Review of African Political Economy
Contents Page for Volume 33 Number 108 (June 2006)
North Africa: Power, Politics and Promise
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Editorial
 North Africa: Power, Politics and Promise by Ray Bush and Jeremy Keenan175-184 
Articles
 Domination and Control in Tunisia: Economic Levers for the Exercise of Authoritarian Power by Béatrice Hibou185-206 
 The Political Contradictions of Algerian Economic Reforms by Lahouari Addi207-217 
 Libya: Reforming the Impossible? by Alison Pargeter219-235 
 State Welfare in Egypt Since Adjustment: Hegemonic Control with a Minimalist Role by Mariz Tadros237-254  
 Autonomy and Intifadah: New Horizons in Western Saharan Nationalism by Jacob Mundy255-267  
 Security and Insecurity in North Africa by Jeremy H Keenan269-296 
 America, China and the Scramble for Africa's Oil by Michael Klare and Daniel Volman297-309 
 'Between a Rock and a Hard Place': North Africa as a Region of Emigration, Immigration and Transit Migration by Martin Baldwin-Edwards311-324 
Briefings
 Darfur: Dying for Peace by Julie Flint325-327 
 Explaining the Darfur Peace Agreement by Justice Africa327-332 
 New Saharawi Poetry: A Brief Anthology by Liman Boicha and Zahra el Hasnaoui Ahmed333-335 
 Moroccan Autonomy for the Western Sahara: A Solution to a Decolonisation Conflict or a Prelude to the Dismantling of a Kingdom? by Malainin Lakhal, Ahmed Khalil, and Pablo San Martin336-341 
 Open Letter to His Majesty Mohamed VI by Silvio Pampiglione341-343 
 A Stain on Medical Ethics by Silvio Pampiglione343-345 
 Western Sahara: British Government to Fish in Illegal Waters by War on Want345 
 Truth and Justice After a Brutal Civil War: Algeria - the Women Speak by Wendy Kristianasen346-351 
 The African Union: Prospects for Regional Peacekeeping after Burundi and Sudan by Paul D Williams352-357 
 The European Commission Considers Gender and Security by Meredeth Turshen358-367 
 Tuareg Take Up Arms by Jeremy Keenan367-368 
Reviews
 Breakfast with Mugabe by Fraser Grace reviewed by Victoria Brittain369-370 
 Challenging Hegemony: Social Movements and the Quest for a New Humanism in Post-Apartheid South Africa by Nigel C Gibson reviewed by Carl Death371-372 

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