2019. ISBN 978-90-04-33613-1
  • Finnane, Antonia, and Derek McDougall, eds, Bandung 1955: Little Histories. Melbourne: Monash Asia Institute, 2010. ISBN 978-1-876924-73-7
  • Kahin, George McTurnan. The Asian-African Conference: Bandung, Indonesia, April 1955. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1956.
  • Lee, Christopher J., ed, Making a World After Empire: The Bandung Moment and Its Political Afterlives. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2010. ISBN 978-0896802773
  • Mackie, Jamie. Bandung 1955: Non-Alignment and Afro-Asian Solidarity. Singapore: Editions Didier Millet, 2005. ISBN 981-4155-49-7
  • Parker, Jason C. "Small Victory, Missed Chance: The Eisenhower Administration, the Bandung Conference, and the Turning of the Cold War." In The Eisenhower Administration, the Third World, and the Globalization of the Cold War. Ed. Kathryn C. Statler & Andrew L. Johns. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2006. ISBN 0742553817
  • Parker, Jason. "Cold War II: The Eisenhower Administration, the Bandung Conference, and the reperiodization of the postwar era." Diplomatic History 30.5 (2006): 867–892.
  • Shimazu, Naoko. "Diplomacy as theatre: staging the Bandung Conference of 1955." Modern Asian Studies 48.1 (2014): 225–252. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X13000371
  • Wood, Sally Percival. "'Chou gags critics in BANDOENG or How the Media Framed Premier Zhou Enlai at the Bandung Conference, 1955" Modern Asian Studies 44.5 (2010): 1001–1027.
  • Utama, Wildan Sena. "A Forgotten Bandung: The Afro-Asian Students’ Conference and the Call for Decolonisation," In Carolien Stolte and Su Lin Lewis (ed.). The Lives of Cold War Afro-Asianism. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2022. https://doi.org/10.1017/9789400604346
  • Utama, Wildan Sena. "Engineering Solidarity: Indonesia, Afro-Asian Networks, and Third World Anti-Imperialism 1950s-1960s," Doctoral Thesis., University of Bristol, 2023. https://hdl.handle.net/1983/37cc4ff7-9e1a-4b8a-a1fc-b625ded3b12e

External links

[edit]
  • Modern History Sourcebook: Prime Minister Nehru: Speech to Asian-African Conference Political Committee, 1955
  • Modern History Sourcebook: President Sukarno of Indonesia: Speech at the Opening of the Asian-African Conference, 18 April 1955
  • "Asian-African Conference: Communiqué; Excerpts" (PDF). Egyptian presidency website. 24 April 1955. Archived from the original on 8 October 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
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  • Suez Crisis
  • "We will bury you"
  • Operation Gladio
  • Syrian Crisis of 1957
  • Sputnik crisis
  • Ifni War
  • Iraqi 14 July Revolution
  • 1958 Lebanon crisis
  • Second Taiwan Strait Crisis
  • 1959 Mosul uprising
  • 1959 Tibetan uprising
  • Kitchen Debate
  • Cuban Revolution
    • Consolidation of the Cuban Revolution
  • Sino-Soviet split
  • Night Frost Crisis
1960s
  • Congo Crisis
  • Laotian Civil War
  • Vietnam War
  • Simba rebellion
  • 1960 U-2 incident
  • Bay of Pigs Invasion
  • 1960 Turkish coup d'état
  • Albanian–Soviet split
  • Iraqi–Kurdish conflict
    • First Iraqi–Kurdish War
  • Berlin Crisis of 1961
  • Berlin Wall
  • Annexation of Goa
  • Papua conflict
  • Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation
  • Sand War
  • Portuguese Colonial War
    • Angolan War of Independence
    • Guinea-Bissau War of Independence
    • Mozambican War of Independence
  • Cuban Missile Crisis
  • El Porteñazo
  • Sino-Indian War
  • Communist insurgency in Sarawak
  • Ramadan Revolution
  • Eritrean War of Independence
  • North Yemen civil war
  • 1963 Syrian coup d'état
  • Assassination of John F. Kennedy
  • Aden Emergency
  • Cyprus crisis of 1963–1964
  • Shifta War
  • Mexican Dirty War
    • Tlatelolco massacre
  • Guatemalan Civil War
  • Colombian conflict
  • 1964 Brazilian coup d'état
  • Dominican Civil War
