This special section responds to the call for renewed attention to the international implications of decolonization with a particular focus on India and the South Asia region. The section offers insights into historical continuities and ruptures in Indian internationalism, interrogating divides between colonial and postcolonial as well as between national and international. In turn, it de-centres histories of global order-making in the twentieth century, building on the work of a growing chorus of international historians, political scientists, and international relations scholars seeking alternative visions of the international in an increasingly multipolar world order. In challenging the binary rupture of India's international outlook in ...
One of the central challenges confronting post-colonial India in its march towards decolonisation wa...
This paper argues that we can view the Round Table Conference (three sittings between 1930-32) as an...
This paper argues that we can view the Round Table Conference (three sittings between 1930-32) as an...
This special section responds to the call for renewed attention to the international implications of...
The independence of the colonies did not mean the end of colonialism in the international system. Th...
This paper attempts to analyze decolonization in British India. India and Pakistan won their indepen...
Despite the existence of a large Indian diaspora, there has been relatively little scholarly attenti...
Prior to Indian independence, the Indian National Congress made savvy use of the United Nations as a...
This paper attempts to analyze decolonization in British India. India and Pakistan won their indepen...
First Online: 25 October 2017This chapter examines the continuities and discontinuities in developme...
This article investigates the contribution of decolonising states to the nascent international order...
AbstractThis paper examines India's experiences as the only non-self-governing member of the League ...
India and South Africa, two states that bookended the process of twentieth century decoloniszation, ...
This project seeks to develop an understanding of India’s role in the UN and the priority accorded t...
This work discusses the change in Indian position in international relations during the Cold War. It...
One of the central challenges confronting post-colonial India in its march towards decolonisation wa...
This paper argues that we can view the Round Table Conference (three sittings between 1930-32) as an...
This paper argues that we can view the Round Table Conference (three sittings between 1930-32) as an...
This special section responds to the call for renewed attention to the international implications of...
The independence of the colonies did not mean the end of colonialism in the international system. Th...
This paper attempts to analyze decolonization in British India. India and Pakistan won their indepen...
Despite the existence of a large Indian diaspora, there has been relatively little scholarly attenti...
Prior to Indian independence, the Indian National Congress made savvy use of the United Nations as a...
This paper attempts to analyze decolonization in British India. India and Pakistan won their indepen...
First Online: 25 October 2017This chapter examines the continuities and discontinuities in developme...
This article investigates the contribution of decolonising states to the nascent international order...
AbstractThis paper examines India's experiences as the only non-self-governing member of the League ...
India and South Africa, two states that bookended the process of twentieth century decoloniszation, ...
This project seeks to develop an understanding of India’s role in the UN and the priority accorded t...
This work discusses the change in Indian position in international relations during the Cold War. It...
One of the central challenges confronting post-colonial India in its march towards decolonisation wa...
This paper argues that we can view the Round Table Conference (three sittings between 1930-32) as an...
This paper argues that we can view the Round Table Conference (three sittings between 1930-32) as an...