Legacies of the 1974 Ethiopian Revolution: Empire and Embattled Statehood
By (Author) Etana H. Dinka
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Zed Books Ltd
18th October 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
African history
Hardback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Fifty years after the 1974 Ethiopian revolution, Etana H. Dinka brings together a whos-who of modern Ethiopian studies in order to offer this long-overdue analysis of the revolution and its legacies. With contributions both from seasoned academicsmany of whom wrote about the revolution as it developedand from representatives of a younger generation, this five-part collection offers new insights not only into the revolution itself, but also into issues such as the Red Terror, the EPRDF revolution of 1991, and Abiy Ahmeds repositioning of Ethiopia after 2018. Such wide-ranging analyses cumulatively cast Ethiopias three successive post-revolution regimes not as separate entities, but rather as successive attempts to fulfil the promise of the revolution surrounding issues such as ethnicity, the nationalities question, economic development, and the land tenure question. In developing this model, the collection captures the defining developments and issues in Ethiopia, the Horn, and the Red Sea region over the past fifty years, and it speaks directly to a global body of knowledge about revolutions; state-making projects and empires; and militarism and military interventions in politics.
A unique collection ultimately expands the historical revolutionary analyses of Ethiopian politics and society to the present in order to suggest new ways of ensuring social, economic, and environmental justice for all, this book is a must-read for researchers and upper-level students interested in Ethiopia, the Horn of Africa, African Studies, and revolutionary politics and economics in general.
Etana H. Dinka is an Assistant Professor of History at James Madison University, USA, where he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in African and world histories. He is the author of Society, Revolution and Military Intervention in Ethiopian Politics (2011). His research articles and book reviews appeared in multiple international peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of African History, Northeast African Studies, African Studies Review, the Journal of Oromo Studies, and FCH Annals.