RSIS International

Transnational Terrorism in The West African and The Sahel Region: An Exploration of Causes and Remedies

Submission Deadline: 17th December 2024
Last Issue of 2024 : Publication Fee: 30$ USD Submit Now
Submission Deadline: 20th December 2024
Special Issue on Education & Public Health: Publication Fee: 30$ USD Submit Now
Submission Deadline: 05th January 2025
Special Issue on Economics, Management, Psychology, Sociology & Communication: Publication Fee: 30$ USD Submit Now

International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science (IJRISS) | Volume V, Issue VII, July 2021 | ISSN 2454–6186

Transnational Terrorism in The West African and The Sahel Region: An Exploration of Causes and Remedies

Assoumi Harouna Abdoul Karim
School of International and Public Affairs, Jilin University, China

IJRISS Call for paper

Abstract: In Africa, while international terrorism has been a salient threat, it has been particularly pronounced in the Horn, West and the predominantly Arabic North. In the Western region of Africa, terror has assumed diverse dimensions. Against this background, this paper seeks to explore the causes and remedies of transnational terrorism in West Africa and the Sahel region. Specifically, the paper analyzes the geopolitical push and pull factors predisposing the West Africa and the Sahel region to transnational terrorism by examining how an inter-play of the state as a domestic player and the state as an international hegemonic pawn engage in actions that serve as a petri dish in which terrorism is cultured and perpetuated. Adopting a qualitative data collection method that relies mainly on secondary and current affairs data on terrorism in the West African region, the paper finds that domestically, terrorism in the West African and the Trans-Sahel region is a product of a decay in state-society relations. This decay a result from narrow definition of the state i.e., as a tool of regime securitization and perpetuation. Over time, this regime securitization and perpetuation agenda result in the neglect of the articulation of the aspirations of the citizenry in public policy which further alienates the state from the people thus allowing the organic maturation of terror. With regard to the state as an international actor, the paper finds that post-September 11 security arrangements that were forged as part of the globalized fight against international terror engendered the militarization of the state which inadvertently occasioned state excesses against the citizenry. The paper calls for the need to address the root causes of terrorism and militarism in the region; an exploration of “bottom-up” local solutions to the challenges of terrorism and violent extremism; enhancing state-society relations in the region and strengthening regional co-operation amongst the states in the West African and the Sahel region.

I. INTRODUCTION

Terrorism denotes actions carried out by states, state actors, non-state actors, groups, or individuals which may imperil the life, liberty, property as well as the physical integrity of a people or may cause damage to natural resources, environmental or cultural heritage and where such actions are calculated or intended to intimidate, induce fear, coerce or induce the general public, governmental bodies and/or institution to do or abstain from doing certain actions in order to achieve political objectives or aid in the attainment of specific objectives or valued ideals.

 





Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Sign up for our newsletter, to get updates regarding the Call for Paper, Papers & Research.