Studying The Bandung Conference From A Global IR Perspective Acharya
Studying The Bandung Conference From A Global IR Perspective Acharya
Studying The Bandung Conference From A Global IR Perspective Acharya
Amitav Acharya
To cite this article: Amitav Acharya (2016) Studying the Bandung conference from a
Global IR perspective, Australian Journal of International Affairs, 70:4, 342-357, DOI:
10.1080/10357718.2016.1168359
ABSTRACT KEYWORDS
Mainstream international relations scholarship has ignored or Asian-African Conference;
disparaged the significance and legacies of the Bandung Bandung conference; global
conference. The author argues in favour of its importance, not international relations; Non-
Aligned Movement; South-
only for any serious investigation into the evolution of the post-
East Asian regionalism
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Brussels meeting, attended by the likes of India’s Jawaharlal Nehru, was where ‘many
distinguished Delegates who are present here today met each other and found new
strength in their fight for independence’, the Bandung conference was distinctive
because it
was a meeting place thousands of miles away, amidst foreign people, in a foreign country, in a
foreign continent. It was not assembled there by choice, but by necessity. Today the contrast
is great. Our nations and countries are colonies no more. Now we are free, sovereign and
independent. We are again masters in our own house. We do not need to go to other con-
tinents to confer (Sukarno 1955, 6).
The first New Delhi conference in 1947 was technically unofficial, hosted by a think
tank, the Indian Council on World Affairs. Participants included Tibet, as well as yet
to be independent governments; indeed, the host country, India, was then still under
British colonial rule and would continue to be for several months more. Both of the
New Delhi conferences were not exclusively a gathering of ‘coloured peoples’: Australia,
the USA and the UK attended the first as observers, and Australia was included in the
1949 conference as a full participant. Australia was not invited to the Bandung confer-
ence, but neither did it wish to be invited. As a declassified British document put it,
Prime Minister Menzies
shares our [British] views of [the] mischievous nature of proposed Afro-Asian Conference
and expressed annoyance at suggestions in Australia [from the Australian Labor Party]
that Australia should have been invited … . He takes dark view of activities which, under
guise of peaceful co-existence, in fact are stirring up colour prejudices (UK High Commis-
sioner 18 January 1955).
Another British document points out that the Australian government ‘neither wanted an
invitation nor the opportunity to refuse one’ (British Embassy, Washington 1955).
The Bandung conference is important not only for any serious investigation into the
evolution of the post-war international order, but also for the development of IR as a
truly universal and inclusive discipline: a Global IR (Acharya 2014a). Global IR is
not a theory or method, but a framework of enquiry and analysis of IR in all its diver-
sity, especially with due recognition of the experiences, voices and agency of non-
344 A. ACHARYA
Western peoples, societies and states that have been marginalised in the discipline of IR.
It takes a pluralistic approach to theory and method. Global IR embraces both main-
stream (realism, liberalism and constructivism) and critical approaches, but is agnostic
about the theoretical and methodological instincts and preferences of scholars. For
example, Global IR has much common ground with post-colonialism, for which
Bandung remains a prized subject. However, unlike some post-colonial scholarship,
Global IR does not reject mainstream theories, but challenges their parochialism and
urges that they be infused and broadened with ideas, experiences and insights from
the non-Western world.
While the Global IR perspective has several elements (Acharya 2013, 2014a), the ones
that are most relevant to the analysis of the Bandung conference may be noted here.
Global IR broadens the study of world politics to include the ideas, identities, insti-
tutions, events and processes that are outside of, and challenging to, the interstate
system of Europe and its colonial expansion, which have been central to the construc-
tion of the dominant IR theories. Global IR seeks to uncover indigenously driven pat-
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terns of interaction around the world, paying attention to local, regional and
interregional interactions, and, through them, the agency of non-Western actors. For
Global IR, true universalism is one that recognises the diversity of human interactions,
rather than one that legitimises the imposition of a temporally dominant Western civi-
lisation. Global IR also encourages the study of the ongoing global power shift,
especially with the relative decline of the West and rise of new powers such as
China, India, Turkey and Indonesia. Finally, Global IR recognises the close nexus
between disciplinary IR and the area studies tradition, and investigates the multiple
and complex ways in which civilisations interact with each other, including through
a pacific process of mutual learning.
