Everyday Politics in the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya with Matteo Capasso

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athompson

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Everyday Politics in the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya with Matteo Capasso


In this episode we’ll host a live discussion with Matteo Capasso about his book Everyday Politics in the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. Come through and join us in the chat to ask Matteo some questions of your own if you like.

Matteo Capasso is the editor of Middle East Critique. He is the author of Everyday Politics in the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya….

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8 Comments

  1. Thank you so much for bringing us these key geopolitical knowledge from Capasso´s work 🌟 Absolutely necessary in order to liberate ourselves from our western-highjacked minds: So liberating! In the struggle with you for our ideological emancipation, and freedom from the evils of empire! United we will be free 🌟✊🏽

  2. Great conversation. I've really appreciated Matteo's contributions on the anti-imperialist podcast circuit in the past months, and it was insightful to hear about how his thinking and research developed over time. I'm from former Yugoslavia, so I can relate on various levels. Thank you both so much!

  3. That line is pretty foundational to Western academia and research. "Thank you Nato, I have a book. Thank you Nato, I have funding. Thank you Nato, I have materials for research. Thank you Nato, we can work on clean energy" and on and on and on.

  4. Libyan society was built from transSaharan logistics or caravans.
    Salt, gold, migrants to Europe, all had to pass through.
    so yes, Libya as a coherent assortment of tribal institutions
    was dependent on the Sahel, which the north atlantic failed to understand.