Gives voice to the conscripts who are forced to serve indefinitely without remuneration under the ENS in a powerful critical survey of its effect from the Liberation Struggle to today
The Struggling State explores Eritreans’ disillusion with a government that permanently conscripts t...
This article analyzes contemporary Eritrea's acute crisis within the framework of the theory of anom...
Eritrea was once part of Ethiopia, but began a struggle for independence in the 1960s and finally be...
openThis study aims to analyse the human rights violations in the military service in Eritrea in det...
Following independence from Ethiopia, Eritrea’s leaders were praised for their success at building a...
Following independence from Ethiopia, Eritrea’s leaders were praised for their success at building a...
During the past decade, hundreds of thousands of Eritreans have fled to neighbouring countries to ev...
In Eritrea, anyone over 18 is conscripted into indefinite National Service, where they are assigned ...
The state of Eritrea is gradually losing its population. A variety of human rights violations includ...
The paper examines the politics of the National Union of Eritrean Youth and Students (NUEYS), Unive...
Two decades after achieving independence from Ethiopia, Eritrea is back in the European headlines – ...
The ex-Italian colony of Eritrea was established as an autonomous state by the United Nations after ...
M.A.With the exception of the Western Sahara, Eritrea was the only African country to have been perm...
After providing a succinct background to the Eritrean National Service, the chapter discusses briefl...
The author of this issue, Richard Lobban, is trained as an anthropologist. He took his B.S. at Buckn...
The Struggling State explores Eritreans’ disillusion with a government that permanently conscripts t...
This article analyzes contemporary Eritrea's acute crisis within the framework of the theory of anom...
Eritrea was once part of Ethiopia, but began a struggle for independence in the 1960s and finally be...
openThis study aims to analyse the human rights violations in the military service in Eritrea in det...
Following independence from Ethiopia, Eritrea’s leaders were praised for their success at building a...
Following independence from Ethiopia, Eritrea’s leaders were praised for their success at building a...
During the past decade, hundreds of thousands of Eritreans have fled to neighbouring countries to ev...
In Eritrea, anyone over 18 is conscripted into indefinite National Service, where they are assigned ...
The state of Eritrea is gradually losing its population. A variety of human rights violations includ...
The paper examines the politics of the National Union of Eritrean Youth and Students (NUEYS), Unive...
Two decades after achieving independence from Ethiopia, Eritrea is back in the European headlines – ...
The ex-Italian colony of Eritrea was established as an autonomous state by the United Nations after ...
M.A.With the exception of the Western Sahara, Eritrea was the only African country to have been perm...
After providing a succinct background to the Eritrean National Service, the chapter discusses briefl...
The author of this issue, Richard Lobban, is trained as an anthropologist. He took his B.S. at Buckn...
The Struggling State explores Eritreans’ disillusion with a government that permanently conscripts t...
This article analyzes contemporary Eritrea's acute crisis within the framework of the theory of anom...
Eritrea was once part of Ethiopia, but began a struggle for independence in the 1960s and finally be...