Pedro Aires Oliveira

Political History – Regimes, Transitions, and Memory
Contact:
opa@fcsh.unl.pt
Biography
Pedro Aires Oliveira is an Associate Professor with Habilitation in the Department of History at NOVA FCSH and a researcher at the Institute of Contemporary History.
His main research interests are international history, Portuguese colonialism and decolonisation, on which he has published extensively in academic journals and books, including a monograph adapted from his doctoral thesis on the late British and Portuguese colonial period and decolonisation (Mário Soares Foundation Prize, 2007), and his contribution to the work História da expansão e do império Português [History of Portuguese Expansion and Empire] (2014).
He has experience in supervising master’s and doctoral students in various fields of 20th-century history and was the scientific curator of historical exhibitions on the cultural impact of the Great War (Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, 2017) and the centenary of the League of Nations (National Library of Portugal, 2020), for which he coordinated the catalogue.
Since 2019, he has been a member of the Steering Committee of the Erasmus+ History in the Public Sphere master’s programme.
Research fields
- International history
- Colonialism and decolonization
- Portuguese foreign relations
- History of military conflicts
Selected publications
- Oliveira, Pedro Aires & João Vieira Borges (Coords.). Crepúsculo do Império. Portugal e as guerras de descolonização. Lisbon: Bertrand, 2024. [link]
- Oliveira, Pedro Aires & Bruno Cardoso Reis. “The Power and Limits of Culture Myths in Portugal’s search for a post-imperial role,” The International History Review 40 (2018): 631-653. [link]
- Costa, João Paulo Oliveira e, José Damião Rodrigues & Pedro Aires Oliveira. História da expansão e do império Português. Lisbon: Esfera dos Livros, 2014. [link]
- Oliveira, Pedro Aires. “Live and Let Live: Britain and Portugal’s imperial endgame (1945-1975),” Portuguese Studies 29 (2013): 209-226. [link]
- Oliveira, Pedro Aires. Os Despojos da Aliança. A Grã-Bretanha e a questão colonial portuguesa, 1945-1975. Lisbon: Tinta da China, 2007. [link]
Main projects
- Co-coordinator, with Zélia Pereira, of the project ‘DecTiL — Auditing Decolonization in Timor-Leste, 1974-82: the Riscado Report’ — Hosted by the IHC and funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (2023.10636.25ABR). 2024-2026
- Researcher in the project “”Tell me how it was”: Public policies and child labor in Portugal and the Portuguese colonies” — Coordinated by Pedro Goulart (ISCSP-ULisboa) and funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (PTDC/IIM-ECO/5303/2014). 2014-2017 [link]
- Coordinator of the project “Memória Oral da Diplomacia Portuguesa” — Developed by the Associação dos Amigos do Arquivo Histórico-Diplomático do Ministério dos Negócios Estrangeiros, Instituto Diplomático and the Institute of Contemporary History, and funded by the Fundo para as Relações Internacionais do MNE. 2012- [link]
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junho, 2026
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Detalhes do Evento
Three-day conference on the alter-lives of independence movements that explores the evolution and transformation of anti-colonial and anti-imperial struggles. The Alter-lives of Independence Movements: Frustrated Hopes, Renewed Utopias Decades
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Detalhes do Evento
Three-day conference on the alter-lives of independence movements that explores the evolution and transformation of anti-colonial and anti-imperial struggles.
The Alter-lives of Independence Movements:
Frustrated Hopes, Renewed Utopias
Decades after formal decolonisation, anti-colonialism and anti-imperialism have remained a wellspring of inspiration and contestation. Studies about anticolonial thought, the 1955 Bandung Conference, and transcontinental solidarity movements have proliferated in academia and activist networks, providing the basis of theories and practices of resistance in contemporary times. Nevertheless, the ideas and the movements they inspired did not perish with the epoch that produced them. They evolved and acquired alternative lives in the period of nation-building and world-making, whether in extended or distorted forms. On the one hand, there were local and transnational efforts to sustain and enrich the revolutionary impulse through embracing the anticolonial spirit in various areas such as development, education, and diplomacy. As international institutions such as the UN welcome additional member states, Europeans and non-Europeans travelled to decolonised states like Algeria and Angola to learn
and further cultivate ideas in building new societies. On the other hand, some dominant groups that took over the independent states capitalised on the anti-colonial pride to justify authoritarian and anti-democratic rule. Their utopian visions led to the systematic oppression of opposing forces and to the reproduction of the hierarchical international state model. The fear of neocolonialism and disillusionment propelled both the former coloniser and colonised to reorganise their strategies and desires in the face of an emerging world order.
This conference on the alter-lives of independence movements explores the evolution and transformation of anti-colonial and anti-imperial struggles. It focuses on events and reflections on the early years of independence, a period of turbulent transition from colonial domination to
self-governing nation-states and the tumultuous beginnings of a new international order. We introduce the concept “alter-lives” to denote the process of altering imaginaries and practices that emerged during the colonial period in responding to uncertain futures, including the
political uses of anticolonial memories and/or histories. It also refers to alternative relations forged between former colonisers and colonised after independence. Thus, using “alter-lives” as a conceptual ground, this conference engages in the following questions: first, how have
anticolonial thinking and practices evolved domestically and transnationally? Second, what were the structural and agential forces behind these evolutions? Third, how were anticolonial memories and histories politicised to achieve certain ends? Fourth, what difficulties did these
agents face in realising their envisioned future? Lastly, how have alterations and alternatives affirmed and/or challenged the revolutionary ideas of the independence struggles?
>> Download the full programme (PDF) <<
Contact:
If you need more information on the conference, please send an email to jiw.hopesandfears@gmail.com.
This event is organised as part of the Joint International Workshop “Hopes and Fears. Anti-colonial and Postcolonial Imaginaries in the Lusotopy and Beyond”, that gathers the Institute of Contemporary History — NOVA University Lisbon / University of Évora, the University of São Paulo, and the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul.

Tempo
junho 25 (Quinta-feira) - 27 (Sábado)
Localização
Lisbon, Portugal
Organizador
Institute of Contemporary History — NOVA FCSH, University of São Paulo, and Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul
News
Marta Pinto Machado in a double bill in Lisbon: MNAC and CCCV
May 14, 2026
“Ceci n’est Pas Francisco” is at MNAC and will extend to CCCV
VINCULUM is still going in Madeira
May 12, 2026
The Inscription I of the Church of Machico will serve as the theme for a series of cultural events
Nuno Silas is exhibiting at MUHNAC
Apr 29, 2026
He is one of the curators of the exhibition “Olhares Críticos no Arquivo Colonial – Sombras e Memórias”
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