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Social Origins of the Iran-Iraq War

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Workman explores the origins of the Iran-Iraq war in terms of the sweeping socioeconomic transformations in both countries as they were drawn into the global economy.

The intense struggles among social forces unleashed by these changes undergirded the slide to war in 1980.

Also figuring prominently in the protracted war were the continuing sociopolitical struggles in both states, especially the process of revolutionary consolidation in Iran.

In the end, Workman concludes, the Iran-Iraq war significantly strengthened the regimes in Baghdad and Tehran and did little to lessen the oppression of subaltern social constituencies in either country - thus tending to confirm Thomas Paine's axiom that ""all wars are the art of conquering at home"".

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Product Details
Lynne Rienner Publishers Inc
1555874606 / 9781555874605
Hardback
955.05
31/03/1994
United States
200 pages
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More