The Eritrean Struggle for Independence

The Eritrean Struggle for Independence

Author: Ruth Iyob

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 228

ISBN-13: 9780521595919

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This book is a comprehensive analysis of the country's political history over the past three decades.


Eritrea

Eritrea

Author: Robert Machida

Publisher: Red Sea Press(NJ)

Published: 1987

Total Pages: 102

ISBN-13:

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An analysis of the historical roots of the Eritrean war of independence, 1960-1978.


Eritrea

Eritrea

Author: Gebre Hiwet Tesfagiorgis

Publisher:

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 136

ISBN-13:

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Biopolitics, Militarism, and Development

Biopolitics, Militarism, and Development

Author: David O'Kane

Publisher: Berghahn Books

Published: 2009-03-01

Total Pages: 234

ISBN-13: 1845458982

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Bringing together original, contemporary ethnographic research on the Northeast African state of Eritrea, this book shows how biopolitics - the state-led deployment of disciplinary technologies on individuals and population groups - is assuming particular forms in the twenty-first century. Once hailed as the “African country that works,” Eritrea’s apparently successful post-independence development has since lapsed into economic crisis and severe human rights violations. This is due not only to the border war with Ethiopia that began in 1998, but is also the result of discernible tendencies in the “high modernist” style of social mobilization for development first adopted by the Eritrean government during the liberation struggle (1961–1991) and later carried into the post-independence era. The contributions to this volume reveal and interpret the links between development and developmentalist ideologies, intensifying militarism, and the controlling and disciplining of human lives and bodies by state institutions, policies, and discourses. Also assessed are the multiple consequences of these policies for the Eritrean people and the ways in which such policies are resisted or subverted. This insightful, comparative volume places the Eritrean case in a broader global and transnational context.