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Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
Examines Eritrea's deprivation of human rights since independence and its transformation into a militarised "garrison state".
Bemærk: Kan leveres før jul.
When traumatised aid worker John Cousins arrives in north-east Africa he hopes to find a sense of personal peace among a gentle people rebuilding their lives following a bitter and prolonged war.
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
This book, first published in 1991, analyses the role of women in the Eritrean struggle for independence. Emerging from a semi-feudal world, these women – peasants and pastoralists, student activists and workers from the cities – participated fully in the Eritrean revolution.
Bemærk: Kan leveres før jul.
In questo 1956 l’Italia non ha mai preso parte alla Prima Guerra Mondiale. Tutto ha inizio nel 1896, quando invece di perderla, l’Italia ha vinto la Battaglia di Adua, in Etiopia. Da lì,... Læs mere
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
Eritrea, the newest nation state in Africa, gained independence from the Ethiopian state after a prolonged and bitter... Læs mere
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
Eritrea, the newest nation state in Africa, gained independence from the Ethiopian state after a prolonged and bitter... Læs mere
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
This book shows how Eritrea and East Timor developed sophisticated strategies to liberate their countries from colonialism, and emphasizes that these insurgencies avoided terrorism.
Scritta durante il periodo che l'autore trascorse in Eritrea, questa raccolta di poesie di gusto scapigliato anticipa una certa tendenza a tematiche tipiche del periodo futurista. Seppur... Læs mere
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
This groundbreaking book fills a large hole in the literature for one of the most diverse and least known areas of Africa.
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
This book, first published in 1991, analyses the role of women in the Eritrean struggle for independence. Emerging from a semi-feudal world, these women – peasants and pastoralists, student activists and workers from the cities – participated fully in the Eritrean revolution.