Citations:Máoist

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English citations of Máoist

1994 2006 2009 2015
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.

Adjective:

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  • 1994, Richard Louis Edmonds, chapter 4, in Patterns of China’s Lost Harmony: A survey of the country’s environmental degradation and protection[1], London: Routledge, →ISBN, page 77:
    Lakes in the Cháng River Valley have seen their navigable area shrink due to siltation from their tributary rivers and from misguided policy which forced peasants to fill in lakes and create crop land during the Máoist period.
  • 2006, Thomas C. Rowe, chapter 4, in Federal Narcotics Laws and the War on Drugs: Money Down a Rat Hole[2], New York: The Haworth Press, Inc., →ISBN, page 71:
    According to Goode (1997), this attempt led to the rise of the Sendero Luminoso (SL; Shining Path in English), a ruthless terrorist group formed by Abimael Guzman in the 1960s with the avowed aim of instituting a Máoist revolution.
  • 2009, Donald Frederick Butler, “Why Foreign Counterinsurgency Campaigns Fail”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name)[3], Knoxville: University of Tennessee, page 76:
    On the face of it, the social welfare strategy should have been a good choice for those campaigns since both British and American occupiers appeared to be confronting Máoist-style guerillas claiming to represent oppressed populations, and popularly supported indigenous governments such as the one which took power in Malaya during 1957 possess limited vulnerabilities for exploitation by Máoist ideologues (MacGillivray, 1958: 161; Biddle, 2006: 5-8).
  • 2015 April 14, Earl A. Pope, “Christian Diversity in China during the Past 200 Years: Post-Secular Visions and Their Scholarly Significance”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name)[4], Lafayette College, page 29:
    Subsequent political and cultural developments continued to indicate how previous Máoist standards for Chinese life (such as communes) had been superseded and replaced by alternatives forms of life (including in the first decade of the 21st century the renewal of private property rights and laws of inheritance).