september, 2023

29sep6:00 pm8:00 pmThe Monarchy and the CommonwealthJosé Medeiros Ferreira Lecture6:00 pm - 8:00 pm NOVA FCSH, Tower B, Auditorium 2, Avenida de Berna 26C - LisboaEvent Type :Conference,Lecture

Faixa ilustrativa da Conferência José Medeiros Ferreira, onde Sue Onslow, do King’s College London, vai apresentar “The Monarchy and the Commonwealth”, dia 20 de Setembro de 2023, às 18 horas. A faixa inclui uma foto dos porta-bandeiras do 1º Batalhão de Coldstream Guards a exibirem as bandeiras de várias nações da Commonwealth no átrio do Palácio de Buckingham, aquando da reunião dos Chefes de Governo da Commonwealth em 2014.

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Event Details

Seventh José Medeiros Ferreira Lecture, marking the beginning of the school year for the PhD Course in History at NOVA FCSH, with Sue Onslow, IHC Visiting Scholar 2023.

 

The Monarchy and the Commonwealth
Sue Onslow (King’s College London)

 

The United Kingdom is unusual in having an ‘international monarch’. Unlike his European counter-parts, the King is head of state of 14 other countries across the globe, known as Commonwealth Realms. The British monarch is also ceremonial head of the international organisation, the Commonwealth. (The overwhelming majority of these countries are former colonial dependencies of the UK.)

These institutional relationships are facing multiple pressures – these include the rise of republicanism; demands for reparations, heightened by monarchy’s past role in the political economy of slavery; and the evident paradox of a modern international organisation having the latest incumbent of a 1000-year-old hereditary institution as its ceremonial head. Despite its progressive past, the Commonwealth continues to be labelled ‘Empire 2.0, but with better PR.’ and struggles for perceived relevance.

Looking at the relationship between monarch and Commonwealth gives us a lens into the evolution of a unique post-colonial multilateral association, and contemporary dilemmas confronting modern British foreign policy. Whereas the Queen was a very long-lived royal diplomat who championed the Commonwealth in public and in private, the King has fewer options and time is not on his side. His decision to support publicly human rights and values across the Commonwealth is placing him at odds with member governments who see the organisation as simply conferring legitimacy, the opportunity to improve trade relations. The King’s known advocacy on issues around climate change also contrasts with the policies of the ‘big emitters’ in the Commonwealth, such as India. Is monarchy key to the survival of the Commonwealth, or increasingly ‘the kiss of death’? What does all this mean for British foreign policy which has repeatedly stressed the salience of the Commonwealth since BREXIT?

 

About the lecturer:
Professor Sue Onslow is IHC’s 2023 Visiting Scholar.
She lectured and taught at the London School of Economics (1994-2012) and in the Department of War Studies, King’s College London. From 2012 – 2023 she worked at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, in the School of Advanced Study, University of London, where she worked as Deputy Director (2015-2020), then Director (2022-23).
She was the lead interviewer on a major oral history project, ‘An Oral History of the Modern Commonwealth’ (1965-2012). Her publications include Co-editor (with Anna-Mart Van Wyk): Southern Africa in the Cold War post-1974 (Cold War International History Project, Woodrow Wilson Center, 2013). ‘The Commonwealth, Neutralism and Non-Alignment’, International Historical Journal, July 2015; Robert Mugabe (with Martin Plaut) (Ohio University Press, 2018); ‘Tanzania, non-alignment and the Non-Aligned Movement’ in Dimitrijevic & Cavoski, The 60th Anniversary of the Non-Aligned Movement (Belgrade, 2021); and ed. (with Lori Maguire) Consuls in the Cold War (Brill Publishers, 2023).
She is a frequent media commentator on the Commonwealth, and Zimbabwe. She is preparing a monograph The Commonwealth in the Cold War Era (Hurst Publishers).

 

>> 📎 Flyer of the lecture (PDF)

 

 

Cartaz da Conferência José Medeiros Ferreira, que inaugura o ano lectivo 2023-2024 do Curso de Doutoramento em História da NOVA FCSH. Sue Onslow, do King’s College London, vai apresentar “The Monarchy and the Commonwealth”, dia 20 de Setembro de 2023, às 18 horas, no Auditório B2 da Torre B da NOVA FCSH. O cartaz inclui uma foto dos porta-bandeiras do 1º Batalhão de Coldstream Guards a exibirem as bandeiras de várias nações da Commonwealth no átrio do Palácio de Buckingham, aquando da reunião dos Chefes de Governo da Commonwealth em 2014.

 

 

Picture in the poster: 1st Battalion Coldstream Guards Flag Bearers displaying flags from Cmmonwealth nations in the forecourt of Buckingham Palace during the 2014 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (Credit: © Crown Copyright 2014; photographer: PO(Phot)Owen Cooban).

Time

(Friday) 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Location

NOVA FCSH, Tower B, Auditorium 2

Avenida de Berna 26C - Lisboa

Organizer

Institute of Contemporary History — NOVA School of Social Sciences and Humanitiescomunicacao.ihc@fcsh.unl.pt Avenida de Berna, 26C - 1069-061 Lisbon

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