Culture of war, instability and sustained contemporary conflicts across African states

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36096/brss.v3i1.261

Keywords:

Sustained Conflict, Africa, War, Drivers

Abstract

Africa continues to witness sustained conflicts owing to a number of different reasons. Already, evidence shows that a majority of these conflicts have been driven by long-standing social- political and economic reasons. Yet a closer look at the conflicts reveals that they have not only transformed, but are now sustained by different actors, methods, and have different objectives. Traditionally, conflicts in Africa have been driven by issues such as natural resources and struggles for political and economic power. However, there are now new factors that are significantly fueling and sustaining violence and conflicts in many parts of Africa. The paper focuses on why there have been such sustained conflicts in Africa and largely categorizes them into two main classes- old and new. Kadlor’s New War Theory helps explain and distinguish these two categories of conflicts by pointing out the salient features in each. However, what cannot be categorized is the effects that these conflicts have previously had and continue to leave in the countries and populations in which they occur. These are also briefly discussed which highlights the implications - both short-term and long-term that these conflicts have in Africa. Through these discussions, perhaps a new way of conceptualization of the nature of conflicts in Africa can be developed. This guides the approaches and means to be used in their mitigation and ultimate resolution.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Addaney, M., & Lubaale, E. C. (2021). An Unintended Legacy: The External Policy Responses of the USA and European Union to Conflict Minerals in Africa. Laws, 10(2), 50.

Addaney, M., Nyarko, M. G., & Boshoff, E. (2019). Protection of the Environment and Natural Resources during Armed Conflicts in Africa. Chinese Journal of Environmental Law, 3(1), 85-115.

Ajah, B. O., Dinne, C. E., & Salami, K. K. (2020). Terrorism in contemporary Nigerian society: Conquest of Boko-Haram, myth or reality. International Journal of Criminal Justice Sciences, 15(2), 312-324.

Ajiboye, E. (2020). Polarisation and the sustenance of Biafra secessionist discourses online. Journal of Asian and African Studies, 55(4), 475-491.

Akiba, O. (2020). Making and Enforcing Peace through Mediation and Fire Power: A Retrospective on the Liberia Experience. In Preventive Diplomacy, Security, and Human Rights in West Africa (pp. 175-214). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.

Akpan, O., & Umoh, U. E. (2021). “Resource Curse” and “Resource Wars” and the Proliferation of Small Arms in Africa. The Palgrave Handbook of Small Arms and Conflicts in Africa, 245.

Ali, N. M. M. (2021). The correlation between the failure of intelligence structures and conflict: The Cabo Delgado case in Northern Mozambique.

Amnesty International. (2021). Sub-Saharan Africa: The devastating impact of conflicts compounded by COVID-19. Amnesty International. Retrieved from https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2021/04/subsaharan-africa-the-devastating-impact-of-conflicts-compounded/

Aremu, J. O. (2010). Conflicts in Africa: Meaning, causes, impact and solution. African research review, 4(4).

Aremu, J. O., & Buhari, L. O. (2017). Sense and senselessness of war: Aggregating the causes, gains and losses of the Nigerian Civil War, 1967-1970. IAFOR Journal of Arts & humanities, 4(1), 61-79.

Armstrong, D. A., Davenport, C., & Stam, A. (2020). Casualty estimates in the Rwandan genocide. Journal of genocide research, 22(1), 104-111.

Arrieta, I. R. G. (2017). When the outside is inside: International features of the Somali “civil” war. In The Horn of Africa since the 1960s (pp. 123-144). Routledge.

Baik, B., Even-Tov, O., Han, R., & Park, D. (2021). The Real Effects of Conflict Minerals Disclosures. Available at SSRN 3908233.

Bedford, J. (2019). Rwanda–DRC Cross Border Dynamics, April 2019.

Belay, T. (2019). Somalia: Conflict Insight.

Berman, N., Couttenier, M., Rohner, D., & Thoenig, M. (2017). This mine is mine! How minerals fuel conflicts in Africa. American Economic Review, 107(6), 1564-1610.

Candau, F., Gbandi, T., & Guepie, G. (2021). Beyond the income effect of international trade on ethnic wars in Africa. Economics of Transition and Institutional Change.

Dam-de Jong, D. (2020). ‘A Rough Trade’? Towards a More Sustainable Minerals Supply Chain. Brill Open Law, 2(1), 8-39.

David, O. A., & Ayegba, S. B. (2021). Uganda: The state and its struggle against the Lord’s Resistance Army. In The Routledge Handbook of Counterterrorism and Counterinsurgency in Africa (pp. 408-424). Routledge.

Day, C. R. (2019). “Survival mode”: rebel resilience and the lord’s resistance army. Terrorism and political violence, 31(5), 966-986.

De Waal, A., & Nouwen, S. M. (2021). The necessary indeterminacy of self?determination: Politics, law and conflict in the Horn of Africa. Nations and Nationalism, 27(1), 41-60.

