Western Sahara conflict: historical, regional and international dimensions
Ali Bahaijoub’s Western Sahara Conflict: Historical, Regional and International Dimensions analyzes the Western Sahara dispute from colonial times to the present, focusing on Spain’s withdrawal, Morocco’s and Mauritania’s claims, and the Polisario Front’s struggle for self-determination. It examines how regional rivalries, especially between Morocco and Algeria, and international involvement by the UN, major powers, and neighboring states have prolonged the conflict. Bahaijoub argues that legal disputes, shifting diplomacy, and the lack of a credible referendum have kept the issue unresolved despite decades of negotiation.
Full book
Western Sahara conflict _ historical, regional andSupport our work
Support our work
Support our work with a one-off or monthly donation
AuthorAli BahaijoubYear2010Pages492LanguageEnglish
Share via
Related resources
The Western Sahara Dispute: A Cautionary Tale for Peacebuilders
The UN and MINURSO have succeeded neither inconducting a referendum nor in…
Western Sahara as a Hybrid of a Parastate and a State-in-Exile: (Extra)territoriality and the Small Print of Sovereignty in a Context of Frozen Conflict
Within the liminal universe of parastates, what makes Western Sahara/SADR…
The Front Polisario Verdict and the Gap Between the EU’s Trade Treatment of Western Sahara and Its Treatment of the Occupied Palestinian Territories
Morocco’s control over Western Sahara and Israel’s control of the West Bank…