Marginalisation and violence : considering origins of insurgency and peace implementation in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan /

Renewed interest in investigating causes of conflict in Africa's Sahel region can be partly credited to Homer-Dixon's work, in which he links "environmental scarcity" and violent conflict. Analyses within this framework supported the role of natural resources in conflict. Althoug...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ylönen, Aleksi
Corporate Author: Institute for Security Studies (South Africa)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Pretoria, South Africa : Institute for Security Studies, 2009
Series:ISS papers paper 201
Subjects:
Description
Summary:Renewed interest in investigating causes of conflict in Africa's Sahel region can be partly credited to Homer-Dixon's work, in which he links "environmental scarcity" and violent conflict. Analyses within this framework supported the role of natural resources in conflict. Although natural resources are an important factor in local conflicts in the region, it is necessary to view them in the social and political context in which they acquire significance. This paper builds on an argument in earlier research on the Nuba Mountains that purely resource-based explanations are not sufficient to find comprehensive measures for conflict resolution, showing that any resource scarcity explanation needs to be incorporated in its prevailing socio-cultural and political context. It is further argued that the mere existence of resources is not necessarily a reason for conflict and that resources only gain prominence and become conflict-prone in the social context that dictates their desirability and value. For instance, in the case of the prolonged wars in Sudan's periphery, resource-focused analyses alone cannot explain why conflicts have been triggered in these politically and socio-economically marginalised areas. An explanation incorporating resource politics in a broad state and governance-based analysis with a significant socio-political dimension does, however, allow a conceptualised interpretation of these conflicts
Item Description:Caption title
"October 2009."
Physical Description:17 p. ; 30 cm
Also available online in PDF format from Institute for Security Studies web site. Adobe Acrobat Reader required
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (p. 14-17)