Power elites war and postwar reconstruction in Africa: Continuities, discontinuities and paradoxes
Power elites war and postwar reconstruction in Africa: Continuities, discontinuities and paradoxes
This article interrogates the manner in which the composition, character, regeneration, and accumulation strategies of power elites and the organization of their hegemony is being affected or unaffected by recent developments, most especially, civil wars and their corollary, postwar reconstruction, in Africa. By seeking to understand how conflicts and post-conflict reconstruction alter or transform the character, recruitment and role of power elites, and the operational context (the nature of the state) in Africa, this article draws attention to the prospects of transforming the nature of leadership in Africa. I contend that the capacity for violence and terror by individuals (especially young combatants who were previously marginalised) and armed groups has become a new marker of elitism and a leverage on peace agreements. Moreover, post-Cold War conflicts in Africa have accentuated the emergence of war-making power elites as 'executors' and 'trustees' of peace treaties, or 'peace celebrities' with considerables leverage on the course and outcomes of postwar reconstruction. The instability in post-1989 Liberia is used as a case study to reflect this claim. I also cite examples of members and leaders or armed groups in countries such as Côte d'Ivoire, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and the Democratic Republic of Congo where the capacity for violence translated into political rewards and gains in peace agreements
CITATION: Ismail, Olawale. Power elites war and postwar reconstruction in Africa: Continuities, discontinuities and paradoxes . : Taylor & Francis Group , . Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol.26, No. 3, July 2008 - Available at: https://library.au.int/power-elites-war-and-postwar-reconstruction-africa-continuities-discontinuities-and-paradoxes-3