While mainstream IR scholarship, especially realism and liberalism, ignores Bandung,
there is already a body of writing on the conference by several participants and contem-
poraneous observers, which forms a rich source for analysing the legacy of the confer-
ence from a Global IR perspective. These writings (for example, Appadorai 1955;
Fitzgerald 1955; Jack 1955; Paulker 1955; Kahin 1956; Wright 1956; Romulo 1956;
Abdulghani 1964, 1981) are of considerable scholarly value as sources of the confer-
ence’s history, even though not written from any conventional IR theoretical perspec-
tive. Other and more recent scholarship on Bandung includes that which is historical
in nature (Mackie 2005) and/or directly engages issues of contemporary IR and
world order (Jansen 1966; Kimche 1973; Jones 2005; Ampia 2007; Tan and Acharya
2009; Lee 2010; McDougall and Finnane 2010). There are also writings on issues
such as human rights, norm diffusion and regionalism that integrate the story of
Bandung with the making of the post-war international order (on human rights, see
Burke 2010; on Bandung’s impact on global and Asian regional norms, see Acharya
2009, 2014b). Some of these recent writings, when framed in theory, tend to be from
a post-colonial (Lee 2010) or constructivist (Acharya 2009, 2014b) perspective. At the
same time, a good deal of Western political and media commentary on Bandung has
viewed it mainly from the prism of interstate competition and power politics (Jansen
1966, although a diplomatic history comes closest to a realist view of the conference).
Given their stress on theoretical pluralism, Global IR scholars should engage these
accounts.
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS 345
This essay relies mainly on a body of primary sources on the conference, including
archival sources not previously available or utilised. I begin by discussing some of the
key legacies of the conference that challenge the conventional perceptions of the con-
ference and attest to the ‘agency’ of the newly independent states in the making of
the post-war international order (Acharya 2009, 2013, 2014b; for earlier work that
this article draws on, see Acharya 2009, 2011, 2014b). In the concluding section of
this essay, I will draw some implications of the conference for the study of Global
IR. Among the legacies highlighted are:
Turkey, Pakistan, the Philippines, Iran, Iraq and Thailand (Cable, UK Foreign Office,
and Far Eastern Department 1955). The British goal was to prevent the emergence of
an Afro-Asian bloc; to prevent any resolution ‘advantageous to the communists or
inimical to British interests’; and to ‘cause the maximum embarrassment to the commu-
nists’ (ibid.). This approach was developed at two meetings held on March 2 and 3,
1955, in the UK Foreign Office (ibid.). British ‘guidance’ documents—dealing with
the existence of ‘communist colonialism’; the need for a ban on strategic goods
exports to communist China; communist violation of the Geneva Agreements on
Indo-China; the dangers of the Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence (promoted by
India and China); the lack of religious freedom in the communist world; and the hydro-
gen bomb (the goal being to discourage any resolution against the bomb with its risk of
massive radiation)—were sent to British diplomatic missions in 37 countries, including
some countries not attending the conference. Through these documents, the British
missions were also asked to urge friendly nations to ‘resist proposals that the Confer-
ence should endorse controversial claims for extensions of sovereignty’, and to offer
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advice to ‘our more trustworthy friends [who] should be warned to beware of projects
for any kind of Afro-Asian bloc designed to disrupt existing regional organisations
(Colombo Plan, specialised agencies of UN, SEATO [Southeast Asia Treaty Organiz-
ation], etc.)’ (‘Draft Guidance Telegram’ 1955). Yet, as will be discussed later, at
Bandung sovereignty was interpreted to cover non-participation in Cold War pacts,
and SEATO was delegitimised. At the same time, no guidance was issued on the
issue of racialism, even though some British officials were anxious to portray
Bandung as a racialist gathering—due to the exclusion of countries like Rhodesia and
the apartheid regime in South Africa—because it was an issue on which the West
was vulnerable.
