This article identifies and examines the processes through which the social justice movements of African Americans in the US, Oromos in Ethiopia, and Southern and Western Sudanese in Sudan emerged, and the successes and failures of these movements in a global and comparative perspective. It specifically explores four interrelated issues. First, the paper deals with some theoretical and methodological insights. Second, the piece explains how the racialized capitalist world system and its political structures facilitated the creation of the states of the US, Ethiopia, and Sudan and legalized racial/ethnonational oppression, colonialism, exploitation, and continued subjugation. Third, it explains comparatively the processes, developments, obje...
A remarkable feature of the Southern Sudanese liberation movement during the First Sudanese Civil Wa...
This paper was commissioned for Inclusion in Asset Building: Research and Policy Symposium, an event...
This article focuses on the consequences of attempts to free slaves and abolish slavery in the Sudan
This article identifies and examines the processes through which the social justice movements of Afr...
This paper explains how some Oromos who were forced to leave their country, Oromia, by successive co...
The paper critically examines how indigenous peoples all over the world have been terrorized, exterm...
The African American and Oromo movements have been anti-colonial struggles, and they have aimed to d...
Today, the Oromo are an impoverished and powerless numerical majority and political minority13 in th...
Just as European and African slave traders merchandised Africans and created the old African diaspor...
This article deals with the marginalization of African-Americans in the social sphere of US society....
This article critically examines how the duality inherent in the concept of Ethiopianism shifts back...
This paper explores the essence of the gadaa system (Oromo democracy) and how and why the Oromo peop...
This article addresses the relationship between African-American leaders and settlement house worker...
The problem under consideration in this paper is the absence of social Justice in Sudan under a situ...
Many scholars have contended that Africa is underdeveloped most probably in comparison with other co...
A remarkable feature of the Southern Sudanese liberation movement during the First Sudanese Civil Wa...
This paper was commissioned for Inclusion in Asset Building: Research and Policy Symposium, an event...
This article focuses on the consequences of attempts to free slaves and abolish slavery in the Sudan
This article identifies and examines the processes through which the social justice movements of Afr...
This paper explains how some Oromos who were forced to leave their country, Oromia, by successive co...
The paper critically examines how indigenous peoples all over the world have been terrorized, exterm...
The African American and Oromo movements have been anti-colonial struggles, and they have aimed to d...
Today, the Oromo are an impoverished and powerless numerical majority and political minority13 in th...
Just as European and African slave traders merchandised Africans and created the old African diaspor...
This article deals with the marginalization of African-Americans in the social sphere of US society....
This article critically examines how the duality inherent in the concept of Ethiopianism shifts back...
This paper explores the essence of the gadaa system (Oromo democracy) and how and why the Oromo peop...
This article addresses the relationship between African-American leaders and settlement house worker...
The problem under consideration in this paper is the absence of social Justice in Sudan under a situ...
Many scholars have contended that Africa is underdeveloped most probably in comparison with other co...
A remarkable feature of the Southern Sudanese liberation movement during the First Sudanese Civil Wa...
This paper was commissioned for Inclusion in Asset Building: Research and Policy Symposium, an event...
This article focuses on the consequences of attempts to free slaves and abolish slavery in the Sudan