Narrativas alternativas sobre o conflito somali: descontinuidades e especifidades históricas

  • Marta Moreno

Resumo

Este artigo tem como objetivo central o combate ao discurso hegemônico ocidental, devido ao seu determinismo histórico, sobre a Somália. O trabalho busca, desta forma, demonstrar como os interesses políticos subjazem a compreensão ocidental da Somália e como este não é fixo. Outra finalidade da pesquisa seria desvendar as características do conflito somali levando em consideração as influências externas.

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

Referências

BESTEMAN, Catherine: “Representing Violence and ‘Othering’ Somalia”, Cultural Anthropology, 11(1), 1996.

__________________: Unraveling Somalia. Race, Vio-lence, and the Legacy of Slavery, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1999.

CASSANELLI, Lee V.: “Somali Land Resource Issues in Historical Perspective”, In: Clarke, Walter; Herbst, Jeffrey (eds): Learning from Somalia: the lessons of armed humani-tarian intervention, Westview Press, 1997.

DARBY, Phillip: “A disabling discipline”, In: Christian Reus-Smith; Duncan Snidal (eds) The Oxford Handbook of International Relations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.

HASHIM, Alice Bettis: The Fallen State: dissonance, dictatorship, and death in Somalia, University Press of America, 1997.

HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH/AFRICA. “Somalia Faces the Future: Human Rights in a Fragmented Society”, vol. 7, n. 2, April 1995. Disponível em: http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/1995/somalia/

ISSA-SALWE, Abdisalam M.: The Collapse of the Somali State. The Impact of the Colonial Legacy, Haan Publish-ing, London, 1996.

KUSOW, Abdi M.: “Contested Narratives and the Crisis of the Nation-State in Somalia: A Prolegomenon”, In: Kusow, Abdi (ed): Putting the Cart Before The Horse. Contest Nationalism and the Crisis of the Nation-State in Somalia, Africa World Press, 2004.

LAUDERDALE, Patt; TOGGIA, Pietro: “An Indigenous View of the New World Order: Somalia and Ostensible Rule of Law”, Journal of Asian and African Studies, volume 34:2, 1999.

LEWIS, Ian M.: A Modern History of the Somali: Nation and State in the Horn of Africa, James Currey, Oxford and Ohio University Press, Athens, 2002 (fourth edition).

LULING, Virginia: “Come back Somalia? Questioning a collapsed state”. Third World Quarterly 18(2), 1997.

______________: “Genealogy as Theory, Genealogy as Tool: Aspects of Somali 'Clanship'”, Social Identities, vol. 12, n. 4, july 2006.

MAH, Ahmed: The Colonial Discourse of Development in Africa. The Somalia Experience, thesis of the Arts Depart-ment of Theory and Policy Studies in Education, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto, 1999.

MILLEKEN, Jennifer: “The Study of Discourse in Interna-tional Relations: A Critique of Research and Methods, European Journal of International Relations, vol. 5 (2), 1999.

MUKHTAR, Mohamed Haji: “The plight of the Agro-pastoral society of Somalia”, Review of African Political Economy, vol. 23, issue 70, december 1996.

Samatar, Abdi Ismail: “Destruction of State and Society in Somalia: Beyond the Tribal Convention”, The Journal of Modern African Studies, 30, 4, 1992.

SAMATAR, Ahmed I.: “Somalia: Statelessness As Home-lessness”, In: Samatar, Abdi Ismail; Samatar, Ahmed, I. (eds): The African State: reconsiderations, Heinemann, Portsmouth, NH, 2002.

SECURITY OF COUNCIL. Security of Council Official Records, 871st Meeting, New York, 5 July 1960 (S/PV.871).

SHAPIRO, Michael J.: “How does the Nation-State Work?”, In: Jenny Edkins and Maja Zehfuss (eds). Global Politics. A New Introduction, Routledge, 2009.

Publicado
10-03-2014
Como Citar
Moreno, M. (2014). Narrativas alternativas sobre o conflito somali: descontinuidades e especifidades históricas. Conjuntura Internacional, 11(1), 43-57. Recuperado de https://seer.pucminas.br/index.php/conjuntura/article/view/7606
Seção
ANÁLISE CONJUNTURAL