For its part, the Eisenhower administration also advised US missions ‘to avoid an open
show of interest’ in the conference (Makins 1955). While the US Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles publicly told the media that the ‘US had always taken a sympathetic attitude’
and Bandung would ‘serve a useful purpose’, and that the US attitude towards the confer-
ence would be one of ‘benevolent indifference’ (Washington Post, May 6, 1955), the USA
was deeply worried that the conference would ‘offer communist China an excellent pro-
paganda opportunity’ and ‘enhance communist prestige in the area and weaken that of the
West’ (British Embassy, Tokyo 1955). The USA further worried that the conference might
‘lull the anxieties of friendly and non-committed countries and place the blame for present
world tensions on the policies of the United States’ (Makins 1955).
In order to counter this, the USA urged collaboration among its friends to oppose the
neutrals and China. The Americans followed the British lead in offering friendly govern-
ments—such as Japan, Turkey, South Vietnam, Lebanon, the Philippines and Thailand—
advice and guidance on how to behave and what to say. The USA not only had an advance
copy of the Philippine lead representative Carlos Romulo’s opening speech at Bandung,
but also gave him (less than two weeks before the conference) a draft resolution on
Taiwan, which he promised to (and did) use at Bandung (US Department of State 1955a).
These Western efforts at manipulation initially had the effect of fuelling controversy
and bickering, which at one point threatened to derail the whole conference. For
example, the British had provided an aide-memoire to the Ceylonese prime minister,
John Kotelawala, one of the sponsors of the conference, urging that ‘full attention
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS 347
such pacts rendered a country a ‘camp follower’ and deprived it of its ‘freedom and
dignity’. Nehru himself came under criticism for using such harsh words, and the confer-
ence compromised by listing among the ‘Ten Principles’ (Dasa Sila) of its Final Commu-
niqué ‘Respect for the right of each nation to defend itself singly or collectively, in
conformity with the Charter of the United Nations’ (Principle 5), as well as the principle
of ‘abstention from the use of arrangements of collective defence to serve the particular
interests of any of the big powers’ (Principle 6a) (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1955).
But the latter—i.e. the abstention principle—became one of the founding declaratory prin-
ciples of the NAM. Moreover, while the conference affirmed the right of collective self-
defence, it had the effect of discouraging any further new members for SEATO, as had
been hoped for by its supporters. In fact, SEATO was doomed. As a UK Foreign Office
assessment of Bandung acknowledged: ‘any hope that might have existed that additional
states could be attracted to SEATO has now vanished, and a growing tendency towards a
neutralist attitude in line with India’s position is to be expected’ (UK Foreign Office,
Research Department 1955).
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Moreover, although no direct link could be established from the available primary
sources, Nasser’s experience at the conference seemed to transform his policy. Within
four months after returning from Bandung, Nasser signed a historic arms deal with Cze-
choslovakia and, less than a year thereafter, in July 1956, he nationalised the Suez Canal
Company, thereby prompting the Anglo-French-Israeli invasion that would change the
history of the Middle East and the course of the Cold War. Whether he actually solicited
Soviet weapons during his meetings with Chou En-lai in Bandung—weapons which the
Soviet Union eventually would provide through Czechoslovakia—is a matter of conjec-
ture, but some analysts believe that it did happen (Sid-Ahmed 2005). According to an
Egyptian political writer, during their meeting in Bandung, ‘Chou-en-Lai (sic) promised
Abdel-Nasser that he would speak to the Soviets to see if they could furnish weapons to
Egypt. His mediation on Egypt’s behalf led to the Czech arms deal’ (Sid-Amed 2005).
And Nasser would join Nehru and Tito as a leader of the NAM that emerged in the 1960s.
Another impact of the Bandung conference might have to do with the seeds of the Sino-
Soviet rift. It was a rare multilateral conference which communist China attended without
the Soviet Union being present. There is little evidence that China consulted the Soviet
Union to discuss and develop a common stand. Bandung allowed China to show its inde-
pendent face in international affairs, rather than as the representative of a monolithic com-
munist bloc. As Jack (1955, 36) noted in a study of the conference: ‘Bandung saw the
emergence of China as a great Asian power and not merely as an isolated partner of
Russia’.
