Exhuming Trends in Ethnic Conflict and Cooperation in Africa some Selected States

Exhuming Trends in Ethnic Conflict and Cooperation in Africa some Selected States

Author: 
Cocodia, Jude
Publisher: 
ACCORD
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
African Journal on Conflict Resolution
Source: 
African Journal on Conflict Resolution, Volume 8 - Number 3, 2008
Abstract: 

The world-wide surge in the number and violence of open conflicts revolving around ethnic or religious identities towards the end of the 20th century is a powerful reminder that communal identities are not a remnant of the past but a potent force in contemporary politics. After three decades of independence, ethnicity is more central than ever to the political process of many African countries. Africa has had more than its fair share of ethnic dissent which has sometimes plummeted states into civil war as was experienced in Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and reachedc frightening proportions in Rwanda and now Sudan. Political openings and multiparty elections have led to the formation of inumerable overtly or covertly ethnic political parties, which serve more often to increase civil strife of which the most recent addition to the long list in Africa is Kenya. Africa's ethnic disturbances have occurred more within national borders, thus giving tise to unstable domestic systems. This paper attempts to address

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CITATION: Cocodia, Jude. Exhuming Trends in Ethnic Conflict and Cooperation in Africa some Selected States . : ACCORD , . African Journal on Conflict Resolution, Volume 8 - Number 3, 2008 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frexhuming-trends-ethnic-conflict-and-cooperation-africa-some-selected-states-3