Coop UQAM | Coopsco

Créer mon profil | Mot de passe oublié?

Magasiner par secteur

Matériel obligatoire et recommandé

Voir les groupes
Devenir membre

Nos partenaires

UQAM
ESG UQAM
Réseau ESG UQAM
Bureau des diplômés
Centre sportif
Citadins
Service de la formation universitaire en région
Université à distance
Société de développement des entreprises culturelles - SODEC
L'institut du tourisme et de l'hotellerie - ITHQ
Pour le rayonnement du livre canadien
Presses de l'Université du Québec
Auteurs UQAM : Campagne permanente de promotion des auteures et auteurs UQAM
Fondation de l'UQAM
Écoles d'été en langues de l'UQAM
Canal savoir
L'économie sociale, j'achète
Millénium Micro



Recherche avancée...

Searching for Boko Haram

Searching for Boko Haram

MacEachern, Scott


Éditeur : OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
ISBN papier: 9780190492526
Parution : 2018
Code produit : 1467500
Catégorisation : Livres / Sciences humaines / Sciences politiques / Guerre et terrorisme

Formats disponibles

Format Qté. disp. Prix* Commander
Livre papier En rupture de stock** Prix membre : 31,30 $
Prix non-membre : 32,95 $
x

*Les prix sont en dollars canadien. Taxes et frais de livraison en sus.
**Ce produits est en rupture de stock mais sera expédié dès qu'ils sera disponible.




Description

This book places the insurgent group Boko Haram, which has terrorised northeastern Nigeria through the last six years, in an historical and cultural context. It examines cultural changes in the lands south of Lake Chad through deep time, showing how these ancient processes can help us thinkabout Boko Haram's activities in the present. The archaeological and documentary record for this area is unusually rich for sub-Saharan Africa, and allows us to understand Boko Haram within an historical narrative that stretches back directly five centuries, with cultural origins that stretch evendeeper into the past.One important way to understand Boko Haram is as a frontier phenomenon, the most recent manifestation of processes of horrific violence, identity production and wealth creation that have been part of political relationships in this area of Central Africa through the last millennium. In strikingways, Boko Haram resembles the slave-raiders and warlords who figure in precolonial and colonial writings about the southern Lake Chad Basin. In modern times, these accounts are paralleled by the activities of smugglers, bandits (coupeurs de route, "road cutters") and tax evaders, illegal actors whostand in complex relationships to the governments of modern African nation-states. The borderlands of these states are often places where the state refuses to exercise its full authority, because of the profits and opportunities that illegal and semi-legal activities afford, among others to stateofficials and bureaucrats. For local people, Boko Haram's actions are thus to a great extent understood in terms of slave-raids and borderlands. Those actions are not some mysterious, unprecedented eruption of violence and savagery: they can be understood within local contexts of politics andhistory. This book is written to counter exoticised portrayals of Boko Haram's activities, and of the region as a whole.