Ultimately, the conference might have contributed to Chinese diplomatic independence
from the Soviet Union. In fact, some Asian leaders, including Nehru, overcame initial
opposition from some countries (Ceylon in particular) to invite China to the conference
precisely on the grounds that it might draw China away from the communist bloc. China
could develop its identity as an Asian nation seeking peaceful relations with its neighbours,
rather than a communist nation promoting subversion and instability in the region. Kahin
(1956, 36) noted in his study of Bandung that the conference was an opportunity for
Chinese leaders to become more acquainted with the ‘realities of China’s international
environment’, and for its neighbours to create ‘moral restraint against possible Chinese
tendencies of aggression’.
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS 349
out of Bandung, which China wanted but India rejected—there was more convergence
than competition in the interests and approach of the two leaders.
As to who won the ‘contest’, the consensus among observers is that it was Chou. Nehru
was seen to have been at least sidelined by Chou. He was criticised for his arrogant
manner, while observers praised Chou’s impressive—calm, mature, restrained and conci-
liatory—demeanour. Yet the reality may well be that neither won. While Bandung might
have undercut Nehru’s prestige and influence, it did not end suspicions of China,
especially after China continued and stepped up its support for communist insurgencies
in its neighbourhood. The Australian Ambassador to Indonesia, W. R. Crocker, who
closely monitored the conference and its outcome, offers a more balanced assessment
of the Nehru–Chou rivalry than most media reports of the time:
It is commonly said at Djakarta today that Chou’s rise in prestige was proportionate to, and
indeed the cause of, Nehru’s decline in prestige. Some at least of this argument originates
from identifiable sources, some of it is wishful, and some is exaggerated. It was, after all,
Nehru who insisted on Chou’s being invited, who indoctrinated him carefully before the
Conference, and who sponsored him in the difficult opening days at Bandung. Mr. Nehru
did not strike me as feeling that he had been supplanted by Chou. He might of course
have been concealing his feelings but during the time I spent with him after the conference
he spoke highly of Chou’s performance and he seemed to be pleased with it (Crocker and Far
Eastern Department 1955).
Yet one might argue, with the benefit of hindsight, that the real winner at Bandung was
neither China nor India, but the future ASEAN. The suspicion of both India and
China, the big powers of Asia, generated at Bandung paved the way for a regionalism
of smaller nations to emerge in Asia—one that is led by none of the big powers. This
was realised with the establishment of ASEAN in 1967. What is more, the Bandung con-
ference gave Japan an opportunity to emerge from its isolation and passivity following its
defeat in World War II. At Bandung, Japan focused almost exclusively on economic issues,
and might have got some ideas and a taste of regionalism without the kind of hegemonic
framework that had underpinned its concept of a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
By paving the way for a regionalism of smaller nations, which Japan came to back strongly
by later providing crucial economic support to ASEAN, the Bandung conference might
350 A. ACHARYA
have decisively shaped the trajectory of Asian regionalism, which continues to this day to
be ASEAN-centric. What is more, the informal, interpersonal and consensus-driven
nature of the interactions among the top leaders at Bandung might have presaged the
‘ASEAN Way’—the non-coercive and non-legalistic mode of interactions that marked
the formative years of ASEAN.
tribution in a negative light, given its tendency to view sovereignty and non-intervention
as a threat to both collective action and collective morality—especially the protection of
human rights. But in the immediate post-war context, sovereignty was a deeply emanci-
patory idea for countries that had lost it to predatory and profoundly immoral Western
powers for several centuries. However, the Bandung conference’s normative contribution
also includes its staunch support for universal human rights—something often overlooked
by Western governments, as well as human rights scholars and transnational activists.
