Fr. 240.00

Us Foreign Policy in the Horn of Africa - From Colonialism to Terrorism

English · Hardback

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Description

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List of contents

Introduction: Cold War Battleground. Chapter 1: The Coming of the Cold War. Chapter 2: The United Nations and the Horn of Africa. Chapter 3: Forging the "Special Relationship". Chapter 4: Self-Determination and the New Frontier. Chapter 5: In the Shadow of Vietnam. Chapter 6: Vital and Peripheral Interests. Chapter 7: Revolution in Ethiopia. Chapter 8: The Era of the Vietnam Syndrome. Chapter 9: The Ogaden War and the Demise of Détente. Chapter 10: Realignment and Reagan. Chapter 11: The End of the Cold War. Chapter 12: Somalia: From Colonialism to Terrorism.

About the author

Donna Jackson is a Senior Lecturer in Modern History, with particular specialism in American History in Department of History and Archaeology at the University of Chester, UK.

Summary

This book examines American foreign policy towards the Horn of Africa between 1945 and 1991

Additional text

"Exhaustively researched and argued with great sophistication, Donna Jackson has produced an impressive volume. A must-read for anyone interested in the evolution of US foreign policy during the Cold War era." - Steven Casey, author of The War Beat Europe: The American Media at War against Nazi Germany.
"U.S. Foreign Policy in the Horn of Africa provides a comprehensive analysis of American policy toward a little-examined and little-understood region of the world from the Cold War to the Somali revolutions of the 1990s. An important and useful volume that serious students of foreign policy should read and utilize. Highly recommended for its careful and detailed historical account." - James M. McCormick, Iowa State University, USA

"For far too long Ethiopia and Somalia have been written into other histories. In US Foreign Policy in the Horn of Africa Jackson brilliantly situates the particularities of the region within the broader dimensions of colonialism, Cold War, and terrorism. Though the book primarily considers the period of the Cold War and after, the legacies of 1884 and the divisions of the continent are never deep beneath the surface. Jackson provides the first sustained focus on the region in US foreign policy situating the story of ‘human tragedy’ within the global and the regional dimensions. Jackson’s work is perceptive, well-written, and based on a deep reading of a multiplicity of archives. Hitherto comparatively overlooked, the story of the Horn of Africa illuminates many aspects of US foreign policy from Cold War illusions, to regional conflicts through to the violence and terrorism that continues to plague the strategic region." -Professor David Ryan, Chair Modern History, University College Cork, Ireland

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