Journal Article

44

Piecing it Together: Post-Conflict Security in an Africa of Networked, Multilevel Governance

Published on 8 January 2013

How do, could and should institutions responsible for security and the management of conflict in Tropical African societies respond to violent conflict? This IDS Bulletin is built on the observation that all governance (especially in Africa) is multileveled and networked – from the village to the international organisation, well beyond what is specified in formal government structures.

Thus the focus must be not only on the ways in which key conflict-management institutions evolve themselves but also on the changing ways in which the networks where they are embedded actually operate. This issue is about post-conflict reconstruction and the rebuilding of shattered states and societies, presenting fieldwork from articles covering the Democratic Republic of Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Mozambique and Somalia.

Post-conflict governance systems have become more multileveled and networked than in the immediate post-independence era, and these local systems and the resolution of their problems, are key to the restoration of order. International actors are also central, as their prominence in networks ensures resources for reconstruction and development.

Their presence means that a country’s president no longer has the ability to set priorities and control the distribution of resources, and therefore local leaders, professionals, national NGOs and churches can challenge the president over policy and politics in a way that they could not previously. But this IDS Bulletin finds that these new or revitalised networks do not challenge the state as an institution itself – ultimately the key links in these networks are individuals and organisations that are embedded in the state and will not challenge its existence, unity or effectiveness.

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Table of contents

Preface David K. Leonard

Social Contracts, Networks and Security in Tropical Africa Conflict States:   An Overview David K. Leonard

Insecurity and Local Governance in Congo’s South Kivu Ferdinand Mugumo Mushi

A Village-Up View of Sierra Leone’s Civil War and Reconstruction James Bibi Maiah Vincent

Reconstructing Political Order Among the Somalis: The Historical Record in the South and Centre David K. Leonard and Mohamed Samantar

Coordinating Development in Conflict States: Donor Networks in Somalia Anna Schmidt

The Dynamics of Restraint in Côte d’Ivoire Jeremy Allouche and Patrick Anderson Zadi Zadi

Democracy, Liberty and Montesquieu: Constructing Accountable Order in African Conflict States  David K. Leonard

Security in an Africa of Networked, Multilevel Governance  Completed Research Papers

Authors

David Leonard

Visiting Fellow

Jeremy Allouche

Professorial Fellow

Publication details

published by
IDS
authors
Leonard, D.
journal
IDS Bulletin, volume 44, issue 1

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