Wronged by Empire: Colonial Memories and Victimhood in India’s and China’s Foreign Policy Today – Manjari Chatterjee Miller

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Wronged by Empire: Colonial Memories and Victimhood in India’s and China’s Foreign Policy Today – Manjari Chatterjee Miller

December 5, 2013 , 10:30 pm December 6, 2013 , 12:30 am

Join us for an exciting talk by author Manjari Chatterjee Miller on her new book Wronged by Empire: Colonial Memories and Victimhood in India’s and China’s Foreign Policy Today. The event will be moderated by Mark Frazier, Professor of Politics at NSSR and Academic Co-director of ICI. More details to follow.

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Wronged by Empire breaks new ground by blending this historical phenomenon, colonialism, with mixed methods—including archival research, newspaper data mining, and a new statistical method of content analysis—to explain the foreign policy choices of India and China: two countries that are continuously discussed but very rarely rigorously compared. By reference to their colonial past, Manjari Chatterjee Miller explains their puzzling behavior today. For example, she demonstrates why in important cases (such as India going nuclear in 1998 or China’s fraught relationship with Japan) their foreign policy behavior is not consistent with the security explanations that are dominant in international relations.

More broadly, she argues that the transformative historical experience of a large category of actors—ex-colonies, who have previously been neglected in the study of international relations—can be used as a method to categorize states in the international system. In the process Miller offers a more inclusive way to analyze states than do traditional theories of international relations, which usually focus on the material power of states, meaning inevitably that they mostly discuss the behavior of states that have power enough to matter—in effect Western states.

Manjari Chatterjee Miller is Assistant Professor of International Relations at Boston University.

Details

Start:
December 5, 2013, 10:30 pm
End:
December 6, 2013, 12:30 am
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