Now readers can make sense of the daily headlines with an examination of the sides and issues of evolving conflicts. This updated edition provides coverage of all of the hot conflict spots in our world today, background and history, new and added coverage of the war on terror, and up-to- date coverage on the Middle East, including Iraq.
* As Iraq continues to dominate the news, there is, unfortunately, no shortage of other trouble spots—this guide looks at conflicts around the globe * An accurate reference source for high school and college students, and a great overview for people who want more in-depth understanding of daily events
This book is about 20 years old, it has taught me a lot about other countries that I did not know. I have also learned that in the past 20 years nothing has changed...
Now that I’ve studied history more I realize that they left out quite a few things. The countries of the Ottoman Empire and Northern Africa were involved in a huge slavery ring that stole people from modern day Ukraine and Russia (we’re talking 10s of millions over the years) along with Italy and other nearby countries. It went on from the 1600’s to the late 1800’s and sometimes early 1900’s. We’ve all heard of Barbary Pirates but historians usually fail to mention that they were mostly pirating PEOPLE. Not a whisper of it was mentioned in this book. I don’t personally know how it influenced that part of the world-that’s why I bought a book about it. I could accept an articulate theory on it not affecting later politics but I thought not mentioning it at all was pretty questionable. It had a good summary of later politics so I still liked it.
A little dated, but that's what happens when you raid the second-hand sale at your local library. Bite size yet not so easily digestible tales of violence and atrocity. I can't get the Sierra Leone section out of my head – horrifying.