Adrian Guelke

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adrian Guelke is Professor of Comparative Politics in the School of Politics, International Studies and Philosophy at Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland. He specialises in the study of ethnic conflict, particularly the cases of Northern Ireland, his native South Africa and Kashmir.

In 1991 he survived an assassination attempt at his Belfast home. Leon Flores, a member of South African Defence Forces' intelligence branch, doctored a police report into an academic at Queen's who was known to be invloved in the IRA, substituting Guelke's name into the report. Flores then contacted the Ulster Defence Association, who attempted to shoot Guelke. He was saved because the gun used by the would-be assassin jammed.[1]

Guelke has written and edited a large number of books on ethnic conflict, including New Perspectives on the Northern Ireland Conflict (1994), The Age of Terrorism and the International Political System (1995), South Africa in Transition: The Misunderstood Miracle (1999), and A Farewell to Arms?: From 'Long War' to Long Peace in Northern Ireland (2000, 2006).

[edit] References

  1. ^ Henry McDonald, The underbelly of a city of assassins, The Observer, 3 October 2004, accessed 17 September 2006

[edit] External link