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A Predictable Tragedy – Robert Mugabe and the Collapse of Zimbabwe

Autor Daniel Compagnon
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 oct 2013
An unflinching analysis of how Robert Mugabe, a man once known as an anticolonial freedom fighter, became one of Africa's most hated autocrats, and why so many inside and outside Zimbabwe were long blind to his bloody misdeeds.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780812222890
ISBN-10: 081222289X
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: MT – University of Pennsylvania Press

Notă biografică


Recenzii

"Compagnon's devastating analysis of the regime argues that the country's collapse was in fact the predictable outcome of the methods and approach Mugabe has always followed... Compagnon's book stands out as the best account of the crisis to date."-Foreign Affairs "[A] masterpiece that will have a dignified shelf life in Zimbabwean studies. The book is well researched and detailed. Its arguments are convincing without being overly polemic. It leaves readers with no doubt about the culpability of Mugabe in the collapse of Zimbabwe."-African Studies Review "In this passionate book, Daniel Compagnon delivers an unrelievedly withering indictment of Zimbabwe's post-independence political regime... Wide-ranging and detailed, the analysis is illuminating and provocative."-International Journal of African Historical Studies "Daniel Compagnon's book succeeds in its fundamental task: it describes in great detail how Robert Mugabe destroyed Zimbabwe. Indeed, it is highly unlikely that we will see a more comprehensive description of the Mugabe regime. While the exact endpoint of that regime remains to be determined, Compagnon's book will be seen as an authoritative account of how it wrecked a once-vibrant country."-Jeffrey Herbst, President, Colgate University "A Predictable Tragedy provides a comprehensive historical analysis of the nature of Robert Mugabe's rule. This is an important contribution because it shows that post-2000 Zimbabwe politics are not 'new' but the product of an authoritarian political system that began in 1980. Mugabe's regime is, and always has been, one of personal rule, Compagnon argues. Academics and domestic opponents were taken in by the regime's rhetoric of reconciliation, democracy, and socialism, failing to understand the true character of the regime. Only after 2000 did they begin to comprehend, and then very slowly and perhaps not yet fully, the Mugabe regime's commitment to hold power at all costs."-Norma Kriger, author of Guerrilla Veterans in Zimbabwe: Symbolic and Violent Politics, 1980-1987

Cuprins

Introduction 1 Authoritarian Control of the Political Arena 2 Violence as the Cornerstone of Mugabe's Strategy of Political Survival 3 Militant Civil Society and the Emergence of a Credible Opposition 4 The Media Battlefield: From Skirmishes to Full-Fledged War 5 The Judiciary: From Resistance to Subjugation 6 The Land "Reform" Charade and the Tragedy of Famine 7 The State Bourgeoisie and the Plunder of the Economy 8 The International Community and the Crisis in Zimbabwe Conclusion: Chaos Averted or Merely Postponed? List of Acronyms Notes Index Acknowledgments