Candace Clare Sobers
Assistant Professor
Department of History
Carleton University
Canada
Biography
Candace Clare Sobers is an historian of international history and modern international relations, specializing in twentieth century decolonization, movements of national liberation, and the global reach of Third World revolutionary internationalism, with a specific focus on African independence movements and United States (U.S.) foreign policy. Dr. Sobers’ research and teaching are informed by questions of race, geopolitics, revolution, and ideas of order and disorder in the international system. Her work crosses geographic, disciplinary, and thematic boundaries, interrogating not only the material and institutional aspects of globalization, but also the circulation and consequences of radical political ideas. This multilingual, multi-sited approach illuminates important aspects of the past and offers insights into the roots of contemporary societal challenges.
Research Interest
History of International Relations; Empire and decolonization; Revolutions and movements of national liberation; Transnational networks; Foreign relations history; American and African political cultures
Publications
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“Flicking the Eagle’s Feathers: Cuba, Revolution and the International Systemâ€, in Fifty Years of Revolution: Perspectives on Cuba, the United States and the World. Edited by Soraya Castro Mariño and Ronald W. Pruessen. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2012
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Ideology, Internationalism, and Intervention: Angola, 1975,†Journal of Cold War Studies, forthcoming 2016