Andrea Benvenuti is Associate Professor in Politics and International Relations at the University of New South Wales, teaching twentieth-century international history at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. He holds a DPhil in International Relations from the University of Oxford. His current research focuses on the Cold War in Asia.
"'This is absolutely a book for our times. Andrea Benvenuti takes the reader beyond traditional patterns of Cold War historiography. He explores new perspectives on mid-range powers other than the US, Soviet Union and China, and embraces this major shift with vigour. This is a really important and scholarly account of complicated and constantly shifting regional politics.' -- Anne Deighton, Emeritus Professor of European International Politics, University of Oxford 'A compelling account of India's role in the Cold War, which has hitherto received limited attention. Given recent developments in the international arena, pressures on the current world order, and the movement towards a multi-polar world, this could not be more timely.' -- Ang Cheng Guan, Associate Dean and Professor of the International History of Southeast Asia, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University 'This is the first detailed attempt to reconstruct Nehru's role in organising the first Asian-African Conference in Bandung, drawing upon an extensive and often overlooked body of archival resources.' -- David Martin Jones, Visiting Professor in War Studies, King's College London 'A thorough, clear and insightful explanation of how and why Nehru's grand aspiration that a new India could forge a new Asia came to grief when it hit the hard brick wall of the Chinese pursuit of national interests.' -- Brian P. Farrell, Professor of History, National University of Singapore 'The book's genius is to use Nehru as the main window onto events, showing diplomacy-in-the-making, as newly independent Asian countries attempted to reshape international relations in the 1950s. Benvenuti reveals the motives, diplomacy and tensions behind attempts to encourage ""peaceful coexistence"" with China, achieve Indochina's neutralisation, and forge a non-aligned path in the face of American opposition.' -- Karl Hack, Professor of Asian and Imperial History, Open University"