Review:
This thorough successor to Gordon Haliburton's 1977 work of the same title brings reference coverage of the Kingdom of Lesotho's complex history up to contemporary times and fills a long-standing gap in Africana. More than twice the size of its predecessor, it reflects the altered social conditions of the region during the past quarter century...Entries are clearly written, with detailed cross-references indicated in italics. A lengthy bibliography of recent publications greatly expands awareness of what has actually been written about Lesotho, while the chronology (a new and much-need resource) reaches from the early nineteenth-century formation of the Basotho kingdom through the coups of the 1990s to 2003, and is accompanied by maps and a royal genealogy. This work is most useful for college and university libraries supporting degree programs in political science, history, and African studies. * American Reference Books Annual * ...the new edition of Lesotho after a quarter of a century is very welcome....Overall, the potential strength of volumes in this series, that they provide fairly regularly revised coverage for many countries where up-to-date reference material in English is lacking or out-of-date, needs to be recognised. * African Research and Documentation * Twice as long as the first edition (ed. By Gordon Halliburton, 1977), this edition has been written by authors who have lived and worked in the country....Like other new editions in this series, this work should be included in reference collections that cover the countries of the world. Recommended. All collections. * CHOICE *
About the Author:
Scott Rosenberg is a professor of history at Wittenberg University in Ohio. He has returned to Lesotho a number of times to conduct research and has published three articles on Basotho culture and national identity. Richard F. Weisfelder is a professor of political science and former Chair of that department at the University of Toledo, Ohio, where he teaches African Politics, American Foreign Policy and International Relations. He has written extensively about Southern Africa, especially politics in Lesotho and the Southern African Development Community. Michelle Frisbie-Fulton lived in Lesotho in the early 1970s and is currently teaching history in Ball State University's Indiana prison degree program.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.