Peasant revolution in Ethiopia : the Tigray People's Liberation Front, 1975-1991 / John Young.
Material type:
TextSeries: African studies series ; 90.Publication details: Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1997.Description: xiv, 270 pages: mapsISBN: - 9780511824135
- Hezbawi wayane harenet Tegray -- History
- Hezbawi wayane harenet Tegray
- 1900-1999
- Peasant uprisings -- Ethiopia -- Tigray Kifle H�ager -- History -- 20th century
- Revoltes paysannes -- Ethiopie -- Tigre -- Histoire -- 20e siecle
- Peasant uprisings
- Politics and government
- Tigray Kifle Hager (Ethiopia) -- Politics and government
- Ethiopia -- Tigray Kifle Hager
- DT390.T5 .Y68 1997
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African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights Library | DT390 .Y68 1997 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 10191968 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
A note on names, transliteration and the Ethiopian Calendar -- 1. Peasants and revolutions: theoretical directions -- 2. Historical and social background -- 3. Tigray on the eve of insurrection -- 4. Struggle for opposition ascendancy: 1975-1978 -- 5. Challenges and advances: 1978-1985 -- 6. Triumph 1985-1991 -- 7. TPLF and the peasants -- 8. Conclusion.
In the wake of the overthrow of the Haile-Selassie regime in Ethiopia in 1974 and the coming to power of the military, a number of opposition forces launched insurrections. But only one movement, the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) triumphed, liberating Tigray in 1989, and in an ethnic-based coalition which it dominated, assuming state power in 1991. This is the first chronicle of the history of that struggle, and it is based largely on interviews with peasants who formed the core of the Tigrayan revolution and the TPLF leadership. It provides the necessary background to understanding post-1991 political developments in Ethiopia. It also offers an explanation of peasant-based revolution that contrasts with contemporary approaches by Marxists, Skocpol, and in particular the works of Wolf, Paige and Scott, all of whom largely ignore the political considerations and the role of the revolutionary party, which Dr Young identifies as a critical element in his study.
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