There is a persistent myth that the Bandung countries were, if not anti-human rights,
at least cultural relativists. But there was no hint of cultural relativism in the discussions
about human rights at Bandung. The very first of the Ten Principles called for ‘respect for
fundamental human rights and for the purposes and principles of the Charter of the
United Nations’ (Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs 1955). And it was not because
of Western pressure. Nehru, who was no stooge of the West, himself took the lead by
urging a dose of self-criticism at the outset of the debate over human rights. As he put
it: ‘We have no right to criticize others for violating human rights if we ourselves do
not observe them’ (Nehru 1955b). The Bandung Declaration ‘takes note of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights as a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all
nations’. But it broadened its support for human rights by also recognising ‘the fundamen-
tal principles of human rights as set forth in the Charter of the United Nations’ (Indone-
sian Ministry of Foreign Affairs 1955). In this sense, the conference advanced the earlier
efforts of the Latin American countries in promoting universal human rights and presaged
the subsequent efforts of the developing countries in advancing the global human rights
agenda at the UN (Reus-Smit 2013, 182–191).
The conference also strengthened support for the UN. Western nations had feared that
the conference might undermine the UN and the principle of universalism by creating an
alternative Afro-Asian bloc. Nine of the 29 participants at Bandung were not yet UN
members. But the Bandung Declaration stated that ‘membership in the United Nations
should be universal’ (Ministry of Foreign Affairs 1955), and demanded that the UN Secur-
ity Council admit those Bandung participants that were not yet members of the UN. In
short, the conference defended universalism and sought its expansion, rather than
suggesting any alternative to it.
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS 351
A comity of civilisations
Finally, the Bandung conference offers one of the most vivid and powerful displays of the
comity of civilisations—the investigation of which is a key concern of Global IR. Hosted by
the world’s largest Muslim country, whose motto is ‘unity in diversity’, the conference
brought together leaders of diverse faiths. The leaders of the largest Hindu, Muslim, Bud-
dhist and Confucian nations were present. Even among the Islamic nations, there were
significant cultural differences—for example, between Saudi Arabia and Turkey. Yet,
aside from adjusting the dates of the conference to avoid the Muslim fasting month,
and despite Western-backed efforts to highlight the lack of religious diversity of commu-
nist societies, religion was a non-issue in shaping positions, alignments and interactions at
the conference. One of the most powerful alliances was between Muslim Pakistan, secular-
minded Turkey, Catholic Philippines and Buddhist Thailand. Religious tolerance was the
dominant ethos, and the interactions among leaders at the conference were remarkably
multicultural and interpersonal (including the sharing of food and common eating
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spaces for the leaders). The identity that mattered and shaped Bandung was the con-
structed political identity of the newly independent and marginalised forces of world poli-
tics, rather than the parochial identities of cultural or civilisational blocs. There was not
even the faintest hint of a ‘clash of civilisations’ at Bandung.
Negative legacies
Some contemporary assessments tend to gloss over the negative legacies of the Bandung
conference. But these did exist and must be recognised. A key negative legacy was the
polarisation of Asia between pro-Western, communist and non-aligned countries.
While these divisions had already become evident under the influence of the Cold War,
Bandung helped to accentuate them considerably. Another negative legacy was that the
conference might have contributed to authoritarianism in Asia and Africa. The pro-
Western nations such as the Philippines, Thailand and Pakistan, which claimed victory
at Bandung for the ‘free world’, were blinded to their domestic failings, which resulted
in military takeovers of their political systems. It is not unreasonable to assume that the
euphoria generated by the success of the conference might have accentuated Sukarno’s
authoritarian impulses. It at least provided a diversion from his gathering domestic trou-
bles. A further negative legacy was to encourage regional adventurism and interventionism
by some of the larger participating nations. Egypt’s Nasser returned from Bandung embol-
dened not only to take on the West, but also to assertively seek an Egyptian sphere of influ-
ence over his neighbours in the interest of pan-Arabism, including by carrying out military
interventions in the region. And Sukarno’s nationalistic foreign policy towards his neigh-
bours—which led to a militant opposition (Konfrontasi) to the creation of Malaysia in
1963—could well have received a boost from the Bandung conference.
