This book presents research focusing on the Vietnam Nationalist Party
(Việt Nam Quốc dân đảng) from 1927 to 1954. It elaborates on the party’s
establishment, political ideology and organizational structure, the Yen Bai
Uprising, the party’s downfall, and its role in the Vietnamese Revolution.
Findings are presented systematically and comprehensively, relying on official
and unofficial, as well as domestic and foreign sources, including texts
from localities and hometowns of vital figures in the organization. The author
compares, contrasts and evaluates this complex collection of documents based on
the theoretical perspectives of conflict theory, social system theory, social
structuralism and functionism, dialectic materialism and Marxist theory. It is
essential reading for Vietnamese and international researchers interested in
Vietnam’s political context in the early twentieth century and for
undergraduate and postgraduate programs in Vietnam’s history and politics.