  • Rhodesian Bush War
  • Indonesian mass killings of 1965–1966
  • Transition to the New Order (Indonesia)
  • ASEAN Declaration
  • 1966 Syrian coup d'état
  • Cultural Revolution
  • Cambodian Civil War
  • Argentine Revolution
  • South African Border War
  • Korean DMZ Conflict
  • 12-3 incident
  • Greek junta
  • 1967 Hong Kong riots
  • Years of Lead (Italy)
  • Six-Day War
  • War of Attrition
  • Dhofar rebellion
  • Al-Wadiah War
  • Nigerian Civil War
  • Protests of 1968
    • May 68
  • Prague Spring
  • USS Pueblo incident
  • 1968 Polish political crisis
  • Communist insurgency in Malaysia
  • Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia
  • 17 July Revolution
  • 1968 Peruvian coup d'état
    • Revolutionary Government
  • 1969 Sudanese coup d'état
  • 1969 Libyan revolution
  • Goulash Communism
  • Sino-Soviet border conflict
  • New People's Army rebellion
  • Note Crisis
1970s
  • Détente
  • Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
  • Black September
  • Alcora Exercise
  • 1970 Syrian coup d'etat
  • Western Sahara conflict
  • Communist insurgency in Thailand
  • December 1970 protests in Poland
  • Koza riot
  • Realpolitik
  • Ping-pong diplomacy
  • 1971 JVP insurrection
  • Corrective revolution (Egypt)
  • 1971 Turkish military memorandum
  • 1971 Sudanese coup d'état
  • 1971 Bolivian coup d'état
  • Four Power Agreement on Berlin
  • Bangladesh Liberation War
  • 1972 visit by Richard Nixon to China
  • North Yemen-South Yemen Border conflict of 1972
  • First Yemenite War
  • Munich massacre
  • 1972–1975 Bangladesh insurgency
  • Eritrean War of Independence
  • Paris Peace Accords
  • 1973 Uruguayan coup d'état
  • 1973 Afghan coup d'état
  • 1973 Chilean coup d'état
  • Yom Kippur War
  • 1973 oil crisis
  • Carnation Revolution
  • Ethiopian Civil War
  • Vietnam War
  • Spanish transition to democracy
  • Metapolitefsi
  • Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
  • Second Iraqi–Kurdish War
  • Turkish invasion of Cyprus
  • 15 August 1975 Bangladeshi coup d'état
  • Siege of Dhaka (1975)
  • Sipahi-Janata revolution
  • Angolan Civil War
  • Indonesian invasion of East Timor
  • Cambodian genocide
  • June 1976 in Polish protests
  • Mozambican Civil War
  • Oromo conflict
  • Ogaden War
  • 1978 Somali coup attempt
  • Western Sahara War
  • Lebanese Civil War
  • Sino-Albanian split
  • Third Indochina War
    • Cambodian–Vietnamese War
    • Khmer Rouge insurgency
    • Sino-Vietnamese War
  • Operation Condor
  • Dirty War (Argentina)
  • 1976 Argentine coup d'état
  • Egyptian–Libyan War
  • German Autumn
  • Korean Air Lines Flight 902
  • Nicaraguan Revolution
  • Uganda–Tanzania War
  • NDF Rebellion
  • Chadian–Libyan War
  • Second Yemenite War
  • Grand Mosque seizure
  • Iranian Revolution
  • Saur Revolution
  • New JEWEL Movement
  • 1979 Herat uprising
  • Seven Days to the River Rhine
  • Struggle against political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union
1980s
  • Salvadoran Civil War
  • Soviet–Afghan War
  • Eritrean War of Independence
  • Summer Olympic boycotts (1980 · 1984 · 1988)
  • Gera Demands
  • Peruvian Revolution
  • August Agreements
    • Solidarity
  • Assassination of Jerzy Popiełuszko
  • 1980 Turkish coup d'état
  • Ugandan Bush War
  • Gulf of Sidra incident
  • Martial law in Poland
  • Casamance conflict
  • Falklands War
  • 1982 Ethiopian–Somali Border War
  • Ndogboyosoi War
  • United States invasion of Grenada
  • Able Archer 83
  • Star Wars
  • 1985 Geneva Summit
  • Iran–Iraq War
  • Somali Rebellion
  • Reykjavík Summit
  • 1986 Black Sea incident
  • South Yemeni crisis
  • Toyota War
  • 1987 Lieyu massacre
  • Operation Denver
  • 1987–1989 JVP insurrection
  • Lord's Resistance Army insurgency
  • 1988 Black Sea bumping incident
  • 8888 Uprising
  • Solidarity (Soviet reaction)
  • Contras
  • Central American crisis
  • Operation RYAN
