Haile Selassie, Western Education, and Political Revolution in EthiopiaCambria Press |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 6-10 من 57
الصفحة
... Selassie's decision to introduce Western education into Ethiopia was the Japanese success in adoptingWestern methods and industrializing their country. However, both emperors had missed the fundamental differences in the sociopolitical ...
... Selassie's decision to introduce Western education into Ethiopia was the Japanese success in adoptingWestern methods and industrializing their country. However, both emperors had missed the fundamental differences in the sociopolitical ...
الصفحة
... Selassie's Ethiopia. Indeed, those who suggested—this includes many Westerneducated Ethiopians of the earlier generation—that Ethiopian traditional rulers could modernize the country without serious societal strains that might lead to ...
... Selassie's Ethiopia. Indeed, those who suggested—this includes many Westerneducated Ethiopians of the earlier generation—that Ethiopian traditional rulers could modernize the country without serious societal strains that might lead to ...
الصفحة
... Selassie, the church and the traditionally educated elite were, for all practical purposes, out of the political equation. The aristocracy, enfeebled by Haile Selassie's centralization efforts, was later almost wholly liquidated during ...
... Selassie, the church and the traditionally educated elite were, for all practical purposes, out of the political equation. The aristocracy, enfeebled by Haile Selassie's centralization efforts, was later almost wholly liquidated during ...
الصفحة
... Selassie's autocratic regime was status quo oriented42 in that it initially threw its weight behind the emperor and his throne43 and as the Ethiopian revolution kept on raging, it played a “sit and wait” game. It took a counter ...
... Selassie's autocratic regime was status quo oriented42 in that it initially threw its weight behind the emperor and his throne43 and as the Ethiopian revolution kept on raging, it played a “sit and wait” game. It took a counter ...
الصفحة
... Selassie's loyalists. By that time, the new generation of students had discovered the level of American cultural penetration and the first crack appeared not only in the tripartite alliance of the monarchy, the Western-educated class ...
... Selassie's loyalists. By that time, the new generation of students had discovered the level of American cultural penetration and the first crack appeared not only in the tripartite alliance of the monarchy, the Western-educated class ...
المحتوى
Chaos in the Imperial Palace | |
The Deluge | |
The New Junta and the Old Lion | |
Conclusion | |
from Military Junta to Ethnicity and Disintegration | |
Aftermath of the Revolution | |
The Revolution that Ate its own Children | |
Problem of Nationalities and the Eritrean Question | |
Cultural Penetration | |
WesternEducated Intelligentsia and the Abortive Coup détat | |
Student Power | |
The Fissure | |
Failure of a Panacea | |
Educational Policy and the Students Movement | |
Famine and Pestilence | |
Showdown by the Teachers | |
The Ascent of the Maquis | |
TPLF Double Cross | |
Democracy Versus Dictatorship | |
APPENDIX A | |
APPENDIX B | |
About the Author | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Addis Ababa Addis Zemen Africa air force Aklilu Habte Wold Amharic aristocratic armed forces army Asfa Wossen Asmara author’s survey questionnaire Berhanenna Selam civilian College of Addis Committee country’s cultural demands democratic Derg Derg members Derg’s economic Education in Ethiopia Education Sector Review elite emperor Endalkatchew enrollment Eritrea Ethiopian education Ethiopian school system Ethiopian students Ethiopian Teachers ethnic famine feudal feudal regime Gondar Government of Ethiopia government’s Haile Selassie Haile Selassie regime Haile Selassie University Higher Education Ibid Imperial institutions intelligentsia International Jesuits major Makonnen masses Mengistu Haile Mariam Military Administrative Council Ministry of Education NCOs negus organized Oromo palace peasants people’s police political population prime minister problem proclamation provinces Provisional Military Administrative radical rebels Report revolution revolutionary rural secondary school Selassie’s Sidamo social society soldiers started students and teachers Tigray TPLF U.S. Government Printing University College Wallo Washington workers