Astor Visiting Lecture: Why is There No Global Racial Equality Norm? Power, Principle and Prejudice in the Origins of Multilateralism
Please note change of venue: This lecture will now take place in the Pavilion Room at St Antony's College (not the Investcorp Lecture Theatre as previously advertised)
Why did global racial equality not become a central principle of the multilateral framework of international order that emerged from the ashes of the Second World War? This lecture will address this question, drawing on the speaker’s previous theoretical work on norms and his new research comparing the discussion of race, human rights and world order at the San Francisco Conference of 1945 and the Asia-Africa Conference in Bandung in 1955. 1945, credited as the foundational moment of the supposedly open and inclusive Liberal International Order, suppressed racial equality, while 1955 made it the central organizing principle of world order. Power matters, but prejudice matters even more in the origins, diffusion and suppression of international norms. Despite subsequent advances within the human rights regime, the idea of global racial equality remains unfulfilled, with implications for the future of world order as powerful challenges confront the Liberal International Order.
Date: 27 May 2022, 17:00 (Friday, 5th week, Trinity 2022)
Venue: St Antony's College, 62 Woodstock Road OX2 6JF
Venue Details: The Pavilion Room
Speaker: Professor Amitav Acharya (The American University)
Organising department: Oxford School of Global and Area Studies
Organiser: Kate Sullivan de Estrada (University of Oxford)
Organiser contact email address: kate.sullivan@area.ox.ac.uk
Host: Kate Sullivan de Estrada (University of Oxford)
Booking required?: Not required
Audience: Public
Editor: Stephen Minay