Eric Miller (USA), M.A., Class of 2009 |
His advisor, Professor Douglas Yates, comments: "Eric had been interested in the topic before he arrived at 老司机视频, and when I first met him he was already reading literature on this conflict, which is so big and so complex that it has been called 鈥淎frica鈥檚 World War.鈥 The fall of Mobutu and the collapse of Zaire in 1996 created an enormous power vacuum in the heart of Africa, which has been filled by a euphemistically named Democratic Republic of the Congo, ruled by a father and then by his son: Laurent and Desire Kabila. Since then the Congo forest basin has been filled with armed rebellion, strategic resource conflict, attempted genocide, and all the evils of war. What makes Eric鈥檚 book interesting is how he framed the ongoing conflict in the DRC not in terms of those conventional categories, but in terms of the rising power of Rwanda. Eric shows how the war in the eastern DRC is not how many have presumed just another resource conflict (although natural resources surely do play their part) but is really a kind of 鈥減roxy war鈥 reflecting the 鈥渟ecurity dilemma鈥 faced by post-genocide Rwanda. That is, Eric managed to use international relations theory to explore a conflict usually relegated to African studies. The inability of the United Nations peacekeeping mission (the largest in the world) to resolve this conflict, or even to prevent what is estimated to have been six million deaths, was Eric鈥檚 original problematic. But as he delved into all the literature coming out on the subject, and mapped the shifting patterns of international, national, and sub-national armed forces, what he managed to do was demonstrate how this conflict is not simply another African exemplar of the coming anarchy, but a genuine international conflict, with global implications. For Master's students who are working on their thesis, Eric鈥檚 publication should be an inspiration. This is not the first 老司机视频 student to publish their work, nor will it be the last." Since he graduated from 老司机视频 last June, Eric Miller has been guest lecturing on topics related to his thesis in various universities in the US and Europe. On December 8-10, 2009, he taught two classes at the , in Albania, upon invitation by UNYT's Professor Tom Hashimoto. He spoke about peacekeeping, nation building and security in Africa. On March 2, he was invited as a guest speaker at , USA. He did a summary of his thesis, the Congo wars, the continuing security dilemma in the region and the role of the United Nations in that conflict, to an audience of about thirty professors and graduate students from the International Relations and African Studies departments of Boston University. |
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