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            Decolonization in Portuguese Africa: capitulo
            PT/AHS-ICS/DIV-02B-201705 · Item · 2018
            Parte de A Divulgação AHS/ICS-ULISBOA

            Aires Oliveira, Pedro. "Decolonization in Portuguese Africa." Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History. 24 May. 2017; https://oxfordre.com/africanhistory/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.001.0001/acrefore-9780190277734-e-41

            The dissolution of Portugal’s African empire took place in the mid-1970s, a decade after the dismantling of similar imperial formations across Europe. Contrary to other European metropoles, Portuguese rulers were unwilling to meet the demands for self-determination in their dependencies, and thus mobilized considerable resources for a long, drawn-out conflict in Angola, Guinea, and Mozambique from 1961 to 1974. Several factors can explain Lisbon’s refusal to come to terms with the “winds of change” that had swept Africa since the late 1950s, from the belief of its decision-makers that Portugal lacked the means to conduct a successful “exit strategy” (akin to the “neocolonial” approach followed by the British, the French, or the Belgians), to the dictatorial nature of Salazar’s “New State,” which prevented a free and open debate on the costs of upholding an empire against the anti-colonial consensus that had prevailed in the United Nations since the early 1960s.

            Taking advantage of its Cold War alliances (as well as secret pacts with Rhodesia and South Africa), Portugal was long able to accommodate the armed insurgencies that erupted in three of its colonies, thereby containing external pressures to decolonize. Through an approach that combined classic “divide and rule” tactics, schemes for population control, and developmental efforts, Portugal’s African empire was able to soldier on for longer than many observers expected. But this uncompromising stance came with a price: the armed forces’ dissatisfaction with a stalemate that had no end in sight. In April 1974, a military coup d’etat put an end to five decades of authoritarianism in the metropole and cleared the way for transfer of power arrangements in the five lusophone African territories. The outcome, though, would be an extremely disorderly transition, in which the political inexperience of the new elites in Lisbon, the die-hard attitude of groups of white settlers, the divisions among the African nationalists, and the meddling of foreign powers all played critical roles.

            PT/AHS-ICS/DIV-02B-201306 · Item · 2013-06
            Parte de A Divulgação AHS/ICS-ULISBOA

            Faria, A. M. & Pires, S. (2013). Os militares do MFA estacionados em África: de fazer a guerra para passar à descolonização. Encontro da Red(e) Ibero-Americana Resistência e(y) Memória (RIARM).; https://repositorio.iscte-iul.pt/bitstream/10071/16071/1/Os%20Militares%20do%20MFA%20estacionados%20em%20%C3%81frica.pdf

            É hoje consensual na análise historiográfica da revolução portuguesa de 1974 a identificação não só guerra mas também do “problema colonial” como questões que rapidamente se tornaram no “centro das atenções” do processo conspirativo militar (Rezola, 2007: 35 e nota 4), contrariando uma leitura da preparação do golpe militar que evoluiu das motivações de ordem corporativa dos oficiais de média patente para motivações de ordem mais especificamente política.

            PT/AHS-ICS/DIV-02B-201311 · Item · 2013-11
            Parte de A Divulgação AHS/ICS-ULISBOA

            Maria Paula Meneses e Catarina Gomes. 2013. "Regressos? Os retornados na (des)colonização portuguesa" in Maria Paula Meneses e Bruno Sena Martins (orgs), As Guerras de Libertação e os Sonhos Coloniais, pp. 59-107; https://estudogeral.uc.pt/bitstream/10316/42480/1/Regressos_Os%20retornados%20na%20des%20coloniza%C3%A7%C3%A3o%20portuguesa.pdf

            A ideia de ampliação e renovação imperial, implícita nos versos de Camões, reflete, alguns séculos mais tarde, a manutenção dos propósitos imperiais de Portugal em ‘África’, agora na sequela da ‘perda’ das Índias e do Brasil (Alexandre, 2000). A história é um terreno de disputas; e este fato é particularmente visível na África Austral, onde situações de colonialismo, apartheid e guerras de libertação nacional se mesclaram nas últimas cinco décadas, ao que se seguiram vários conflitos armados, incluindo guerras civis. Neste sentido, a compreensão dos conflitos que marcaram a história do cone austral do continente africano na segunda metade do século XX exige uma abordagem crítica à construção da história – nacional, regional, coletiva, pessoal – e uma análise do porquê de
            tantos segredos preservados e de tantos mitos constituídos.

            PT/AHS-ICS/DIV-02B-2018-07 · Item · 2018-07
            Parte de A Divulgação AHS/ICS-ULISBOA

            Cahen, Michel, 2018, “The war as seen by Renamo. Guerrilla politics and the ‘move to the North’ at the time of the Nkomati Accord (1983-1985),” in The War Within. New Perspectives on the Civil War in Mozambique, 1976-1992, eds. Eric Morier-Genoud, Michel Cahen e Domingos do Rosário (Martlesham: James Currey/Boydell and Brewer, 2018), 100-46

            Resumo do livro:
            The 1976-1992 civil war which opposed the Government of Frelimo and the Renamo guerrillas (among other actors) is a central event in the history of Mozambique. Aiming to open up a new era of studies of the war, this book re-evaluates this period from a number of different local perspectives in an attempt to better understand the history, complexity and multiple dynamics of the armed conflict. Focusing at local level on either a province or a single village, the authors analyse the conflict as a "total social phenomena" involving all elements of society and impacting on every aspect of life across the country. The chapters examine Frelimo and Renamo as well as private, popular and state militias, the Catholic Church, NGOs and traders. Drawing on previously unexamined sources such as local and provincial state archives, religious archives, the guerrilla's own documentation and interviews, the authors uncoveralternative dimensions of the civil war. The book thus enables a deeper understanding of the conflict and its actors as well as offering an explanatory framework for understanding peacemaking, the nature of contemporary politics,and the current conflict in the country