Regionalism of armed groups and movements in Central Africa

2016 ◽  
pp. 179-194
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Natasha White

The past year has seen attention directed, both in policy discourse and the media, towards the implication of Central African non-state armed groups in poaching and ivory trafficking. Engaging with both mainstream political economy analyses and work on the “geographies of resource wars,” this paper turns to the case of ivory as a “conflict resource,” through the case study of the Lord’s Resistance Army. It begins by outlining the contextual specificities and conditions of access, before assessing the compatibility of the resource’s biophysical, spatial and material characteristics with the needs of regional armed groups and the LRA in particular. Though the direction of causality is difficult to untangle, the paper finds that poaching and the trade in ivory by armed groups in Central Africa appears to incur low opportunity costs for relatively high potential gains. Moreover, that ivory qualifies as a “conflict resource” under Le Billon’s (2008) definition in the extent to which it is likely to be implicated in the duration of conflict in the region, both financing and benefitting from a context of insecurity. Future research would benefit from more accessible and robust data; interesting avenues would include an evaluation of the effects of the increasing militarization of poaching strategies - including shoot-to-kill policies - and the potential of igniting grievance-based conflict.


Subject Regional security dynamics in Central Africa. Significance Two decades after regional interventions saw eastern Congo’s conflict evolve into what has been widely described as ‘Africa’s World War’, regional military interference appeared to be declining. However, this trend may be reversing, raising the spectre of a return to the days of regional proxy warfare, with Congo once again the fulcrum. Impacts Conflicts over land or control of illicit cross-border trade could quickly escalate. The proliferation of armed groups -- over 120 now operate in the Kivus alone -- will increase the volatility of the security situation. A more generalised wave of violence across the Kivus could even trigger open intervention by neighbouring countries.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sébastien Owona ◽  
Lothar Ratschbacher ◽  
Gulzar Afzal M ◽  
Moussa Nsangou Ngapna ◽  
Joseph Mvondo Ondoa ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sébastien Owona ◽  
Lothar Ratschbacher ◽  
Gulzar Afzal M ◽  
Moussa Nsangou Ngapna ◽  
Joseph Mvondo Ondoa ◽  
...  

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