Beyond Displacement: Campesinos, Refugees, and Collective Action in the Salvadoran Civil War
Synopsis
During the civil war that wracked El Salvador from the mid-1970s to the early 1990s, the Salvadoran military tried to stamp out dissidence and insurgency through an aggressive campaign of crop-burning, kidnapping, rape, killing, torture, and gruesome bodily mutilations. Even as human rights violations drew world attention, repression and war displaced more than a quarter of El Salvador's population, both inside the country and beyond its borders. Beyond Displacement examines how the peasant campesinos of war-torn northern El Salvador responded to violence by taking to the hills. Molly Todd demonstrates that their flight was not hasty and chaotic, but was a deliberate strategy that grew out of a longer history of collective organization, mobilization, and self-defense.
Publisher information
- Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
- ISBN: 9780299250041
- Number of pages: 306
- Dimensions: 226 x 149 x 22 mm
- Weight: 437g
- Languages: English
