Project Details
Projekt Print View

Governing Jihad in Africa: Ideology, Political Economy, and Violence

Subject Area Political Science
Modern and Contemporary History
Term since 2024
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 542745079
 
Since the collapse of the “Caliphate” of the Islamic State in the Levant, sub-Saharan Africa has been the next jihadist frontier, actively promoted as such by global jihadist networks. This armed challenge has largely been analysed from the perspective of “violent extremism,” suggesting that jihadist armed groups produce new forms of violence, mobilisation, and governance that threaten African states in new ways. However, it is far from clear that jihadist armed groups have had such a revolutionary effect on contemporary conflict dynamics. Some insist that jihadist violence is very much in line with earlier forms of conflict. What this project intends to do is unpack this assumption and we therefore ask: How (if at all) has jihadist ideology changed political, social, economic, and political dynamics across African conflicts? Current scholarship is ill-equipped to answer this question. First, the dominance of jihadist brutal violence in analyses prevents many from recognizing these groups as grounded social and political phenomena. Second, Africanists are divided over whether local roots of conflict matter more than transnational linkages for these conflicts—a debate that hinders our understanding of how the local and global interact. Third, prior country-specific work makes it hard to compare systematically and effectively across contexts and generalise findings. Lastly, research has been hampered by the lack of reliable information, which creates limited if not prejudiced analyses. GOV-JIHAD innovates the field by understanding jihad as a social, economic, and political phenomenon and inquiring how jihad governs and is governed in three different realms: how ideology shapes what jihadi armed groups value and try to impose systemically (norms), how ideology and pragmatism shape how they generate and use resources (spatial expansion and political economy), and how ideology and tactical imperatives shape how they fight (and against whom) (violence and counter-violence). This analytical effort requires an approach that takes the local and global into account. GOV-JIHAD will form a team of researchers who will conduct joint fieldwork to facilitate meaningful and empirically informed comparisons. We will collect high-quality data through immersive fieldwork and archival work, using careful process tracing and systematic historical analysis to analyse how ideology shapes conflict in three main regions: Mali and the Sahel region, Nigeria, and Mozambique.
DFG Programme Research Grants
International Connection France, United Kingdom
 
 

Additional Information

Textvergrößerung und Kontrastanpassung