  • Korean Air Lines Flight 007
  • People Power Revolution
  • Glasnost
  • Perestroika
  • Bougainville conflict
  • First Nagorno-Karabakh War
  • Afghan Civil War
  • United States invasion of Panama
  • 1988 Polish strikes
  • Polish Round Table Agreement
  • 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre
  • Revolutions of 1989
  • Fall of the Berlin Wall
  • Fall of the inner German border
  • Velvet Revolution
  • Romanian Revolution
  • Peaceful Revolution
1990s
  • Mongolian Revolution of 1990
  • Min Ping Yu No. 5540 incident
  • Gulf War
  • Min Ping Yu No. 5202
  • German reunification
  • Yemeni unification
  • Fall of communism in Albania
  • Breakup of Yugoslavia
  • Dissolution of the Soviet Union
    • 1991 August Coup
  • Dissolution of Czechoslovakia
Frozen conflicts
  • Abkhazia
  • China-Taiwan
  • Korea
  • Kosovo
  • South Ossetia
  • Transnistria
  • Sino-Indian border dispute
  • North Borneo dispute
Foreign policy
  • Truman Doctrine
  • Containment
  • Eisenhower Doctrine
  • Domino theory
  • Hallstein Doctrine
  • Kennedy Doctrine
  • Johnson Doctrine
  • Peaceful coexistence
  • Ostpolitik
  • Brezhnev Doctrine
  • Nixon Doctrine
  • Ulbricht Doctrine
  • Carter Doctrine
  • Reagan Doctrine
  • Paasikivi–Kekkonen doctrine
  • Rollback
  • Kinmen Agreement
Ideologies
Capitalism
  • Chicago school
  • Conservatism
    • American conservatism
  • Democratic capitalism
  • Keynesianism
  • Liberalism
  • Libertarianism
  • Monetarism
  • Neoclassical economics
  • Reaganomics
  • Supply-side economics
Socialism
  • Communism
  • Marxism–Leninism
  • Fidelismo
  • Eurocommunism
  • Guevarism
  • Hoxhaism
  • Juche
  • Ho Chi Minh Thought
  • Maoism
  • Stalinism
  • Titoism
  • Trotskyism
Other
  • Imperialism
  • Anti-imperialism
  • Nationalism
  • Ultranationalism
  • Chauvinism
  • Ethnic nationalism
  • Racism
  • Zionism
  • Anti-Zionism
  • Fascism
  • Neo-Nazism
  • Islamism
  • Totalitarianism
  • Authoritarianism
  • Autocracy
  • Liberal democracy
  • Illiberal democracy
  • Guided democracy
  • Social democracy
  • Third-worldism
  • White supremacy
  • White nationalism
  • White separatism
  • Apartheid
  • Finlandization
Organizations
  • NATO
  • SEATO
  • METO
  • EEC
  • Warsaw Pact
  • Comecon
  • Non-Aligned Movement
  • NN States
  • ASEAN
  • SAARC
  • Safari Club
Propaganda
Pro-communist
  • Active measures
  • Izvestia
  • Neues Deutschland
  • Pravda
  • Radio Moscow
  • Rudé právo
  • Trybuna Ludu
  • TASS
  • Soviet Life
Pro-Western
  • Amerika
  • Crusade for Freedom
  • Paix et Liberté
  • Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
  • Red Scare
  • Voice of America
Technological
competition
  • Arms race
  • Nuclear arms race
  • Space Race
Historians
  • Gar Alperovitz
  • Thomas A. Bailey
  • Michael Beschloss
  • Manu Bhagavan
  • Thomas Borstelmann
  • Archie Brown
  • Warren H. Carroll
  • Chen Jian
  • Adrian Cioroianu
  • John Costello
  • Michael Cox
  • Nicholas J. Cull
  • Nick Cullather
  • Norman Davies
  • Willem Drees
  • Robert D. English
  • Herbert Feis
  • Robert Hugh Ferrell
  • Sheila Fitzpatrick
  • André Fontaine
  • Anneli Ute Gabanyi
  • John Lewis Gaddis
  • Lloyd Gardner
  • Timothy Garton Ash
  • Gabriel Gorodetsky
  • Greg Grandin
  • Fred Halliday
  • Jussi Hanhimäki
  • Jamil Hasanli
  • John Earl Haynes
  • Patrick J. Hearden
  • James Hershberg
  • Tvrtko Jakovina
  • Tony Judt
  • Oleg Khlevniuk
  • Harvey Klehr
  • Gabriel Kolko
  • Bruce R. Kuniholm
  • Walter LaFeber
  • Walter Laqueur
  • Melvyn P. Leffler
  • Fredrik Logevall
  • Geir Lundestad
  • Vojtech Mastny
  • Jack F. Matlock Jr.
  • Thomas J. McCormick
  • Robert J. McMahon
  • Timothy Naftali
  • Marius Oprea
  • David S. Painter
  • William B. Pickett
  • Ronald E. Powaski
  • Stephen G. Rabe
  • Yakov M. Rabkin
  • Sergey Radchenko
  • M. E. Sarotte
  • Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.
