Paula Cristina Roque PhD has worked for the Crisis Management Initiative, the International Crisis Group, and the Institute for Security Studies. She is a founding member of the South Sudan Center for Strategic and Policy Studies, and author of Governing in the Shadows: Angola's Securitised State, also published by Hurst.
‘A leading expert in African liberation movements, Roque has the outstanding analytical ability to unpack the complexity of insurgencies’ ethnic politics, rebel leadership and liberation power dynamics. This is a work of an accomplished hand in the field of African liberation politics.’ -- <b>Dr John Gai Yoh, former Minister of Education, Science and Technology of the Republic of South Sudan</b> ‘Based on remarkable in-depth field research, this is a timely, solid and well-informed book. An important contribution to the current literature on rebel governance and to the history of the Cold War in Africa.' -- <b>Didier Péclard, Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science and International Relations, University of Geneva, and co-editor of <i>Negotiating Statehood: Dynamics of Power and Domination in Africa</i></b> ‘A provocative, vital addition to comparative work on rebel governance. It places a hard won, deeply researched account of rebel agency at the heart of its analysis, offering us fresh understandings of the distinctive governing projects and legacies of the SPLM/A and UNITA.’ -- <b>Jocelyn Alexander, Professor of Commonwealth Studies, University of Oxford</b> ‘In a comparative study of Angola’s UNITA and South Sudan’s SPLM/A, Roque deploys fine-grained evidence based on assiduous fieldwork to address the question of when and why non-state armed groups start to act like states.’ -- <b>Justin Pearce, Senior Lecturer in History, Stellenbosch University, and author of <i>Political Identity and Conflict in Central Angola, 1975-2002</i></b> ‘Insurgent Nations offers valuable new insights that advance our understanding of “parallel states”. Roque is right on target in posing the central question for all studies of rebel governance, one that some overlook: how is force converted into authority? A significant contribution.’ -- <b>Nelson Kasfir, Emeritus Professor of Government, Dartmouth College, and editor of <i>Civil Society and Democracy in Africa: Critical Perspectives</i></b>