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The Defiant Border
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 279

The Defiant Border

This book explores why the Afghan-Pakistan borderlands have remained largely independent of state controls throughout the twentieth century.

Afghan Crucible
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 368

Afghan Crucible

A new global history of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan - an invasion whose consequences are still felt in Afghanistan and across the wider world. On 24 December 1979, Soviet armed forces entered Afghanistan, beginning an occupation that would last almost a decade and creating a political crisis that shook the world. To many observers, the Soviet invasion showed the lengths to which one of the world's superpowers would go to vie for supremacy in the global Cold War. The Soviet war, and parallel covert American aid to Afghan resistance fighters, would come to be a defining event of international politics in the final years of the Cold War, lingering far beyond the Soviet Union's own demise...

South Asia Unbound
  • Language: en

South Asia Unbound

South Asia Unbound gathers an interdisciplinary group of scholars from across the world to investigate South Asian global engagement at the local, regional, national, and supra-national levels, spanning the time before and after independence.

Decolonization and the Cold War
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 329

Decolonization and the Cold War

Explores the intersections between the historiographies of the Cold War and decolonization.

Afghan Crucible
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 368

Afghan Crucible

"Offers a new global history of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, exploring the conflict both within and beyond the framework of the Cold War. Based on extensive, multilingual research in archives across South Asia, Europe, and North America. Draws on recently declassified US documents"--

The Reagan Moment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 480

The Reagan Moment

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2021
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  • Publisher: Unknown

"A worldwide collection of histories of US foreign relations during the two presidential administrations of Ronald Reagan"--

No Useless Mouth
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 308

No Useless Mouth

In the era of the American Revolution, the rituals of diplomacy between the British, Patriots, and Native Americans featured gifts of food, ceremonial feasts, and a shared experience of hunger. When diplomacy failed, Native Americans could destroy food stores and cut off supply chains in order to assert authority. Black colonists also stole and destroyed food to ward off hunger and carve out tenuous spaces of freedom. Hunger was a means of power and a weapon of war. In No Useless Mouth, Rachel B. Herrmann argues that Native Americans and formerly enslaved black colonists ultimately lost the battle against hunger and the larger struggle for power because white British and United States offici...

South Asia Unbound
  • Language: en

South Asia Unbound

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2023
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Whose international matters, and why? How are geographic regions constructed? What are the channels of engagement between a place, its people, its institutions, and the world? How do we understand the non-West's influence in contemporary global interactions? From humanitarianism and activism to diplomacy and institutional networks, South Asia has been a crucial place for the elaboration of international politics, even before the twentieth century. South Asia Unbound gathers an interdisciplinary group of scholars from across the world to investigate South Asian global engagement at the local, regional, national, and supra-national levels, spanning the time before and after independence. Only by understanding its past entanglements with the world can we understand South Asia's increasing global importance today.

Cold War Social Science
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 413

Cold War Social Science

This book explores how the social sciences became entangled with the global Cold War. While duly recognizing the realities of nation states, national power, and national aspirations, the studies gathered here open up new lines of transnational investigation. Considering developments in a wide array of fields – anthropology, development studies, economics, education, political science, psychology, science studies, and sociology – that involved the movement of people, projects, funding, and ideas across diverse national contexts, this volume pushes scholars to rethink certain fundamental points about how we should understand – and thus how we should study – Cold War social science itself.

The Nanyang Revolution
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 279

The Nanyang Revolution

A ground-breaking analysis of how the Malayan Communist Party helped forge a Malayan national identity, while promoting Chinese nationalism.