Tag: state legitimacy

  • Eritrea at Year’s End: Between Endurance and Exhaustion

    Eritrea at Year’s End: Between Endurance and Exhaustion

    As another year closes—the thirty‑fourth since independence—Eritrea stands as a nation defined by contradiction. It is a country that endured colonial rule, international machinations, a short‑lived annexation disguised as a “UN‑supervised federation,” Cold War rivalries, a brutal thirty‑year liberation struggle, a devastating border war, and repeated regional upheavals, yet still struggles to define peace on

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  • Horn of Africa: A Unity Deferred: Between Memory and Possibility

    Horn of Africa: A Unity Deferred: Between Memory and Possibility

    The Horn of Africa remains one of the world’s most fragile political landscapes. State legitimacy is contested, nation-building is stalled or unraveling, and war routinely eclipses peace. Ethiopia and Sudan, its two largest states, are engulfed in civil war and political upheaval. Somalia continues to fracture, with little more than nominal central authority. Eritrea and

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