Brief

IDS Practice Paper in Brief 19

Return of the Rebel: Legacies of War and Reconstruction in West Africa’s Ebola Epidemic

Published on 1 February 2015

The spread of Ebola in West Africa centres on a region with a shared recent history of transnational civil war and internationally led post-conflict reconstruction efforts. This legacy of conflict and shortcomings in the reconstruction efforts are key to understanding how the virus has spread.

The dynamics of warfare tied into and accentuated the state’s remoteness from many people. Ebola has simply unmasked persisting deep public suspicion and mistrust of the state, laying bare the limits of post-conflict reconstruction to transform state-society relations. The reconstruction emphasis on rehabilitating pre-existing governance structures – such as the paramount chieftancy in Sierra Leone – did not redress deeply rooted social inequalities, with the result that many people have been marginalised. Ebola’s impacts threaten to undo some of the advances made since the wars ended in Sierra Leone and Liberia, yet there are critical lessons to learn about how to better support societies shaped by violence and war.

Cite this publication

Lind, J. and Ndebe, J. (2015) Return of the Rebel: Legacies of War and Reconstruction in West Africa’s Ebola Epidemic, IDS Practice Paper in Brief 19, Brighton: IDS

Authors

Jeremy Lind

Professorial Fellow

Publication details

published by
IDS
authors
Lind, J. and Ndebe, J.
journal
Practice Paper in Brief, issue 19
language
English

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