States, nations, and self-determination: Afghanistan and decolonization at the United Nations

IF 1.7 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Journal of Global History Pub Date : 2022-03-15 DOI:10.1017/S1740022822000080
Elisabeth Leake
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Afghanistan is not traditionally seen as a ‘decolonized’ state, given that it was never formally part of any empire. Yet Afghan state leaders embraced the language of anti-colonialism and self-determination to assert influence in the international community, and especially at the UN. This paper explores the interactions between Afghan elites and the UN, particularly the way that Afghanistan fought the growing global consensus that self-determination in the era of decolonization meant the establishment of an international states system. Afghan elites instead argued that self-determination was for peoples, not states. Afghanistan’s stance on self-determination, as an exception to territorial state centrism, provides a way of thinking about decolonization’s universalisms and particularities, as well as how it ultimately complicated Afghanistan’s own place in the international community. The article uses Afghanistan’s engagement with the UN General Assembly and its various subcommittees, from its membership in 1946 to the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, to reflect on the ways decolonization became a global yet fractured phenomenon that came to mean numerous practices and could be used by different historical actors to articulate multiple, potentially competing visions of political autonomy and rights. International institutions like the UN provided crucial arenas where postcolonial statehood became the norm yet was nevertheless contested and questioned. By providing an exception to the UN’s focus on territorial statehood, Afghanistan demonstrates the ongoing fluidity and complexity of decolonization’s meaning and consequences, as well as the ways in which nations continue to inform the global.
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国家、民族与自决:阿富汗与联合国的非殖民化
摘要阿富汗传统上不被视为“非殖民化”国家,因为它从未正式成为任何帝国的一部分。然而,阿富汗国家领导人接受了反殖民主义和自决的语言,以在国际社会,特别是在联合国发挥影响力。本文探讨了阿富汗精英与联合国之间的互动,特别是阿富汗如何对抗日益增长的全球共识,即非殖民化时代的自决意味着建立一个国际国家体系。相反,阿富汗精英们辩称,自决权属于人民,而不是国家。阿富汗对自决的立场,作为领土国家中心主义的例外,提供了一种思考非殖民化的普遍性和特殊性的方式,以及它最终如何使阿富汗在国际社会中的地位复杂化。这篇文章利用阿富汗与联合国大会及其各小组委员会的接触,从1946年加入联合国大会到1989年苏联从阿富汗撤军,来反思非殖民化是如何成为一种全球性但分裂的现象的,这意味着许多做法,不同的历史行动者可以利用这些做法来阐明,政治自治和权利的潜在竞争愿景。像联合国这样的国际机构提供了关键的舞台,在那里,后殖民国家成为常态,但仍受到质疑和质疑。通过为联合国对领土国家地位的关注提供一个例外,阿富汗展示了非殖民化的意义和后果的持续流动性和复杂性,以及各国继续向全球宣传的方式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Journal of Global History addresses the main problems of global change over time, together with the diverse histories of globalization. It also examines counter-currents to globalization, including those that have structured other spatial units. The journal seeks to transcend the dichotomy between "the West and the rest", straddle traditional regional boundaries, relate material to cultural and political history, and overcome thematic fragmentation in historiography. The journal also acts as a forum for interdisciplinary conversations across a wide variety of social and natural sciences. Published for London School of Economics and Political Science
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