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- W2400677893 abstract "Figures like these underpin the importance of food supply as a tool for gaining popular support. The Roman Annona is perhaps an early example of such an overt attempt by the authorities to ‘buy’ the support from the masseshowever temporary that may be (Toussaint-Samat, 2009). As in any undertaking food is crucial because the lack of it prohibits the pursuit of success. Revolutionary groups are subject to this as much as anyone. If the group is small, to prosper it will need to have the goodwill of a support community prepared to hide and feed them and provide other essential logistical supports. This cannot be achieved without the group having a common cause with the host community. If the group is substantial in number then they will have to requisition stores and foodstuffs from the populace at large and this has the potential for causing the host community to turn against the armed revolutionary group. Therefore both situations are open to potential problems. A third scenario is one by which the armed revolutionary group liberates territory and the burden of provisioning both guerrillas and civilians fall to it as it has to behave as a de facto government with all the attendant logistical issues that comes with it; not least the inevitable conversion of important members of the group from military cadres to civilian functionaries. This essentially dilutes the group’s capability for armed struggle. This research project has, by necessity, relied on a wide ranging selection of secondary sources which has informed the direction of this paper. It studies provisioning within revolutionary movements with the aim of investigating the food pathway used by revolutionaries under arms. The immensely broad nature of such an undertaking has suggested a narrower focus and this has led to the author to decide to investigate two very different types of revolutionary warfare: Rural Guerrilla War as exemplified by the Cuban revolutionary war by the 26th of July Movement and their ‘Jungle War’ in the Sierra Maestra mountains in the 1950s or the Khmer Rouges in Cambodia in the 1970s and the PLAF (Viet Cong) in Vietnam in the 1960/70s. These revolutionary armies had different pressures on their food provisioning – sometimes they had conquered territory and were often acting as de facto governments or in contrast to that were a jungle -or wilderness-based army who emerged to attack the enemy and then melt back into the wild. Urban Guerrilla War as exemplified by armed insurrectionary groups such as the I.R.A. since the early nineteen hundreds and the Rote Armee Fraktion (BaaderMeinhof) (RAF) in 1970’s and 80’s. This is necessarily characterised by the anonymity of the revolutionary cadres Revolution: ‘A forcible overthrow of a government or social order, in favour of a new system’ (Pearsall 2001, p.1590)." @default.
- W2400677893 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2400677893 creator A5035842355 @default.
- W2400677893 date "2016-01-01" @default.
- W2400677893 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W2400677893 title "Guerilla Cuisine: A Comparison of Various Food Provisioning Methods of Revolutionary Forces in the Field" @default.
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