Small Wars & Insurgencies | 2019
Notes on Contributors
Abstract
Takawira Chatambudza has a BA (War Studies) from the University of Zimbabwe. He teaches History at Ryswick College in Zimbabwe and is currently researching ZPRA operations in Mashonaland West during the liberation war of Zimbabwe. Mediel Hove is a research associate at the International Centre of Nonviolence and Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa and an Associate Professor of war and strategic studies in the History Department at the University of Zimbabwe. His research interests include: conflict, peace, human and state security and strategic studies. Enock Ndawana is a PhD candidate in the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Johannesburg, South Africa and a temporary lecturer in the History Department, University of Zimbabwe. His research interests encompass human security, African peace and politics, gender and conflict, conflict resolution and transformation. He has authored and co-authored articles in journals including African Security Review, African Security, Migration and Development and Journal of African Military History. Fenja Søndergaard Møller is currently a PhD candidate at the Department of Political Science, Aarhus University. Her research focuses on state legitimacy and how it affects the likelihood of intrastate conflict. She has studied legitimacy in Middle Eastern monarchies and African provinces. Fausto Scarinzi is lecturer in Politics & International Relations at the University of Reading. His research interests focus on IR theory, International Security and Security Studies. Moreover, she has work experience from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark, Ministry of Finance of Denmark and NGO’s in Liberia, Tanzania and South Africa. Amos Zevure is a curator at the Zimbabwe Military Museum and graduate of War and Strategic Studies from the University of Zimbabwe. His research interests include the role of media in warfare and military history. Jangkhomang Guite teaches modern Indian history at the Centre for Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, NewDelhi. His research explores the history of the Indo-Myanmar borderland, ranging from tribal studies, memory studies, economic, social and cultural history to military history of the region. He has published some original articles related to his area of research in different refereed journals such as on tribal ‘raids’, First and Second World Wars in SMALL WARS & INSURGENCIES 2019, VOL. 30, NO. 2, 487–488 https://doi.org/10.1080/09592318.2018.1558483