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Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Da: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germania
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Aggiungi al carrelloTaschenbuch. Condizione: Neu. Neuware - Authoritarian regimes rarely fall because they are defeated by force. They collapse when the systems that sustain obedience begin to break.
Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Authoritarian regimes rarely fall because they are defeated by force. They collapse when the systems that sustain obedience begin to break.The Anatomy of a Revolutionary Insurgency examines how modern dictatorships maintain control and how civilian resistance movements challenge authoritarian power.Across the world, authoritarian governments have adapted. Modern autocracies rely less on constant violence and more on systems designed to manage obedience. Surveillance states monitor communication networks. Security services suppress dissent before it becomes organized. Patronage networks bind political elites to the regime. Information control floods the public sphere with competing narratives until truth becomes difficult to recognize.These mechanisms make authoritarian regimes appear stable. Yet beneath that stability lie structural vulnerabilities.This book analyzes how those vulnerabilities emerge and how civilian resistance movements learn to exploit them.Drawing on political science, intelligence studies, and real-world political movements, Kriss Namakola explains how dictators stay in power and why dictatorships eventually collapse. The book explores the internal architecture of authoritarian rule and the strategic dynamics that allow resistance movements to survive repression.Readers will gain insight into: - how authoritarian regimes control information and suppress dissent- how surveillance states monitor populations and isolate opposition- how fear is used to control populations and discourage protest- how patronage networks bind political elites to authoritarian systems- how mass protest movements challenge authoritarian governments- why some revolutionary movements succeed while others collapse- how civilian resistance movements organize under conditions of repressionUsing examples from political struggles such as South Africa's anti-apartheid movement and major uprisings across Africa and the Middle East, the book explains how resistance movements develop in societies shaped by surveillance, political repression, and information control.Some uprisings become powerful people-power revolutions. Others fracture into violence or collapse under pressure. Understanding the difference requires examining how power actually operates inside authoritarian systems.The Anatomy of a Revolutionary Insurgency offers a strategic examination of modern authoritarianism and political resistance. It explains how revolutions begin, how resistance movements survive repression, and how authoritarian regimes ultimately lose control over the societies they govern.For readers interested in modern authoritarian regimes, political resistance strategy, revolutionary movements, mass protest movements, and the forces that shape political change, this book provides a clear analysis of how civilian-led movements confront modern autocracies-and sometimes defeat them. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Uganda is frequently described as one of the most stable countries in East Africa. For nearly four decades, regular elections, economic growth figures, and strong regional security partnerships have reinforced that narrative.The Myth of Stability examines the structure of political power in Uganda and the long-term institutional consequences of centralized rule. Kriss Namakola analyzes Ugandan politics from colonial state formation through independence, military regimes, and the consolidation of executive authority under prolonged leadership.This study situates Uganda within broader discussions of African governance, post-colonial state design, authoritarian durability, civil-military relations, patronage systems, and democratic institutional development. It explores how political authority is organized, how institutions evolve under concentrated power, and how economic and administrative systems adapt over time.Rather than focusing on personalities, the book concentrates on political structure: the civil service, the military, electoral processes, public finance, and the political economy of the modern Ugandan state.As Uganda approaches an eventual leadership transition, questions of institutional resilience, regime continuity, and governance reform become central. This book offers a structured analysis for readers of African politics, East African history, political science, and comparative governance. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Authoritarian regimes rarely fall because they are defeated by force. They collapse when the systems that sustain obedience begin to break.The Anatomy of a Revolutionary Insurgency examines how modern dictatorships maintain control and how civilian resistance movements challenge authoritarian power.Across the world, authoritarian governments have adapted. Modern autocracies rely less on constant violence and more on systems designed to manage obedience. Surveillance states monitor communication networks. Security services suppress dissent before it becomes organized. Patronage networks bind political elites to the regime. Information control floods the public sphere with competing narratives until truth becomes difficult to recognize.These mechanisms make authoritarian regimes appear stable. Yet beneath that stability lie structural vulnerabilities.This book analyzes how those vulnerabilities emerge and how civilian resistance movements learn to exploit them.Drawing on political science, intelligence studies, and real-world political movements, Kriss Namakola explains how dictators stay in power and why dictatorships eventually collapse. The book explores the internal architecture of authoritarian rule and the strategic dynamics that allow resistance movements to survive repression.Readers will gain insight into: - how authoritarian regimes control information and suppress dissent- how surveillance states monitor populations and isolate opposition- how fear is used to control populations and discourage protest- how patronage networks bind political elites to authoritarian systems- how mass protest movements challenge authoritarian governments- why some revolutionary movements succeed while others collapse- how civilian resistance movements organize under conditions of repressionUsing examples from political struggles such as South Africa's anti-apartheid movement and major uprisings across Africa and the Middle East, the book explains how resistance movements develop in societies shaped by surveillance, political repression, and information control.Some uprisings become powerful people-power revolutions. Others fracture into violence or collapse under pressure. Understanding the difference requires examining how power actually operates inside authoritarian systems.The Anatomy of a Revolutionary Insurgency offers a strategic examination of modern authoritarianism and political resistance. It explains how revolutions begin, how resistance movements survive repression, and how authoritarian regimes ultimately lose control over the societies they govern.For readers interested in modern authoritarian regimes, political resistance strategy, revolutionary movements, mass protest movements, and the forces that shape political change, this book provides a clear analysis of how civilian-led movements confront modern autocracies-and sometimes defeat them. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
Da: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Regno Unito
EUR 35,65
