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Decolonization and the Cold War: National Liberation in a Bipolar World MTA
How anti-colonial movements interacted with Soviet and Western strategies in Africa, Asia, and Latin America
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Decolonization and the Cold War: National Liberation in a Bipolar World This book examines the complex intersection of decolonization and the Cold War, arguing that the global South was not merely a passive theater for superpower rivalry but a dynamic engine that reshaped the conflict’s trajectory. By tracing the history of national liberation movements across Africa, Asia, and Latin America, the text demonstrates how local actors—from nationalist leaders like Nasser and Sukarno to guerrilla fighters in Vietnam and Angola—strategically leveraged the bipolar competition between the United States and the Soviet Union to secure weapons, aid, and international legitimacy. This reciprocal influence forced Washington and Moscow to constantly recalibrate their strategies, often leading to unintended consequences and the formation of hybrid political systems that defied simple ideological categorization.

The narrative spans various thematic and geographical flashpoints, including the Suez Crisis, the Algerian War, the Congo Crisis, and the Vietnam War. It details the "superpower toolkits" of aid, advisors, and covert action used to cultivate client states, alongside the information wars waged through propaganda and cultural diplomacy. The book highlights the internal contradictions of this era, such as the tension between the quest for economic sovereignty—exemplified by the rise of OPEC and the demand for a New International Economic Order—and the reality of mounting debt and dependency on global financial institutions. It also explores the gendered nature of liberation, noting how women’s active participation in revolutionary struggles frequently gave way to a reassertion of patriarchal norms in the post-independence era.

Ultimately, the book posits that the legacies of these 20th-century struggles continue to define the modern international system. The institutions, security architectures, and political divisions forged during the Cold War outlived the fall of the Soviet Union and continue to structure the politics of the Global South. By analyzing the long afterlives of decolonization, the text explains how the memory of liberation remains an active resource for contemporary state building and accountability. It concludes that the transition from a bipolar world to a globalized, multi-polar order has not erased the structural imbalances of the past, but has instead shifted the terrain on which the ongoing battle for genuine sovereignty and global justice is fought.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Decolonization actively reshaped the Cold War as anti-colonial movements compelled superpowers to recalibrate strategies, institutions, and ideologies rather than unfolding on its margins.
  • Local actors leveraged superpower rivalries for weapons, training, finance, and recognition while superpowers sought clients and narratives, creating reciprocal influence and unintended consequences.
  • National liberation encompassed both political independence and social transformation including land reform, labor rights, literacy, gender equality, and cultural decolonization.
  • Economic sovereignty over oil, minerals, and debt emerged as a central battleground linking domestic agendas to world markets and the New International Economic Order.
  • The legacies of decolonization endure in post-Cold War institutions, memory, and ongoing debates over sovereignty, intervention, and global justice in the Global South.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for students, scholars, and researchers in history, political science, international relations, and post-colonial studies who seek a deep understanding of how anti-colonial movements interacted with Cold War dynamics. It will also appeal to general readers interested in 20th century global history, particularly those focusing on Africa, Asia, and Latin America's struggles for independence and the lasting impact of superpower competition on the developing world.

Author:

Jacqueline Sanders

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 25, 2026

Word Count:

65,702 words

Reading Time:

4 hours 36 minutes

Sample:

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