Networks Of Dissolution: Somalia UndoneAvalon Publishing, 1995 M12 28 - 246 pages In this penetrating and timely book, Anna Simons documents Somalia's impending slide toward anarchy. How do people react to a failing yet still repressive government? What do they do when the banks run out of cash? How do they cope with unprecedented uncertainty? These are some of the questions Simons addresses as she introduces the reader to Somalia's descent into dissolution from within the Somali capital of Mogadishu.Exploring the volatile mix of external interest in Somalia, internal politicking, and enduring social structure, she shows how cross-cultural misunderstanding and regroupment are key to explaining Somalia's breakdown at the national level. One aim of this book is to challenge broadly held assumptions about the content of nationalism, tribalism, and the state, as defined and debated by academics and as experienced by individuals. Another is to analyze the making of a pivotal moment in Somali history. Simons charts new ground in the study of the dissolution of a state at all levels, shuttling back and forth between micro and macro frames, historical and everyday practices, and expatriate and Somali experiences. |
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Page 52
... refugees from the fighting . Throughout 1978 and 1979 , 1,000 refugees a day were fleeing into Somalia ( ACR 1979-1980 : B306 ) so that by 1981 it was widely recognized that " the accumulation of , perhaps , 1.5 million refugees in ...
... refugees from the fighting . Throughout 1978 and 1979 , 1,000 refugees a day were fleeing into Somalia ( ACR 1979-1980 : B306 ) so that by 1981 it was widely recognized that " the accumulation of , perhaps , 1.5 million refugees in ...
Page 53
... refugee crisis in Cambodia beginning to wind down . Maintaining the refugee camps and inflating the numbers proved to be a lucrative business for all enterprising Somalis , including refugees themselves who participated in the sale or ...
... refugee crisis in Cambodia beginning to wind down . Maintaining the refugee camps and inflating the numbers proved to be a lucrative business for all enterprising Somalis , including refugees themselves who participated in the sale or ...
Page 70
... refugees still in camps in Somalia were especially disturbing not only because the army was manned by so many Ogadeni but more specifically because many of them were refugees from the 1977-1978 Ogaden War who themselves had been ...
... refugees still in camps in Somalia were especially disturbing not only because the army was manned by so many Ogadeni but more specifically because many of them were refugees from the 1977-1978 Ogaden War who themselves had been ...
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