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Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Uganda is frequently described as one of the most stable countries in East Africa. For nearly four decades, regular elections, economic growth figures, and strong regional security partnerships have reinforced that narrative.The Myth of Stability examines the structure of political power in Uganda and the long-term institutional consequences of centralized rule. Kriss Namakola analyzes Ugandan politics from colonial state formation through independence, military regimes, and the consolidation of executive authority under prolonged leadership.This study situates Uganda within broader discussions of African governance, post-colonial state design, authoritarian durability, civil-military relations, patronage systems, and democratic institutional development. It explores how political authority is organized, how institutions evolve under concentrated power, and how economic and administrative systems adapt over time.Rather than focusing on personalities, the book concentrates on political structure: the civil service, the military, electoral processes, public finance, and the political economy of the modern Ugandan state.As Uganda approaches an eventual leadership transition, questions of institutional resilience, regime continuity, and governance reform become central. This book offers a structured analysis for readers of African politics, East African history, political science, and comparative governance. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
Da: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
EUR 46,35
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Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Authoritarian regimes rarely fall because they are defeated by force. They collapse when the systems that sustain obedience begin to break.The Anatomy of a Revolutionary Insurgency examines how modern dictatorships maintain control and how civilian resistance movements challenge authoritarian power.Across the world, authoritarian governments have adapted. Modern autocracies rely less on constant violence and more on systems designed to manage obedience. Surveillance states monitor communication networks. Security services suppress dissent before it becomes organized. Patronage networks bind political elites to the regime. Information control floods the public sphere with competing narratives until truth becomes difficult to recognize.These mechanisms make authoritarian regimes appear stable. Yet beneath that stability lie structural vulnerabilities.This book analyzes how those vulnerabilities emerge and how civilian resistance movements learn to exploit them.Drawing on political science, intelligence studies, and real-world political movements, Kriss Namakola explains how dictators stay in power and why dictatorships eventually collapse. The book explores the internal architecture of authoritarian rule and the strategic dynamics that allow resistance movements to survive repression.Readers will gain insight into: - how authoritarian regimes control information and suppress dissent- how surveillance states monitor populations and isolate opposition- how fear is used to control populations and discourage protest- how patronage networks bind political elites to authoritarian systems- how mass protest movements challenge authoritarian governments- why some revolutionary movements succeed while others collapse- how civilian resistance movements organize under conditions of repressionUsing examples from political struggles such as South Africa's anti-apartheid movement and major uprisings across Africa and the Middle East, the book explains how resistance movements develop in societies shaped by surveillance, political repression, and information control.Some uprisings become powerful people-power revolutions. Others fracture into violence or collapse under pressure. Understanding the difference requires examining how power actually operates inside authoritarian systems.The Anatomy of a Revolutionary Insurgency offers a strategic examination of modern authoritarianism and political resistance. It explains how revolutions begin, how resistance movements survive repression, and how authoritarian regimes ultimately lose control over the societies they govern.For readers interested in modern authoritarian regimes, political resistance strategy, revolutionary movements, mass protest movements, and the forces that shape political change, this book provides a clear analysis of how civilian-led movements confront modern autocracies-and sometimes defeat them. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Da: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
EUR 53,29
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Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Uganda is frequently described as one of the most stable countries in East Africa. For nearly four decades, regular elections, economic growth figures, and strong regional security partnerships have reinforced that narrative.The Myth of Stability examines the structure of political power in Uganda and the long-term institutional consequences of centralized rule. Kriss Namakola analyzes Ugandan politics from colonial state formation through independence, military regimes, and the consolidation of executive authority under prolonged leadership.This study situates Uganda within broader discussions of African governance, post-colonial state design, authoritarian durability, civil-military relations, patronage systems, and democratic institutional development. It explores how political authority is organized, how institutions evolve under concentrated power, and how economic and administrative systems adapt over time.Rather than focusing on personalities, the book concentrates on political structure: the civil service, the military, electoral processes, public finance, and the political economy of the modern Ugandan state.As Uganda approaches an eventual leadership transition, questions of institutional resilience, regime continuity, and governance reform become central. This book offers a structured analysis for readers of African politics, East African history, political science, and comparative governance. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Da: preigu, Osnabrück, Germania
EUR 38,55
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Aggiungi al carrelloTaschenbuch. Condizione: Neu. The Myth of Stability | The Invisible Cost of Museveni's One-Man Rule in Uganda and the Hoax of Peace | Kriss Namakola | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2026 | Kriss Namakola | EAN 9798224883578 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand.
Da: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germania
EUR 45,54
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Aggiungi al carrelloTaschenbuch. Condizione: Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - Uganda is frequently described as one of the most stable countries in East Africa. For nearly four decades, regular elections, economic growth figures, and strong regional security partnerships have reinforced that narrative.The Myth of Stability examines the structure of political power in Uganda and the long-term institutional consequences of centralized rule. Kriss Namakola analyzes Ugandan politics from colonial state formation through independence, military regimes, and the consolidation of executive authority under prolonged leadership.This study situates Uganda within broader discussions of African governance, post-colonial state design, authoritarian durability, civil-military relations, patronage systems, and democratic institutional development. It explores how political authority is organized, how institutions evolve under concentrated power, and how economic and administrative systems adapt over time.Rather than focusing on personalities, the book concentrates on political structure: the civil service, the military, electoral processes, public finance, and the political economy of the modern Ugandan state.As Uganda approaches an eventual leadership transition, questions of institutional resilience, regime continuity, and governance reform become central. This book offers a structured analysis for readers of African politics, East African history, political science, and comparative governance.