Spelling suggestions: "subject:"multionational liberation movements""
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The emergence and transformation of Basque nationalism; 1875-1975.Light, Daniel, Carleton University. Dissertation. International Affairs. January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 1988. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Guns and guerrilla girls : women in the Zimbabwean National Liberation struggle /Lyons, Tanya. January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, Dept. of Politics, 1999. / Bibliography: leaves 290-311.
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From cannibal to terrorist : state violence, indigenous resistance and representation in West Papua /Kirksey, S. Eben January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--University of Oxford, 2002. / Supervisor: Dr P.B. Carey, Dr M. O'Hanlon. Title from start screen (viewed Aug. 19, 2004). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 101-107). Also issued online.
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The idea of national liberationMacFarlane, S. Neil January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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Divided and conquered why states and self-determination groups fail in bargaining over autonomy /Cunningham, Kathleen Gallagher. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, San Diego, 2007. / Title from first page of PDF file (viewed Aug. 13, 2007). Available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 197-204).
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Liberation movements as governments : understanding the ANC's quality of governmentOctober, Lauren Sue 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2015. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Liberation struggles and the way liberation movements are organised can leave a lasting impact on post-liberation societies. This research project was conducted in order to research liberation movements as governments and how the quality of governance is affected in post-liberation societies when liberation movements become governments. The South African liberation movement is seen as having contributed to one of the most peaceful transitions of power on the African continent. However, the stigma surrounding liberation movements prompted a study of the South African liberation movement and to establish whether or not the ANC as ruling party has made a success of its governance of South Africa. This thesis uses South Africa as a case study to determine how quality of governance is affected when liberation movements become governments.
This thesis focused on the lingering effects of the structure and organisation of liberation movements. It is thus an exploratory as well as descriptive study where the legacies of the South African liberation movement are investigated and where the ANC as a liberation movement is compared to the ANC as a ruling party. Using historical analysis to discover the structure and internal governance of the liberation movement, this thesis seeks to explain the legacies that still influence the ANC today after its transition from a liberation movement into a political party. To do this the thesis used the theoretical framework of quality of government taken from Rothstein and Teorell (2008), who define it as impartiality. These legacies of the South African liberation movement are believed to have had an impact on the quality of governance of the ANC as a ruling party in post-liberation South Africa. By researching the last twenty years of ANC rule in South Africa’s post-liberation society, this thesis investigated the impartiality of government institutions in order to evaluate the quality of governance in South Africa, and thereby to discover what happens to the quality of governance when liberation movements become governments.
The findings of this thesis indicate three conclusions. First, the legacies of the South African liberation movement still have a great influence on the modus operandi, the structure and the goals of the ANC today. Second, these legacies have contributed to the decline of the impartiality of government institutions, in particular through the National Democratic Revolution (NDR) project and its cadre deployment strategy, where appointments are made without the consideration of the principle of impartiality. The legacies of the South African liberation movement have thus had a negative impact on the quality of the ANC’s governance. Finally, this thesis has found that in the case of South Africa, when the ANC as liberation movement took over as the ruling party in a post-liberation society, it negatively affected the quality of governance. Further research in this field is needed in order to compare these findings with other countries that have liberation histories so as to be able to generalise about other liberation movements and to improve the quality of governance in other countries. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Bevrydingstryde en die manier waarop bevrydingsbewegings georganiseer is kan 'n blywende impak op post-bevryding samelewings laat. Hierdie studie is uitgevoer om bevrydingsbewegings as regerings na te vors en ondersoek in te stel oor hoe die kwaliteit van staatsbestuur beïnvloed word in post-bevryding samelewings wanneer bevrydingsbewegings regerings word. Die Suid-Afrikaanse bevrydingsbeweging het bygedra tot een van die mees vreedsame oorgange van mag op die Afrika-kontinent. Die stigma rondom bevrydingsbewegings het egter gelei tot die implementering van 'n studie oor die Suid-Afrikaanse bevrydingsbeweging en of die ANC as regerende party wel 'n sukses van sy staatsbestuur van Suid-Afrika gemaak het. Hierdie tesis gebruik Suid-Afrika as 'n gevallestudie om te bepaal hoe die kwaliteit van bestuur beïnvloed word wanneer bevrydingsbewegings regerings word.