with Western manipulation as with Indian misgivings, as Nehru, learning from his earlier
attempt at an Asian relations organisation, had by now realised the practical difficulties of
creating a permanent organisation. Perhaps he was already looking to the future, when a
larger and more global movement of post-colonial nations could be established (it was
realised in the creation of the NAM in 1961). Some Western analysts noted that the con-
demnation of colonialism and the expression of anti-Western sentiments at the conference
was muted. While this may be seen as a victory for the Western governments—especially
the UK—the fact was that the leading participants, such as India and China, had no inten-
tion of turning the conference into an anti-Western talkfest. The Bandung conference
advanced decolonisation. Aside from laying the foundations of the NAM, it directly
inspired Nasser’s pan-Arabism and Nkrumah’s pan-African movement, the latter
having a pronounced anti-colonial function, since Africa had lagged behind Asia on
that score. As Kahin (1955) noted, the conference proved to be a ‘substantial denominator
of anti-colonialism’.
Indeed, one way to assess these overall implications of the conference would be to take a
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look at the confidential assessments of those very Western nations that had both feared its
results and disparaged its significance in mobilising an Afro-Asian consensus. This may be
more credible, given that assessments by the conference’s main supporters—such as
China, Indonesia and India—are likely to be perceived as biased in highlighting its suc-
cesses. Despite their initial hostility and misgivings about the purpose and likely
outcome of the conference, the Western powers had to accept, however grudgingly, its sig-
nificance. In a patronising tone, a British assessment noted:
The East is no longer age-old, inscrutable, unchanging. It is young, eager, drunk with new
nationalism and freedom, but also desperately anxious to behave with maturity and make
a good showing before its elders if not betters. It loses its angularity only when treated as
a grown-up and an equal, and like all adolescents is easily offended, and as easily influenced
for good (R. W. Parkes, quoted in Morlan 1955).
A British document further conceded that the conference ‘strengthened the self-confi-
dence’ of the participating nations, ‘gave them a greater sense of their importance in
[the] world’s affairs’, and encouraged them to ‘evolve policies of their own’. It further
noted that an Afro-Asian ‘common purpose’ had been ‘strengthened’, leading to a corre-
sponding ‘weakening of Western leadership’ (UK Foreign Office, Research Department
1955).
Although questions such as who won, who lost and whether the Bandung conference
was a success or failure may never be settled, at the very least it produced ‘the evident
feeling of the delegations that the meeting represented a fresh stage in international
relations’, as the British assessment of the conference put it (R. W. Parkes, quoted in
Morlan 1955). It underscored the real and substantial ‘agency’ of the non-Western
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS 353
nations in the construction of the post-war international order in areas such as anti-colo-
nialism, universalism and human rights. It marked the rise of the regionalism of the weak
in world politics. It also had an ‘educational function’: ‘a fuller and more realistic under-
standing of one another’s point of view’ (Kahin 1955, 35). It is more useful to view the
Bandung legacies not in terms of successes and failure, but in terms of how the conference
shaped and reshaped international order in Asia and the world, the analysis of which has
been dominated by the centrality of great-power geopolitics to the neglect of the perspec-
tives and agency of non-Western, non-great-power actors.
clearly reminds us. What Sukarno (1955) said next is no less important: ‘It is a new depar-
ture in the history of the world that leaders of Asian and African peoples can meet together
in their own countries to discuss and deliberate upon matters of common concern’.
Bandung was the first time that the nations of different continents were holding a multi-
lateral intergovernmental meeting on their home turf, instead of in the imperial capitals of
London, Paris, Brussels or Berlin. And their purpose was to advance not just decolonisa-
tion, which was already well under way (except in Africa), but also, as the secretary general
of the Bandung conference, Roselan Abdulghani (1964, 103), later wrote, ‘the formulation
and establishment of certain norms for the conduct of present-day international relations
and the instruments for the practical application of these norms’. The fact that they did so
more in the former, or normative, sense, with the articulation of the Ten Principles, rather
than in the latter, or practical, manner, and that there would remain gaps between the
principles and how they were applied, does not detract from this contribution. While
the international system they were born into was European in its origin, it would be mis-
leading to simply call it, in the manner of the early English School theorists, the European
states system writ large (Bull and Watson 1984). The new actors had to adapt those Euro-
pean rules to fit local post-colonial realities. At Bandung, they did so by broadening the
meaning of non-intervention, seeking control over natural resources and delegitimising
regional cooperation under the orbit of the great powers in the manner of the Concert
of Europe. Later, the NAM, which was presaged at Bandung, and developing countries
through their networking would advance these and other principles, including human
rights.
