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Asian–African Conference - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The core principles of the Bandung Conference were political self-determination, mutual respect for sovereignty, non-aggression, non-interference in internal affairs, and equality. These issues were of central importance to all participants in the conference, most of which had recently emerged from colonial rule.
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Richard Wright's The Color Curtain [University Press of Mississippi, 1994], originally published in 1956, chronicles the Bandung Conference of April 18-25, 1955. The gathering of leaders of 29 African and Asian nations considered how they could help one another in achieving social and economic well-being for their...
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Mr. Chairman, the turn this discussion has taken is a much wider one than that we had already expected. In fact, it has covered the whole major heading. ... Reprinted in G. M. Kahin, The Asian-African Conference (Cornell University Press, 1956), pp. 64-72.
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The likelihood of success of this Conference is proved already by the very presence of you all here today. It is for us to give it strength, to give it the power of inspiration-to spread its message all over the World...
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The Bandung Conference, a meeting of Asian and African countries in Bandung, Indonesia, between April 18 and April 24, 1955, represented a landmark in the ...
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More Links Within This Section ... Skip to page content | Text only Graphical version of this page; ... First conference, in 1955, of the Afro-Asian nations, proclaiming anticolonialism and neutrality between East and West. It was organized by Indonesia, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, India, and Pakistan.
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Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Bandung Conference. Bandung Conference. Information about Bandung Conference in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. ... The Color Curtain (1956), based on his observations of the 1955 Bandung Conference, a gathering of leaders of developing nations; and White Man, Listen...
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Encyclopedia article about Bandung Conference. Information about Bandung Conference in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. ... Again, in 1955, Nehru's leadership ensured the success of the Bandung Conference of independent Asian and African nations, held in Indonesia.
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Also known as the Bandung Conference, leaders in attendance included Indonesia's Sukarno, India's Nehru and a representative from the People's Republic of China (PRC), Zhou Enlai. ... 2003. An American dilemma: Race and realpolitik in the American response to the Bandung Conference, 1955. In Window on freedom: Race,
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