Revolutionary Sudan: Hasan Al-Turabi and the Islamist State, 1989-2000

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BRILL, 2003年1月1日 - 300 頁
This book investigates the objectives, activities, and a decade of success and failure by Islamist military officers and civilians to create the first Islamic government in Africa after the coup d'etat by Brigadier Omar Hasan Ahmad al-Bashir. It describes and analyzes the role played by Hasan al-Turabi in the Sudan, the world, and the revolutionary government from its relative isolation on the frontiers of Islam and the margins of the Arab World. It follows the activities of this ideological and activist leader of the revolution who used his influence as a charismatic Muslim scholar to precipitate an Islamic revolution until his downfall and expulsion from government in 2000 by those whom he had hoped to mold to his Islamist ideologies.
 

內容

Chapter One The Islamist Revolution
1
Chapter Two Foreign Policy Initiatives
25
Chapter Three The Return of Hasan alTurabi
55
Chapter Four The NIF Takes Charge
87
Chapter Five The United States and the NIF
109
Chapter Six State Sponsored Terrorism
130
Chapter Seven The French Connection
150
Chapter Eight The Islamic Conference the Middle East
164
Chapter Nine The Plot to Assassinate President
186
Chapter Ten Searching for Friends Surrounded
210
Chapter Eleven Arakis Oil and China
231
Chapter Twelve The End of an Islamist Experiment
253
Bibliography
281
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關於作者 (2003)

Robert O. Collins, emeritus professor of history at University of California, Santa Barbara, has written numerous books on the history of Africa, the Sudan, and the Nile. He has also worked as a professional river guide and has traversed most of the Nile.

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