Insurgency in East and Central Africa: Trends and Inter-Connectivity

Authors

  • Cyril Anaele DEPARTMENT OF PEACE AND CONFLICT STUDIES SALEM UNIVERSITY, LOKOJA

Keywords:

insurgency ecology, cultural cum territorial homogeneity, external provisioning, net-working and complicity

Abstract

Plethora of literatures abound on insurgencies that swept away many regimes in East and Central Africa, but not without protracted internecine civil wars, some stretching from 1980s to 2000s. The typologies, propitious triggers, including the economic, social and political paraplegia it inflicted on the States under insurgency attacks have been widely published. The loss in population is equally disheartening. This paper differs from previous works in that it seeks instead, to capture the parallelism through the parallax of interconnectivities cutting across insurgency groups and regimes under insurgency jaws (regardless of type, demand, objective and country).

These interconnectivities, albeit multi-faceted and convoluted, when properly grasped, this paper further argues, will advance our existing state of knowledge on the reasons behind the boldness and success of warlords using insurgency route to power. The paper argues that there are labyrinths of interwoven connectedness in the study of insurgency in East and Central Africa. These inter-related dynamics ,  if adequately understood  will be instructive to governments in preventing future rise of insurgency for the much desired peace, necessary for sustenance of development.

 

References

• Journals

• Anaele, C “State, Conflict and Violence in Contemporary Post Colonial States of Africa†in Journal of Social Science, Salem University, Lokoja: Vol.1, No 1, 2012 pp 156 – 160

• Asiwaju, A “Migration and Revolt: The Example of Ivory Coast and the Upper Volta before 1945†in Journal of African History 17(4), (1976) pp 577 – 5943 Block, R (1994) “The Tragedy in Rwanda†The New York Review, 3 – 8.

• Block, R “The Tragedy in Rwanda†The New York Review, 1994, 3 – 8.

• Chege, M “Between Africa’s Extremes†Journal of Democracy 1995, 6: 44 – 51

• 5Ihonvbere, J “Theâ€Irrelevant†State, Ethnicity and the Quest for Nationhood in Africa†in Ethnic and Racial Studies 17(1) 1994, pp 42 – 60

• Kaplan, R “The Coming Anarchyâ€, Atlantic Monthly, 273 (2) 1994, pp 44 – 76

• Munro, W “Power, Peasants and Political Development: Reconsiderating State Construction in Africa†Comparative Studies in Society and History 38,1, 1996, pp 112 – 138

• Zolberg, A “The Specter of Anarchy: African States Verging on Disslotionâ€Dissent 39:3 ,1964,303 – 8

• Books

• Adekanye, B Linking Conflict Diagnosis, Conflict Prevention, and Conflict Management in Africa: Selected Essays Lagos:Ababa Press, 2007

• Brass, P Ethnicity and Nationalism: Theory and Comparison. London: Sage Publications.1991

• Crawford, Y The Politics of Ethnic Pluralism, Madison: University of Winscosin Press,1976

• Egwu, S “Beyond†Revival of Old Hatredsâ€: The State and Conflict in Africa†in Gaya Best, G (ed) Introduction to Peace and Conflict Studies in West Africa, Ibadan: Spectrum Books, 2006 pp 406 – 437

• Horowitz, D Ethnic Groups in Conflict, Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of Califonia Press, 1985

• Hyden, G “Reciprocity and Governance in Africaâ€. In The Failure of the Centralised State and Self-Governance in Africa, Wunch J and Olowu, D (eds.) Boulder: Westview.1990 pp 245 – 269

• Ngoga, P “Uganda: The National Resistanve Army†in African Guerrilla Clapman, C(ed) Kampala: Fountain Publishers, 1998 pp 91 – 106

• Nnoli, O Ethnic Politics in Africa, Ibadan: Vintage Publishers, 1989

• Vansina, J Paths in the Rainforest: Toward a History of Political Tradition in Equatorial Africa. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1990

• Zartman, I (ed) Collapsed States: the Disintegration and Restoration of Legitimate Authority, Boulder: Rienner Lienner

• Zartman W “Introduction: Posing the Problem of State Collapse†Collapsed States: The Disintergation and Restoration of Legtimate Authority, ed. Zartman, W. Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1995 pp 1 – 11.

Downloads

Published

2014-02-15

How to Cite

Insurgency in East and Central Africa: Trends and Inter-Connectivity. (2014). Asian Journal of Humanities and Social Studies, 2(1). https://ajouronline.com/index.php/AJHSS/article/view/572

Similar Articles

41-50 of 94

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.