Hierdie tesis is gefokus op die voortslepende gevolge van die struktuur en organisasie van bevrydingsbewegings. Dit is dus 'n verkennende asook beskrywende studie waar die nalatenskappe van die Suid-Afrikaanse bevrydingsbeweging ondersoek word en waar die ANC as 'n bevrydingsbeweging staan in vergelyking met die ANC as 'n regerende party. Die gebruik van historiese ontleding om die struktuur en interne bestuur van die bevrydingsbeweging te ontdek, is in hierdie tesis gebruik om die nalatenskappe, wat vandag nog ’n invloed het op die ANC selfs ná sy oorgang van 'n bevrydingsbeweging na 'n politieke party, te verduidelik. Om dit te kan doen het die tesis gebruik gemaak van Rothstein en Teorell (2008) se teoretiese raamwerk van die gehalte van bestuur wat gedefineer word as onpartydigheid. Hierdie nalatenskappe van die Suid-Afrikaanse bevrydingsbeweging het kwansuis 'n impak op die gehalte van die staatsbestuur van die ANC as 'n regerende party in 'n post-bevryding Suid-Afrika gehad. Deur navorsing te doen oor die laaste twintig jaar van die ANC-regering in Suid-Afrika se post-bevryding gemeenskap, ondersoek hierdie tesis die onpartydigheid van staatsinstellings om sodoende die gehalte van regering in Suid-Afrika te evalueer, en om daardeur te ontdek wat word van die kwaliteit van staatsbestuur wanneer bevrydingsbewegings regerings word.
Die bevindings van hierdie studie dui aan op drie gevolgtrekkings. Eerstens, die nalatenskappe van die Suid-Afrikaanse bevrydingsbeweging het vandag nog 'n groot invloed op die modus operandi, die struktuur en die doelwitte van die ANC. Tweedens, hierdie nalatenskappe het bygedra tot die agteruitgang van die onpartydigheid van staatsinstellings, in die besonder as gevolg van die Nasionale Demokratiese Revolusie (NDR) projek en sy kaderontplooiing strategie waar aanstellings gemaak is sonder om die beginsel van onpartydigheid in ag te neem. Die nalatenskappe van die Suid-Afrikaanse bevrydingsbeweging het dus 'n negatiewe impak op die gehalte van die ANC se staatsbestuur. Laastens het hierdie tesis bevind dat in die geval van Suid-Afrika, toe die ANC as bevrydingsbeweging oorgeneem het as die regerende party in 'n post-bevryding samelewing, die gehalte van bestuur negatiewelik geaffekteer is. Verdere navorsing in hierdie gebied word benodig om hierdie bevindinge met ander lande wat ’n soortgelyke geskiedenis deel te vergelyk en om sodoende te veralgemeen oor ander bevrydingsbewegings en gevolglik die kwaliteit van bestuur in ander lande te verbeter.
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Re-living liberation war militia bases: violence, history and the making of political subjectivies in ZimbabweChitukutuku, Edmore January 2017 (has links)
Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Anthropology), March 2017 / In this study, I explore the ways in which legacies of how and where the Zimbabwean liberation war was fought, the landscapes of the struggle, and the violence associated with it were invoked at district and village level by ZANU PF as it sought to instill loyalty, fear and discipline through its supporters and the youth militia. Although they were invoking memories of former guerrilla bases, and the violence often associated with them, the bases set up by ZANU-PF youth militia in 2008 were not established on the actual sites of former guerrilla camps. However, since then, ZANU-PF war veterans in the Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) have been returning to the actual sites of the 1970s liberation war guerrilla bases in order to teach senior staff the history of the liberation struggle, drawing together former liberation war collaborators or ‘messengers’ who assisted guerrilla fighters during the war, as well as contemporary unemployed ZANU-PF youth. They used these often highly choreographed events to talk about battles during war, to perform liberation songs, and to explain how ancestors assisted them during the struggle. I examine these recent events, and argue that both the establishment of the new militia bases in the post-2000 period, and invocation of the old, former guerrilla bases dating to the Chimurenga period are deliberate efforts by ZANU-PF to make violence, geography and landscapes do political/ideological work by forging political subjectivities and loyalties that sustain its rule.
