Bandung 60 years on: revolt and resilience in international society
Author: Richard Devetak, Tim Dunne, Ririn Tri Nurhayati.
Devetak, Richard and Dunne, Tim and Nurhayati, Ririn Tri. 2016-07-03. "Bandung 60 years on: revolt and resilience in international society." Australian Journal of International Affairs 70 (4): 358-373. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10357718.2016.1155201
This article examines the extent to which international society has
been able to accommodate challenges such as the mid twentieth-
century ‘revolt against the West’ and the twenty-first-century rise of new (especially non-Western) great powers. The Bandung
conference of 1955 has commonly been seen as posing a threat
to the fabric of international society by proliferating cultural and political differences. The authors show, on the contrary, that the
political project of anti-colonialism and peaceful coexistence
expressed at Bandung was actually consistent with a pluralist
conception of international society, even if Western powers and intellectuals at the time failed to notice. The non-Western
countries represented at Bandung were intent on expunging
international society of the structures and practices of racism and
colonialism so as to strengthen the foundations of a pluralistic
international society better able to accommodate cultural and political differences.Published: 2016-07-03Typ: journalArticleISSN: 1035-7718, 1465-332X