  • Ellen Schrecker
  • Giles Scott-Smith
  • Shen Zhihua
  • Timothy Snyder
  • Frances S. Saunders
  • Michael Szonyi
  • Fyodor Tertitskiy
  • Athan Theoharis
  • Andrew Thorpe
  • Vladimir Tismăneanu
  • Patrick Vaughan
  • Alex von Tunzelmann
  • Odd Arne Westad
  • William Appleman Williams
  • Jonathan Reed Winkler
  • Rudolph Winnacker
  • Ken Young
  • Vladislav M. Zubok
Espionage and
intelligence
  • List of Eastern Bloc agents in the United States
  • Soviet espionage in the United States
  • Russian espionage in the United States
  • American espionage in the Soviet Union and Russian Federation
  • CIA and the Cultural Cold War
  • CIA
  • MI5
  • MI6
  • United States involvement in regime change
  • Soviet involvement in regime change
  • MVD
  • KGB
  • Stasi
See also
  • Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War
  • Soviet Union–United States relations
  • Soviet Union–United States summits
  • Russia–NATO relations
  • War on terror
  • Brinkmanship
  • Pax Atomica
  • Second Cold War
  • Russian Revolution
  • Category
  • List of conflicts
  • Timeline
  • v
  • t
  • e
Non-Aligned Movement
Members and the NAM
  • Cyprus ‡
  • Egypt
  • Ghana
  • India
  • Malta ‡
  • Sri Lanka
  • Tanzania
  • Yugoslavia ‡
  • Zimbabwe
Structure
Bureau
  • Coordinating Bureau of the Non-Aligned Movement
Organizations
  • Centre for South-South Technical Cooperation
  • Centre for Science and Technology of the Non-aligned and Other Developing Countries
  • Center for Human Rights and Cultural Diversity
  • NAM Youth
  • NAM News Network (News Agencies Pool)
  • "Josip Broz Tito" Art Gallery of the Nonaligned Countries
Principles
  • Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence
Summits
  • Bandung Conference
  • Brioni Meeting
  • 1st
  • 2nd
  • 3rd
  • 4th
  • 5th
  • 6th
  • 7th
  • 8th
  • 9th
  • 10th
  • 16th
  • 18th
  • 19th
Founders
  • Josip Broz Tito (Yugoslavia)
  • Sukarno (Indonesia)
  • Jawaharlal Nehru (India)
  • Kwame Nkrumah (Ghana)
  • Gamal Abdel Nasser (Egypt)
People
  • Houari Boumédiène
  • Fidel Castro
  • Nelson Mandela
  • Mohamed Morsi
  • Nicolás Maduro
  • Sirimavo Bandaranaike
‡ denotes a former member state of the Non-Aligned Movement
  • v
  • t
  • e
South–South cooperation and Third Worldism
Global South
Development
  • Landlocked developing countries
  • Least developed countries
  • Heavily indebted poor countries
Markets
  • Emerging markets
  • Newly industrialized country
  • Transition economy
Worlds theory
  • First World
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  • Fourth World
Geopolitics
  • Decolonization
  • Cold War
  • Neocolonialism
  • Multipolarity
  • World Conference against Racism
    • Durban I
    • Durban II
    • Durban III
  • Globalization
Finance
  • Debt
  • Asian Clearing Union
  • Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
  • Asian Development Bank
  • Arab Monetary Fund
  • BancoSur
  • BRIC (economics term)
  • Caribbean Development Bank
  • Common Fund for Commodities
  • New Development Bank
  • OPEC Fund for International Development
Trade and
development
  • Developmental state
  • Flying geese paradigm
  • Infrastructure-based development
  • Sustainable development
  • Global System of Trade Preferences
  • Protocol on Trade Negotiations
  • New International Economic Order
  • New World Information and Communication Order
  • United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
  • United Nations Development Programme
  • United Nations Industrial Development Organization
Public health
  • Generic drugs
    • biosimilar
  • Pharmaceutical patents
    • criticism
  • Test data exclusivity
  • Doha Declaration
  • World Health Organization
Organizations
and groups
  • G-5
  • G-77
  • G-15
  • D-8
  • G20 developing nations (G-20)
  • G-24
  • G33 developing countries (G-33)
  • G-11
  • G-90
  • Non-Aligned Movement
  • African, Caribbean and Pacific Group
  • African Union
  • Afro–Asian Conference
  • BASIC countries
  • BRICS
  • Association of Southeast Asian Nations
  • Colombo Plan
  • Community of Latin American and Caribbean States
  • IBSA Dialogue Forum
  • International Solar Alliance
  • Melanesian Spearhead Group
  • North–South Summit
  • Polynesian Leaders Group
  • South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation Zone
  • South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation
  • Small Island Developing States
  • South Centre
North–South
divide
  • Brandt Report
  • Global financial system
    • International Monetary Fund
    • World Bank
    • World Trade Organization
  • Fair trade
  • Financial regulation
  • Global digital divide
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