This article opens up new perspectives on the dispute between the Netherlands and Indonesia about West New Guinea between 1950 and 1962. Conventional historiography describes this episode as the ‘trauma of decolonisation’, with Dutch policy-makers clinging on to the last bits of their overseas empire in Southeast Asia. This article shows that some of them also attempted to formulate new principles to convince world opinion that their country was making a break from traditional forms of colonialism. Referring to Article 73 of the United Nations’ Charter, the Dutch government put the well-being of the local Papuan population at the centre of their policy and several key officials embarked on an international publicity campaign to propagate th...
Dutch international radio broadcaster Radio Nederland Wereldomroep (RNW) was founded in 1947, during...
Based on the Round Table Conference between Indonesia and the Netherlands' representatives in 1949, ...
This article describes the forging of networks and the articulation of solidarities by Indonesians i...
‘Imperialism is no word for scholars’. Australian historian W. K. Hancock’s aphorism has not held sc...
Why did the Dutch hold on to Western New Guinea, one of the many territories that constituted the Du...
Why did the Dutch hold on to Western New Guinea, one of the many territories that constituted the Du...
Recent research has shown that (neo-)colonial concepts played a larger role in ideas about European ...
Throughout the 1960s, West Papuan activists engaged in a political campaign for West Papuan independ...
Published online: 9 June 2022This article examines the West Papuan campaign for independence in the ...
Scholars of international history have argued for the separation of decolonization struggles in Afri...
This paper concerns the struggle among the Netherlands, Indonesia and indigenous Papuan nationalists...
This paper concerns the struggle among the Netherlands, Indonesia and indigenous Papuan nationalists...
Lecturing the Dutch in public probably makes them more stubborn rather than less stubborn. And they ...
The literature about Dutch presence in Indonesia in the colonial era is mainly written by white Dutc...
This is the final version. Available on open access from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this recor...
Dutch international radio broadcaster Radio Nederland Wereldomroep (RNW) was founded in 1947, during...
Based on the Round Table Conference between Indonesia and the Netherlands' representatives in 1949, ...
This article describes the forging of networks and the articulation of solidarities by Indonesians i...
‘Imperialism is no word for scholars’. Australian historian W. K. Hancock’s aphorism has not held sc...
Why did the Dutch hold on to Western New Guinea, one of the many territories that constituted the Du...
Why did the Dutch hold on to Western New Guinea, one of the many territories that constituted the Du...
Recent research has shown that (neo-)colonial concepts played a larger role in ideas about European ...
Throughout the 1960s, West Papuan activists engaged in a political campaign for West Papuan independ...
Published online: 9 June 2022This article examines the West Papuan campaign for independence in the ...
Scholars of international history have argued for the separation of decolonization struggles in Afri...
This paper concerns the struggle among the Netherlands, Indonesia and indigenous Papuan nationalists...
This paper concerns the struggle among the Netherlands, Indonesia and indigenous Papuan nationalists...
Lecturing the Dutch in public probably makes them more stubborn rather than less stubborn. And they ...
The literature about Dutch presence in Indonesia in the colonial era is mainly written by white Dutc...
This is the final version. Available on open access from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this recor...
Dutch international radio broadcaster Radio Nederland Wereldomroep (RNW) was founded in 1947, during...
Based on the Round Table Conference between Indonesia and the Netherlands' representatives in 1949, ...
This article describes the forging of networks and the articulation of solidarities by Indonesians i...