The Bandung conference aspired to contribute to an international order that recognises
some indigenous, non-Western forms of interaction (Acharya 2009). It decided against
adopting any elaborate or formal rules of procedure, preferring to keep things informal,
and rejected voting so that decisions were to be reached by deliberations and consensus.
Abdulghani (1964, 29), the Indonesian secretary general of the conference, characterised
these rules as the ‘deep-rooted and unquestioned practice’ of Indonesian, Asian and
African societies. ‘The object is to reach an acceptable consensus of opinion, and one
which not only hurts the feeling or the position of no one, but which actually tends to
reinforce the community feeling’ (ibid.).
354 A. ACHARYA
global power shift. Many of the emerging powers of today have a strong connection with
Bandung. Seven of the members of the G20, the premier global forum that brings together
both emerging and established powers, attended Bandung: China, India, Indonesia, Japan,
Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Japan (South Africa, which, along with India and China, belongs
to BRICS—Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa—should also be added, as del-
egates from the African National Congress attended as observers). While there were differ-
ences at Bandung, there was also a substantial measure of consensus among the
participants about the need to reform the existing global order to make it more just
and democratic. The same demand underpins the policies of the contemporary emerging
powers, and hence must count as a legacy of the Bandung conference. Indeed, the ideo-
logical gap between then pro-Western Turkey, on the one hand, and India and China,
on the other, has narrowed. While the West hopes that these powers may somehow be
co-opted into the existing international order without it having to make significant con-
cessions, these hopes are likely to prove illusory. The normative aspirations of the emer-
ging powers are more consistent with the Bandung Declaration, with its quest for greater
justice and equality among nations, than the past great-power initiatives, be it the Con-
gress of Vienna, which marginalised weaker states by creating the Concert of Europe,
or the Berlin Conference, which carved up Africa.
The Bandung conference also underscores the importance of regions and interactions
within and between regions—another core element of Global IR. It was not a global con-
ference, nor was it strictly regional. It was an inter-regional endeavour comprising repre-
sentatives of Asia, Africa and the Middle East, well before the European Union developed
its own policy of inter-regionalism. Bandung demonstrated the contrived and constructed
nature of regions—a subject of considerable importance in contemporary studies of com-
parative regionalism, a key foundation of Global IR. At Bandung, there was no separation
between South-East Asia and South Asia, as the five sponsors—the Conference of South-
East Asian Prime Ministers—included Pakistan, Ceylon and India, which are now part of
South Asia. Similarly, there was no conception of the ‘Middle East’—an imperial British
concoction. The very fact that the conference was called the Asian-African Conference sig-
nifies that the Arab countries—Iran and Turkey—were simply regarded as part of Asia,
with Egypt straddling Asia and Africa.
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS 355
The study of the Bandung conference also provides an excellent example of how the
area studies tradition can mesh with the discipline of IR to enrich both and create the
foundation of a Global IR. The first major study of Bandung was produced by Kahin
(1956), who was mainly from an area studies tradition. Subsequently, however,
Bandung has been analysed from IR theoretical standpoints, especially critical, post-colo-
nial and social constructivist perspectives. These perspectives add richness and sophisti-
cation to the analysis of the conference, and expand its message and relevance well
beyond the South-East Asian or Asian studies community. The area studies tradition
can only benefit from this expanded coverage of and attention to an event that occurred
at the heart of South-East Asia, much as the study of ASEAN—which has a normative link
with the Bandung conference—is proving to be an enriching meeting point for both area
specialists and Global IR theorists.
Acknowledgements
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This article is an expanded version of the author’s keynote speech to the international conference
‘Bandung Conference and Beyond: Rethinking International Order, Identity, Security, and Justice
in a Post-Western World’, Yogyakarta, April 8–10, 2015. The author would like to thank Andrew
Phillips and Tim Dunne for their encouragement and advice, and Ryan Smith for his expert work in
copy-editing this article.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
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