Angola
1975-1995, 1998-2002
- Type:
Internal/internationalized
- Side A:
Angola
- Side B:
National Front for the Liberation of Angola (FNLA), National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA)
References:
Anstee, Margaret Joan (1996) Orphan of the Cold War: Inside Story of the Collapse of the Angolan Peace Process, 1992-93. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Beck, Teresa Koloma (2012) The Normality of Civil War: Armed Groups and Everyday Life in Angola. Frankfurt: Campus Verlag.
Bender, Gerald J. (1978) Angola Under the Portuguese. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
Cilliers, Jakkie & Christian Dietrich, eds (2000) Angola’s War Economy: The Role of Oil and Diamonds. Pretoria: Institute for Security Studies.
Faria, Paulo C.J (2013) The Post-War Angola: Public Sphere, Political Regime and Democracy. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publ.
Guimaraes, Fernando Andresen (2001) The Origins of the Angolan Civil War: Foreign Intervention and Domestic Political Conflict. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Hodges, Tony (2003) Angola :The Anatomy of an Oil State. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
James III, W. Martin (2011) A Political History of the Civil War in Angola, 1974-1990. Second Edition. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.
Jett, Dennis (2001) Why Peacekeeping Fails. New York: Palgrave Macmillan
Lujala, Päivi & Siri Aas Rustad, eds (2012) High-Value Natural Resources and Post-Conflict Peacebuilding. Abingdon: Earthscan.
Malaquias, Assis (2007) Rebels and Robbers: Violence in Post-colonial Angola. Uppsala: Nordiska Afrikainstitutet.
Marcum, John A. (1969) The Angolan Revolution - Vol. 1: The Anatomy of an Explosion. Cambridge: MIT Press.
Marcum, John A. (1978) Angolan Revolution - Vol. 2: Exile Politics and Guerilla Warfare, 1962-1976. Cambridge: MIT Press.
Pearce, Justin (2005) An Outbreak of Peace: Angola’s Situation of Confusion. Cape Town: David Philip.
Samset, Ingrid (2013) Explaining Variation in Violence After Civil War: A Comparative Analysis of Angola (2002-2009) and the Democratic Republic of Congo (2003-2010). PhD thesis. Bergen: Department of Comparative Politics, University of Bergen.