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A ruler’s stroke can outlive a regime. Lines drawn to simplify empire split markets, harden identities, and make everyday life brittle. This book shows how postwar bargains turned into everyday frictions that invited strongmen, invited revolt, and set the stage for disasters we still inherit.
Across regions, it explains how colonial borders functioned as political technologies, why the Versailles settlement bred grievance, and how the Sykes-Picot Agreement and the Middle East Mandates fused imperial exploitation with administrative tidiness. It follows the knock-on effects of African partition, the export of Japanese imperialism, and the bureaucratic sorting that turned neighbours into problems. For readers of history, policy, and international affairs, it offers a clear framework for decoding interwar geopolitics and the mechanics of ethnic conflict history without getting lost in minutiae.
You will leave with a mental model for reading maps as arguments, not facts of nature: who benefits from a line, who pays, and how such choices travel across decades. For analysts, journalists, and curious citizens, it turns cartography from background noise into a tool for seeing the world anew.

A Map Drawn in Blood: How Colonial Borders Fueled Conflict

SKU: 9789347436147
₹1,250.00 Regular Price
₹1,000.00Sale Price
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  • Hardback   |   9789347436147 |   232pp

    Paperback   | 9789347436819  |   232pp

  • Tariq El-Masri

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