In stressing these continuities between the 1970s guerrilla bases, and their invocation and reproduction in post-2000 Zimbabwe, I am interested in what the base enables and does in terms of the formation of political subjectivities. I aim to show through critical analysis of the political history and local accounts of the second Chimurenga why political subjectivity and the base are important in the re-examination of both the history and the literature on this history. The base allows for a sophisticated reading of political subjectivity in that it was the space through which the grand narrative of the liberation struggle hit the ground, entered into people’s homes, and constituted a complex relationship between political education, conscientisation, freedom and violence. The liberation war base was meant to make people inhabit subjectivities characterized by bravery, resistance, and resilience when fighting the might of Rhodesian army. In the post-colonial context, the base served the purpose of annihilating the kind of rebellious subjectivities inhabited during the liberation war and replacing them with those characterized by fear, pretense, and quietude. This substitution explains the subjectivities that exist in the post-independence rural population and reveals the purpose that electoral violence has served in Zimbabwe’s post-independence period, especially through the base. However people have also engaged with these landscapes outside of ZANU-PF politicking and this has produced critical subjectivities where people challenge ZANU-PF dominant narratives. / GR2018
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The social integration of demobilised ex-combatants in Mozambique.Taju, Gulamo Amade January 1998 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Arts, University of the Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg. in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of
Arts / This study is an analysis of the social integration of demobilised soldiers in
Mozambique, in the context of post-war social reconstruction. De-constructing the
concept of "reintegration" that informed the top-down programmes designed for the
social integration of ex-combatants, that dichotomize society into the military sphere
and the civilian one, so that the process into which ex-combatants are involved after
leaving the Army is one of "returning home", as society remaining the same or in a
moving equilibrium, one saw society- marked by social differentiations, even
amongst the demobilised ex-combatants. The ideal of "sameness" between "civilians"
and ex-combatants involved in the concept of reintegration seems more an utopia.
This research used previous studies of my colleagues. In criticizing them, I do not
wish to create the impression that these works are of little value. Their analysis stand
from very different disciplinary approaches, and with others aims. The major
weakness I often saw was the indefinition of the terms they use and the mix of
concepts like social integration and reintegration as having the same meaning. Other
documentary research was carried out, and as the study included the understanding
of meanings, values, individual actions and social interactions, in order to capture
the meaningfulness of such life other qualitative methods were employed as the
informal interviews, the use of key informants, participation in and observation of
events in the setting.
Looking society in a dynamic change, social integration is regarded as the process of
negotiation of a common social order between actors in interaction (demobilised
soldiers, other social groupings, and institutions like the state). It is better approached
using the concept of integration. As an interactive process it is marked by a tension
between the affirmation of the individuality of actors and the will to the sense of
community. In its course different actors mobilise and use different identities
according to the situations. avoiding or erasing specificities of previous socializations
and identities and highlighting others.
This study is an analysis of the social integration of demobilised soldiers in
Mozambique, in the context of post-war social reconstruction. De-constructing the
concept of "reintegration" that informed the top-down programmes designed for the
social integration of ex-combatants, that dichotomize society into the military sphere
and the civil one, so that the process into which ex-combatants is one of "returning
home", as society remaining the same or in a moving equilibrium, one saw society
full of differentiations, even within the groups social defined as "demobilised
soldiers". The ideal of "sameness" involved in the concept of reintegration seems
more an utopia. Society is full of social differentiation, and the group of demobiIised
soldiers also inmarked by differences of gender, age, marital status, previous military
affiliation and rank, control of resources and social status in the living/working place,
marital status.
This study used previous studies of my colleagues. In criticizing them, I do not wish
to create the impression that these works are of little value. Their analysis stand from
very different disciplinary approaches, and with others aims. The major weakness I
often saw was the indefinition of the terms they use and the mix of concepts like
social integration and reintegration as having the same meaning. Other documentary
research was carried out, and as the study included the understanding of meanings,
values, individual actions and social interactions, to capture the meaningfulness of
such life other qualitative methods were employed: informal interviews, the use of key
informants, participation in and observation of events in the setting.
Looking society in a dynamic change, the process of negotiation of a social order
between actors in interaction (demobilised soldiers, other social groupings, and
institutions like the state) is better approached using the concept of social integration.
