Regional Meeting for West, East and Central Africa and the Horn of Africa
2 November
9:00-18:00
Venue: Poortgebouw, Rijnsburgerweg 10, Leiden (3 minutes’ walk from
Leiden CS railway station)
Directions to the Poortgebouw.
Read
the final report
Plenary session: keynote addresses:
Dr. Annie Barbara Chikwanha (Institute for Security Studies, Nairobi,):
The
anatomy of insecurity in the East African community: linking security with
development.
Sara Geenen (IOB, Antwerpen University):
Struggling without arms: the
reintegration of former combatants in Ruyigi (Burundi) and Kinshasa (DRC)
Dr. Abdul Lamin (University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa): Security,
governance and development in West Africa: reflections from the Mano River
Union, 1990 - 2007
Prof. Dr. G.J. Abbink (African Studies Centre): The price of instability:
problems of political and human security in the Horn of Africa.
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| Han van Dijk (ASC), Chair |
Jan Abbink (ASC) on the Horn of Africa |
Read
the preliminary programme.
Development policy and the security agenda in Africa: Reassessing the
relationship
Since 9/11, increased concern about security problems in Africa has been
posing new challenges for classical types of development policies. In the
early 21st century, security within African states is being threatened from
all sides and there are various inter-state conflicts. Some conflicts are
becoming persistent, fuelled by ecological and domestic political problems
as well as by international rivalries and global politics. The war against
terrorism is one more visible aspect of this trend and is dominating public
discourse and influencing the policies of donor countries. On the other
hand, terrorist activities by radical militants and the breakdown of the
monopoly on violence by African states are producing increased human
suffering and misery and effectively ‘spoiling’ development processes such
as institution building, democratization, productive investment and national
compromise politics in pluralistic political arenas.
There is also an emerging debate in the US and the EU on the impact on
national security of global climate change, which is often seen as
aggravating crises in livelihood conditions and the natural environment and
escalating local competition for resources and violent conflicts to enforce
entitlements.
These problems have raised new questions regarding the relationship between
development policies, donor involvement and security issues: How can the gap
be bridged between emergency aid, the promotion of human security and
development and reconstruction at various levels? How can these activities
be effectively combined on the ground? What type of information is needed
about security issues to develop more effective intervention in conflicts,
emergencies and longer-term reconstruction activities? What are the
political and economic dynamics underlying the erosion of human security and
what are the most important factors to be tackled by policies and diplomatic
efforts at the international, national and local level?
This DPRN study day plans to address issues raised by the new links between
security thinking and development efforts by bringing together policy
makers, NGO staff, representatives of the media and academics, who all have
first-hand knowledge of these issues through their professional activities.
The DPRN day will host four guest speakers in the morning session and then
divide into four regional groups (West, East and Central Africa and the Horn
of Africa) to discuss common themes relevant to all four regions. A plenary
session will discuss the reports from the four regional working sessions.
For further information, please contact Ursula Oberst (oberst@ascleiden.nl).
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