Deberdt, R., & Le Billon, P. (2021). Conflict minerals and battery materials supply chains: A mapping review of responsible sourcing initiatives. The Extractive Industries and Society, 100935.

dos Santos, F. A. (2020). War in resource-rich northern Mozambique–Six scenarios. CMI Insight.

Frynas, J. G., & Buur, L. (2020). The presource curse in Africa: Economic and political effects of anticipating natural resource revenues. The Extractive Industries and Society, 7(4), 1257-1270.

Grant, J. A. (2020). Conflict-Prone Minerals, Forced Migration and Norm Dynamics in the Kimberley Process and ICGLR (pp. 197-217). Bristol: Bristol University Press.

Grynberg, R., & Singogo, F. K. (2021). Gold Smuggling and the Plunder of the DRC. In African Gold (pp. 247-278). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.

Guazzini, F. (2021). The Eritrean-Ethiopian Boundary Conflict: the Physical Border, the Human Border, and the Scars of History.

Hoeffler, A. (2008). Dealing with the Consequences of Violent Conflicts in Africa.

Iheka, C. N. (2021). Postcolonial Ecocriticism and African Literature: The Nigeria Civil War Example. Biafran War Database.

Ikhuoso, O. A., Adegbeye, M. J., Elghandour, M. M. Y., Mellado, M., Al-Dobaib, S. N., & Salem, A. Z. M. (2020). Climate change and Agriculture: The competition for limited resources amidst crop farmers-livestock herding conflict in Nigeria-A review. Journal of Cleaner Production, 123104.

Isheloke, B. E., & von Blottnitz, H. (2019). Dimensions of the coltan and cobalt resource curse in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In 9th international conference on sustainable development in the minerals industry (SDIMI 2019).

Kaldor, M. (1999). New and old wars: Organised violence in a global era. (1st edition). Cambridge: Polity Press.

Kaldor, M., 2013. In Defence of New Wars. Stability: International Journal of Security and Development, 2(1), p.Art. 4. doi: http://doi.org/10.5334/sta.at

Lisa, P., Christian, L., Karen, B., & Blake, W. (2021). Armed conflict and cross-border asymmetries in urban development: A contextualized spatial analysis of Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Gisenyi, Rwanda. Land Use Policy, 109, 105711.

Mathys, G. (2017). Bringing history back in: past, present, and conflict in Rwanda and the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. The Journal of African History, 58(3), 465-487.

McDoom, O. S. (2020). Contested counting: toward a rigorous estimate of the death toll in the Rwandan genocide. Journal of genocide research, 22(1), 83-93.

McGuirk, E. F., & Nunn, N. (2020). Transhumant Pastoralism, Climate Change, and Conflict in Africa (No. w28243). National Bureau of Economic Research.

Moro, L. N. (2018). Oil, economic development, and community in South Sudan. In South Sudan (pp. 38-56). Routledge.

Mroszczyk, J., & Abrahms, M. (2021). Terrorism in Africa: Explaining the Rise of Extremist Violence against Civilians. E-International Relations.

Mustapha, M., & Yerima, H. (2021). Somalia: State Collapse and the Proliferation of Small Arms and Light Weapons. In The Palgrave Handbook of Small Arms and Conflicts in Africa (pp. 863-877). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.

Norich University. (2017). Five major African wars and conflicts of the Twentieth Century. Academic Programs- Resources. Available at https://online.norwich.edu/academic-programs/resources/five-major-african-wars-and-conflicts-of-the-twentieth-century

Nwalu, O. A. (2020). The Nigerian Civil War and Border Question: 1966-1981. Akpauche: International Journal of Arts and Social Sciences, 1(2).

Nyadera, I. N. (2018). South Sudan conflict from 2013 to 2018: Rethinking the causes, situation and solutions. African Journal on Conflict Resolution, 18(2), 59-86.

Nyadera, I. N., & Ahmed, M. S. (2020). The Somali Civil War: Integrating Traditional and Modern Peacebuilding Approaches. Asian Journal of Peacebuilding, 8. Available at https://s-space.snu.ac.kr/handle/10371/168500

Nzongola-Ntalaja, G. (2004). From Zaire to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (2nd ed.). Uppsala, Sweden: Nordiska Afrikainstitutet.

Oghuvbu, E. A., & Oghuvbu, O. B. (2021). Farmer-Herders Conflict as a Challenge to National Unity in Nigeria. In Africa and the Formation of the New System of International Relations (pp. 217-226). Springer, Cham.

Ojaruega, E. E. (2021). From the Niger Delta’s viewpoint: The Nigerian Civil War literature. In The Literature and Arts of the Niger Delta (pp. 206-217). Routledge.

Okechukwu, A. T., Chikwado, N. K., & Michael, O. (2020). Herdsmen/Farmer Conflict, New Dimension of Violent Conflict in Nigeria: The Case of North Central Region 2014-2018.

