ID | 152958 |
Title Proper | Back to the future – people’s war in the 21st century |
Language | ENG |
Author | Marks, Thomas A ; Rich, Paul B |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This issue of Small Wars and Insurgencies focuses on the continuing importance of Maoist and post-Maoist concepts of people’s war. It has assembled a collection of papers that addresses various examples from around the world, with an emphasis on South America, where the premier illustration, that of Colombia’s FARC, was Marxist-Leninist but not Maoist, yet embraced the form and strategy of people’s war in a bid which at one point had the state in a critical situation. The collection comes in the wake of previous papers published in this journal on politically Maoist insurgent movements in South Asia, notably Mika Kerttuenen’s study of Maoist insurgents in Nepal and Prem Mahadevan’s survey of Maoist insurgencies in India and their links to organized crime (Kerttunen, “A Transformed Insurgency,” 78–118; Mahadevan, “The Maoist Insurgency in India,” 203–20). The papers confirm that people’s war remains an important analytical framework in the study of small wars and insurgencies, for some even a ‘model’ through which to understand distinct types of insurgent movements and their strategies. |
`In' analytical Note | Small Wars and Insurgencies Vol. 28, No.3; Jun 2017: p.409-425 |
Journal Source | Small Wars and Insurgencies Vol: 28 No 3 |
Key Words | Maoism ; Bolivia ; Mao Zedong ; Ho Chi Minh ; FARC ; Che Guevara ; Vo Nguyen Giap ; Sendero Luminoso ; People’s War ; Lin Biao ; Mass Line |