This pioneering study was first published in 1988. It examines the
effects of revolution on one of Africa's largest states. Christopher
Clapham traces the continuities between revolutionary Ethiopia and the
development of a centralised Ethiopian state since the nineteenth
century, emphasising the institutionalisation of the revolutionary
regime since 1978. He pays particular attention to the establishment of
a Leninist political party and its associated mass organisations, the
new apparatus of physical and economic control, and - critically
important in Ethiopia - the effects of revolution on agricultural
production. He also assesses the impact of revolution on national
integration and regional conflict, and the reversal of Ethiopia's
international alignment through alliance with the socialist states. A
postscript to the paperback edition outlines events in Ethiopia between
1987 and 1990.