As an interactive process, in its course different actors mobilise and use different
identities, the most convenient for each occasion, in a way that sometimes involves
the attempt to erase specificities of previous socializations and identities. / Andrew Chakane 2019
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An examination of the relationship between national identity and sovereignty: debates around the South African nation-state from 1990 to 2010.Yacoob, Abba Omar January 2017 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, September 2017 / The study attempts to examine the relationship between national identity and political sovereignty and their impact on the emergence of nations, with a special focus on debates around the South African nation-state from 1990 to 2004. Located within the postcolonialism approach, the study looks at national identity through the prism of ethnicity, language, religion and race, while sovereignty is considered through its two component parts, the state and citizenry.
By examining two postcolonial contexts, the Arab world and India, the study has developed a framework which is applied to the study of the South African state. This framework identifies nationalism as a glue which holds sovereignty and identity together in the nation-state. The two cases reveal that there is always more than one nationalist narrative, often competing against each other. In the case of the Arab world the study looks at the tensions between pan-Arabism, Arab nationalism and Islamism. In the case of India a secular Indian nationalism has had to compete against a Hindu nationalism.
The study argues that South Africa’s history has been characterised by contestation between a white, Afrikaner nationalism and an African nationalism. As in the two case studies, these narratives are not just polar ends, but rather a complex spectrum which has seen alliances being struck across the racial divide.
The essence of the former has been an attempt at addressing the ‘Native Question’, that is how to manage the continued subjugation of the overwhelming number of Africans in this country. Having its roots as a reaction to its socio-economic conditions in the Cape, it evolved into an ethnically constructed view of itself and through which it mobilised political and economic resources to perpetuate its dominance after it reached its zenith in the 1948 elections. This narrative’s arc saw it being redefined in race terms to encompass English-speaking whites, and then through a combination of anti-communist rhetoric and anti-African scare-mongering, included the coloured and Indian parts of the South African population. Today it manifests itself in a return to an ethnic laager which takes the form of attempts at discriminating against non-Afrikaans speakers on the basis of an appeal to victimhood and the exercise of constitutional rights.
The African nationalism narrative begins from the mid-1800s, tracing the impact of those educated at missionary schools on the society they came from. This Christian elite came to play a powerful role in establishing a plethora of organisations so that as the wars of resistance were ending, political mobilisation was taking off. This mobilisation took the form of voter registration and voting for those white candidates considered to be acting in the interests of Africans, church congregations as well as newspapers which served as platforms for airing of grievances. A moderate, urbanbased, accommodating form of politics ran parallel to a more militant, rural-based form of resistance. The former would shape the first few decades of the African National Congress until the 1940s, while the latter was subsumed under the rhetoric of the nationalist elite – similar to the experiences of India and the Arab world. / XL2018
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The United Democratic Front (UDF) : a case study of democratic organisation, 1983-1987.Houston, Gregory Frederick. January 1998 (has links)
This study, using the theoretical basis of the writings of Lenin and Gramsci
on revolutionary theory and praxis, traces the formation, policy and aims,
membership and structure, and practices of the United Democratic Front
(UDF) and selected affiliate organisations during the period 1983-1987. The
central problem investigated is the relation between revolutionary theory and
praxis and the aims, policies and practices of the UDF and its affiliates.
More particularly, in what respects does the formation of the UDF and
revolutionary developments thereafter meet the strategic and tactical
requirements of Lenin and Gramsci's theories of revolutionary strategy?
It is argued that the formation of the UDF, and revolutionary
developments during the period of review, conformed to the strategic and
tactical requirements of a Leninist-Gramscian model of revolutionary praxis in
the following way: the general drive to establish mass-based community
organisations (increasing the complexity of civil society by establishing mass
organisations); the formation of the UDF in August 1983 (creating a historical
bloc in opposition to the ruling bloc during the phase of democratic struggle);
and the development and spread of a common national political culture based
on resistance to apartheid (expanding the revolutionary consciousness of the
masses).
During the period under review, the UDF-Ied opposition to apartheid
resulted in the organisational and ideological penetration of the Front into
almost every major sector of black civil society. The major forces behind the
increasing political and ideological leadership of the UDF were the affiliated
civic associations, trade unions, student/youth and women's organisations.
These organisations played a central role in mass mobilisation and
organisation and the spread of revolutionary consciousness throughout black civil society. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1998.
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