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African Guerrillas: Raging Against the Machine
Barnes and Noble
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African Guerrillas: Raging Against the Machine in Franklin, TN
Current price: $23.50

Barnes and Noble
African Guerrillas: Raging Against the Machine in Franklin, TN
Current price: $23.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
At the center of many of Africa's violent conflicts are movements that do not seem to fit any established theories of armed resistance.
African Guerrillas
offers new models for understanding these movements, eschewing one-dimensional explanations.
The authors build onand in some cases debateinsights provided in Christopher Clapham's groundbreaking work. They find a new generation of fightersone that reflects rage against the machinery of a dysfunctional state. Their analysis of this phenomenon, combining thematic chapters and a range of representative case studies, is a crucial contribution to any effort to understand Afria's war-torn societies.
African Guerrillas
offers new models for understanding these movements, eschewing one-dimensional explanations.
The authors build onand in some cases debateinsights provided in Christopher Clapham's groundbreaking work. They find a new generation of fightersone that reflects rage against the machinery of a dysfunctional state. Their analysis of this phenomenon, combining thematic chapters and a range of representative case studies, is a crucial contribution to any effort to understand Afria's war-torn societies.
At the center of many of Africa's violent conflicts are movements that do not seem to fit any established theories of armed resistance.
African Guerrillas
offers new models for understanding these movements, eschewing one-dimensional explanations.
The authors build onand in some cases debateinsights provided in Christopher Clapham's groundbreaking work. They find a new generation of fightersone that reflects rage against the machinery of a dysfunctional state. Their analysis of this phenomenon, combining thematic chapters and a range of representative case studies, is a crucial contribution to any effort to understand Afria's war-torn societies.
African Guerrillas
offers new models for understanding these movements, eschewing one-dimensional explanations.
The authors build onand in some cases debateinsights provided in Christopher Clapham's groundbreaking work. They find a new generation of fightersone that reflects rage against the machinery of a dysfunctional state. Their analysis of this phenomenon, combining thematic chapters and a range of representative case studies, is a crucial contribution to any effort to understand Afria's war-torn societies.
















