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Full Description
Essays on the security challenges faced by African states.
The central concern that shapes this edited volume is the nature of the African state. Contributors point to an interesting intersection of domestic and external issues that is framed as a glocalized security situation. Individual chapters shed new insights on conflict drivers through case studies on Sierra Leone, Cameroon, Mali, Nigeria, and Somalia, as well as broader issues on the nature of African states. Arguments pivot on three issues, which show the intersection of the domestic and external forces that render the African state as a glocal problem: (a) the colonial roots of the state, (b) problems of governance, and (c) international and regional security imperatives. By problematizing the African state and connecting the security challenges of African states to colonialism, patrimonial rule, and geopolitical security issues, African States brings forth a new way of examining African states through the notion of glocalized security.
Contents
Introduction: The Glocal Security Challenges of the African State
Abu Bakarr Bah
1. The Stability of Instability in Africa: Glocalization, Colonial Borders, and the Limits of Conflict Resolution
Ian S. Spears
2. The Anglophone War of Secession in Cameroon: Domestic Problem, Extra-National Challenges, and Shared Responsibility
Walters Tohnji Samah
3. Domestic and External Militarization under Democratic Governance: The Case of Sierra Leone
Abu Bakarr Bah and Kassandra Gonzalez
4. Boko Haram and Glocalization of Child Soldier Recruitment in Nigeria
Mary-Jane Fox
5. International Responses to the Glocalized Conflict in Mali
Matthew Pflaum
6. Explaining Piracy: From State Failure to Glocalized Security
Keunsoo Jeong
7. Foreign Military and Security Bases: Implications for the Practice of Peace and Security in Africa
Sebastian Angzoorokuu Paalo and John-Paul Safunu Banchani
About the Contributors
Index