Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
Bookbot

Ora Szekely

    Insurgent Women
    Syria Divided
    Aiding and Abetting
    The Politics of Militant Group Survival in the Middle East
    • The Politics of Militant Group Survival in the Middle East

      Resources, Relationships, and Resistance

      • 348pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      4,4(3)Évaluer

      This book analyzes the performance of four non-state actors in the Arab-Israeli conflict: the PLO, Hamas, Hizbullah, and Amal. It emphasizes that the method of acquiring resources impacts their military and political resilience. The study includes field research across multiple countries and offers insights applicable to other groups like ISIS.

      The Politics of Militant Group Survival in the Middle East
    • Aiding and Abetting

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,5(16)Évaluer

      The United States is the world's leading foreign aid donor. Yet there has been little inquiry into how such assistance affects the politics and societies of recipient nations. Drawing on four decades of data on U.S. economic and military aid, Aiding and Abetting explores whether foreign aid does more harm than good. Jessica Trisko Darden challenges long-standing ideas about aid and its consequences, and highlights key patterns in the relationship between assistance and violence. She persuasively demonstrates that many of the foreign aid policy challenges the U.S. faced in the Cold War era, such as the propping up of dictators friendly to U.S. interests, remain salient today. Historical case studies of Indonesia, El Salvador, and South Korea illustrate how aid can uphold human freedoms or propagate human rights abuses. Aiding and Abetting encourages both advocates and critics of foreign assistance to reconsider its political and social consequences by focusing international aid efforts on the expansion of human freedom.

      Aiding and Abetting
    • Ora Szekely draws on sources including in-depth interviews, conflict data, and propaganda distributed through social media to examine how competing narratives of the civil war in Syria have shaped the course of the conflict.

      Syria Divided
    • Insurgent Women

      • 96pages
      • 4 heures de lecture

      Why do women go to war? Despite the reality that female combatants exist the world over, we still know relatively little about who these women are, what motivates them to take up arms, how they are utilized by armed groups, and what happens to them when war ends. This book uses three case studies to explore variation in women’s participation in nonstate armed groups in a range of contemporary political and social contexts: the civil war in Ukraine, the conflicts involving Kurdish groups in the Middle East, and the civil war in Colombia. In particular, the authors examine three important aspects of women’s participation in armed groups: mobilization, participation in combat, and conflict cessation. In doing so, they shed light on women’s pathways into and out of nonstate armed groups. They also address the implications of women’s participation in these conflicts for policy, including postconflict programming. This is an accessible and timely work that will be a useful introduction to another side of contemporary conflict.

      Insurgent Women