Okoli, R. C., & Iwuamadi, K. C. (2021). State Failure and Clash of Civilisations in Somalia: Explaining the Interests and Interventions of External Actors. Journal of Somali Studies: Research on Somalia and the Greater Horn of African Countries, 8(1), 41-60.

Okpan, S., & Njoku, P. (2019). Evaluation of Corruption and Conflict in Nigerian Oil Industry: Imperative for Sustainable Development. International Journal of Sociology and Anthropology Research, 5(4), 14-26.

Oludimu, S., & Alola, A. A. (2021). Does crude oil output aid economy boom or curse in Nigeria? An inference from “Dutch disease”. Management of Environmental Quality: An International Journal. doi:10.1108/MEQ-03-2021-0049

Omaka, A. O. (2019). The Nigerian Civil War and the ‘Italian’Oil Workers. War & Society, 38(3), 203-224.

Onapajo, H., & Ozden, K. (2020). Non-military approach against terrorism in Nigeria: Deradicalization strategies and challenges in countering Boko Haram. Security Journal, 1-17.

Rapanyane, M. B. (2021). China’s involvement in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s resource curse mineral driven conflict: an Afrocentric review. Contemporary Social Science, 1-12.

Rexer, J., & Hvinden, E. (2020). Delta boys: Bargaining, war, and black market oil in Nigeria. Working Paper.

Roessler, P., & Verhoeven, H. (2017). Why comrades go to war: liberation politics and the outbreak of Africa's deadliest conflict. Oxford University Press.

Saka, L., Moh’d Sani, M. D. A., & Omede, A. J. (2021). The Niger Delta, oil politics and the Nigerian state. In Nigerian Politics (pp. 321-339). Springer, Cham.

Salako, S. E. (2020). Transnational Corporations, Natural Resources and Conflict. International Law Research, 9(1), 56-71.

Schomerus, M. (2021). The Lord's Resistance Army: Violence and Peacemaking in Africa. Cambridge University Press.

Schulte, M., & Paris, C. M. (2020). Blood diamonds: an analysis of the state of affairs and the effectiveness of the Kimberley Process. International Journal of Sustainable Society, 12(1), 51-75.

Simon, T. T. (2020). Mirroring the conflict situation of the oil-rich Niger Delta region of Nigeria on the screen: a thematic analysis of the film-black November. Galactica Media: Journal of Media Studies, (2), 123-146.

Sini, S., Abdul-Rahim, A. S., & Sulaiman, C. (2021). Does natural resource influence conflict in Africa? Evidence from panel nonlinear relationship. Resources Policy, 74, 102268.

Solomon, N., Birhane, E., Gordon, C., Haile, M., Taheri, F., Azadi, H., & Scheffran, J. (2018). Environmental impacts and causes of conflict in the Horn of Africa: A review. Earth-science reviews, 177, 284-290.

Solomon, N., Birhane, E., Gordon, C., Haile, M., Taheri, F., Azadi, H., & Scheffran, J. (2018). Environmental impacts and causes of conflict in the Horn of Africa: A review. Earth-science reviews, 177, 284-290.

Stapleton, T. (2018). Africa: War and Conflict in the Twentieth Century. United Kingdom, UK: Routledge.

Tafotie, J. R., & Idahosa, S. O. (2016). Conflicts in Africa and Major Powers: Proxy Wars, Zones of Influence or Provocative Instability. Vestnik RUDN. International Relations, 16(3), 451-460.

Tengu, Y. (2007). A biblical response to natural resource stewardship practices of the Democratic Republic of Congo from 1965-1997 (Unpublished master’s thesis). Nairobi, Kenya: Nairobi International School of Theology.

Tengu, Y. (2020). Empowering Public Institutions to Promote Good Governance for Sustainable Development: A Case Study of the National Parliament, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) (Doctoral dissertation, Pan Africa Christian University).

Tronvoll, K. (2020). ‘Brothers at Peace’: People-to-People Reconciliation in the Ethiopian–Eritrean Borderlands. War & Society, 39(1), 58-76.

Wapmuk, S. (2021). Sierra Leone: Civil War, Democratic Collapse and Small Arms Proliferation. In The Palgrave Handbook of Small Arms and Conflicts in Africa (pp. 847-862). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.

Winer, J. M. (2019). Origins of the Libyan Conflict and Options for its Resolution. Policy.

Zeleza, P. T. (2008). The Causes and Costs of War in Africa: From Liberation Struggles to the 'War on Terror'.

Downloads

Published

2021-10-31

How to Cite

Bakamana, D. B. . (2021). Culture of war, instability and sustained contemporary conflicts across African states. Bussecon Review of Social Sciences (2687-2285), 3(1), 28–35. https://doi.org/10.36096/brss.v3i1.261

Issue

Section

Society, Culture and Politics