This paper provides an historical analysis of the concept of Greater Somalia, the nationalist project that advocates the political union of all Somali-speaking people, including those inhabiting areas in current Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya. The Somali territorial unification project of “lost territories” was a direct consequence of the arbitrary borders drawn up by the European colonial powers in order to realise their expansionist interests. This paper underlines the instability produced by the European colonial powers in the Horn of Africa, and presents their arbitrary decisions as the root cause of Somali grievances and border disputes, which dogged the region from the end of colonial rule to the outbreak of civil war. The aim of the pa...
This study examines genesis of the Somali instability and causes of the protracted conflicts in the ...
Abstract The Trajectory of Power among the Somali. — The question of feats of power in the Somali cu...
Somali is to be a people united by one language and divided by maps.”1 Rushdie was referring to the ...
This paper provides an historical analysis of the concept of Greater Somalia, the nationalist projec...
Contested Somali borders: the power of tradition vs. the tradition of power Marco Zoppi∗ This paper ...
After Berlin Conference in 1884 to 1885, Somalia was partitioned into five parts by Britain, Italy, ...
This paper examines the roots of the crisis, that engulfed the country since the fall of the regime ...
This paper is typically focused on the issue of conflict and revolution in Somali. As an introductio...
Nation-states are described as failed states when they fall into internal violence,stop providing af...
Abstract This study addresses two macro issues, which concern politics and state affairs in post-c...
This thesis offers a new historical examination of the genesis of modern Somali nationalism. Using a...
Border issues are political problems in Africa. The border conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea was...
In response to Kenyan citizens' growing uneasiness with regard to the cross-border violence from Som...
This study is "Somalia As A Failed State: Internal and External Dynamics", and examines both the int...
The achievements of successive Somaliland governments in building legitimacy and conducting election...
This study examines genesis of the Somali instability and causes of the protracted conflicts in the ...
Abstract The Trajectory of Power among the Somali. — The question of feats of power in the Somali cu...
Somali is to be a people united by one language and divided by maps.”1 Rushdie was referring to the ...
This paper provides an historical analysis of the concept of Greater Somalia, the nationalist projec...
Contested Somali borders: the power of tradition vs. the tradition of power Marco Zoppi∗ This paper ...
After Berlin Conference in 1884 to 1885, Somalia was partitioned into five parts by Britain, Italy, ...
This paper examines the roots of the crisis, that engulfed the country since the fall of the regime ...
This paper is typically focused on the issue of conflict and revolution in Somali. As an introductio...
Nation-states are described as failed states when they fall into internal violence,stop providing af...
Abstract This study addresses two macro issues, which concern politics and state affairs in post-c...
This thesis offers a new historical examination of the genesis of modern Somali nationalism. Using a...
Border issues are political problems in Africa. The border conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea was...
In response to Kenyan citizens' growing uneasiness with regard to the cross-border violence from Som...
This study is "Somalia As A Failed State: Internal and External Dynamics", and examines both the int...
The achievements of successive Somaliland governments in building legitimacy and conducting election...
This study examines genesis of the Somali instability and causes of the protracted conflicts in the ...
Abstract The Trajectory of Power among the Somali. — The question of feats of power in the Somali cu...
Somali is to be a people united by one language and divided by maps.”1 Rushdie was referring to the ...