Steven C. Roach is Professor and Distinguished Scholar of International Relations at the University of South Florida. A Fulbright Scholar (2020-21), he has written extensively on South Sudan's politics and published widely on international ethics and affairs. From 2019-2020, he served as Country Expert of USAID's Democracy, Human Rights, and Governance assessment team in South Sudan (2019-2020). Among his most recent books are International Relations: The Key Concepts, Fourth Edition (2022), Moral Responsibility in Twenty-First Century Warfare (2020), Decency and Difference (2019), and The Challenge of Governance in South Sudan (2019).
Steven C. Roach offers a piercing analysis of South Sudan's complicated history of hope, uncertainty and war as the South Sudanese seek to build a modern state in the aftermath of the landmark referendum of 2011. Roach's valuable insights are well-presented and the book provides an excellent perspective on an important subject that should concern us all. * Christopher Zambakari, Founder & CEO, The Zambakari Advisory L.L.C * In South Sudan's Fateful Struggle, Steven Roach presents the compelling case that the legacy of South-South war not only exacerbated ethnic violence and promoted the breakdown of law and order in South Sudan but continues to shape the political culture of its political class. Roach offers an innovative approach to the question of why South Sudan has reproduced the ugliness of its political history after declaring its independence in 2011. Tracing the history and politics of state formation and national liberation movement in South Sudan, Roach explains how the political violence and human sufferings that have occurred over the past decade, including ethnic violence, human rights abuses, and the proliferation of a culture of impunity and corruption, can only be understood considering this bitter legacy. * Amir H. Idris, Professor of African History and Politics, Fordham University (Lincoln Center Campus) * South Sudan's Fateful Struggle is a comprehensive investigation into South Sudan's civil war, tracing the challenges of fashioning a state from disparate communities and competing elites. Reflecting back through history the work sets out the trajectory for South Sudan since independence. Importantly, the work develops a concept of militarized patronage to explain the challenges and failures to build the world's newest state. Not all pessimism, however, the work explores the potential present with opportunities for hybrid justice and to pressure the government to implement a truth commission, war crimes court, and reparations commission. This is an important contribution to understanding South Sudan and state emergence more broadly and will be interesting to policy makers and scholars alike. * Matthew LeRiche, Director Global Leadership Center, Assistant Professor Global Studies, Ohio University * A superb, well-documented analysis. * Choice *