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Omar Al-Bashir and Africa's Longest War

Page 33

by Paul Moorcraft

13. Independent National Figures.

  14. Representatives of the Liberated Areas.

  15. Sudanese National Party.

  5. According to Collins’s account, op. cit., p.253.

  Chapter 8: The War in the West: Darfur

  1. Rob Crilly, Saving Darfur: Everyone’s Favourite African War (Reportage Press, London, 2010) p.219.

  2. Julie Flint and Alex de Waal, Darfur: A New History of a Long War (Zed, London, 2008).

  3. Cockett, op. cit., p.218.

  4. For a poor translation in English of his views, see his Chad in a Changing World (No publishing details, c. 2012).

  Chapter 9: The ICC and Sudan

  1. Terence McNamee, The ICC and Africa (Conference Proceedings, Brenthurst Foundation, Johannesburg, April 2014).

  Chapter 10: The Fall of the Republic

  1. Cockett, op. cit., p.257.

  2. As Director of the Centre for Foreign Policy Analysis, I had organized six London conferences on Sudan and especially Darfur, usually in tandem with the Royal United Services Institute, Britain’s oldest and most distinguished security think tank. It was amazing how bitter enemies at home would take tea together in London and reminisce fondly about old times at school or college. I was invited to lead an observer team by a range of government and anti-government politicians, some of whom had found the conferences useful.

  3. Mareike Schomerus and Tim Allen, Southern Sudan at Odds with Itself: Dynamics of conflict and predicaments of peace (Development Studies Institute, LSE, London, 2011).

  Select Bibliography

  Akol, Lam, Southern Sudan: Colonialism, Resistance and Autonomy (Red Sea Press, Asmara, 2007).

  Allen, Tim, Trial Justice: The International Criminal Court and the Lord’s Resistance Army (Zed, London, 2006).

  Cockett, Richard, Sudan: Darfur and the Failure of an African State (Yale University Press, London, 2010).

  Collins, Robert O., A History of Modern Sudan (Cambridge University Press, New York, 2010).

  Copnall, James, A Poisonous Thorn in our Hearts: Sudan and South Sudan’s Bitter and Complete Divorce (Hurst, London, 2014).

  Crilly, Rob, Saving Darfur: Everyone’s Favourite African War (Reportage Press, London, 2010).

  Flint, Julie and Alex de Waal, Darfur: A New History of a Long War (Zed, London, 2008).

  Johnson, Douglas H., The Root Causes of Sudan’s Civil Wars: Peace or Truce (James Currey, Wodbridge, Sussex, 2011).

  LeRiche, Matthew and Matthew Arnold, South Sudan: From Revolution to Independence (Hurst, London, 2012).

  Moorcraft, Paul, ‘Sudan: the Bin Laden Connection’ in Paul Moorcraft, Gwyn Winfield and John Chisholm, eds, Axis of Evil: The War on Terror (Pen and Sword, Barnsley, UK 2004).

  – ‘Sudan: End of the Longest War?’ RUSI Journal, February 2005.

  – Inside the Danger Zones: Travels to Arresting Places (Biteback, London, 2010).

  – and Philip M. Taylor, Shooting the Messenger: The Politics of War Reporting (Biteback, London, 2011).

  Moorehead, Alan, The White Nile (Penguin, London, 1983).

  Natsios, Andrew S., Sudan, South Sudan and Darfur: What Everyone Needs to Know (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2012).

  Nichol, Fergus, Gladstone, Gordon and the Sudan Wars (Pen and Sword, Barnsley, UK, 2013).

  Patey, Luke, The New Kings of Crude: China, India and the Global Struggle for Oil in Sudan and South Sudan (Hurst, London, 2014).

  Royle, Trevor, Orde Wingate: A Man of Genius (Frontline, London, 2010).

  Salmon, Jago, Paramilitary Revolution: Popular Defence Forces (Small Arms Survey, Geneva, 2007).

  Schomerus, Mareike and Tim Allen, Southern Sudan at Odds with Itself: Dynamics of conflict and predicaments of peace (Development Studies Institute, LSE, London, 2011).

  Scroggins, Deborah, Emma’s War: Love, Betrayal and Death in the Sudan (Harper Collins, London, 2003).

  Waddell, Nicholas and Phil Clark, Courting Conflict: Justice, Peace and the ICC in Africa (Royal African Society, London, 2008).

  Wolff, Steffan, ‘South Sudan’s Year One: Managing the Challenges of Building a New State’, RUSI Journal, October/November 2012.

  Young, John The Fate of Sudan: The Origins and Consequences of a Flawed Peace Process (Zed, London, 2012).

 

 

 


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