1st Edition
The United Nations and Decolonization
Introduction
Jessica Lynne Pearson
Part I: The Politics of Oversight
1. National Prerogatives versus International Supervision: Britain’s Evolving Policy toward the Campaign for Equivalency of United Nations’ Handling of Dependent Territories, 1945-1963
Mary Ann Heiss
2. A Challenge to the System: The South West African Question and the United Nations Trusteeship Council
Jason Morgan
3. The United Nations, the Italian Decolonization and the 1949 Bevin-Sforza Plan: A Victory for Neo-colonialism?
Francesco Tamburini
Part II: Decolonizing Global Governance?
4. The United Nations between ‘Old Boys Club’ and a Changing World Order: The South African-Indian Dispute at the United Nations, 1945-1955
Angela Loschke
5. ‘A Crisis of Confidence’: The Postcolonial Moment and the Diplomacy of Decolonization at the United Nations, ca. 1961
Caio Simões de Araújo
6. Haiti, the United Nations, and Decolonization in the Congo
Chantalle F. Verna
Part III: Unraveling Empire
7. The Trust Territory of Somaliland, 1950-1960: Trusteeship or Colony?
Alessia Tortolini
8. The United Nations and Information Gathering on Portuguese Colonies, 1961-1962
Aurora Almada e Santos
9. The United Nations and West Papuan Self-Determination: Lingering Conceptions of ‘Civilization’ in the Decolonization Process
Grace Cheng
Biography
Nicole Eggers is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Tennessee– Knoxville. Her field of research is the modern history of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Jessica Lynne Pearson is Assistant Professor of History at Macalester College. She is the author of The Colonial Politics of Global Health: France and the United Nations in Postwar Africa (2018).
Aurora Almada e Santos is Researcher at the Institute of Contemporary History of NOVA University of Lisbon. She is the author of A Organização das Nações Unidas e a Questão Colonial Portuguesa, 1960–1974 (2017).






