ABSTRACT

This book is a critical reading of contemporary interventionism, exploring how interventions shape the course of conflicts and reconciliation processes in Somalia.

In a critical departure from the state-capacity consensus that has dominated the debate on terrorism and state failure, this book argues that conflict and sovereignty transformations in Somalia cannot be understood as the result of a gap in state-capacity, as multiple interventions have compromised the autonomy of the target state and society to act as sovereign.

Destabilising Interventions in Somalia focuses on the humanitarian intervention of the mid-1990s, the Ethiopia–Eritrean regional proxy war in the late 1990s and the Global War on Terror in the 2000s. Examining the politics and mechanisms of multiple interventions, this book shows how interveners complicate and amplify existing conflicts, how they reiterate the international dimension of the conflict itself, and how they orient the target state towards the outsourcing of sovereignty functions. Key to this process has been the violent and exclusionary nature of interventions grounded in the aspiration of transforming existing political orders.

Destabilising Interventions in Somalia will be of interest to students of African peace and conflict studies, international intervention and International Relations.

part I|1 pages

How we think about sovereignty and intervention

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|21 pages

Minding the gap

When state weakness justifies intervention

chapter 3|20 pages

Problems with international intervention

part II|1 pages

Interventions in Somalia

chapter 4|23 pages

Neutral in favour of whom?

The UN intervention in Somalia and the Somaliland peace process

chapter 5|17 pages

Regional mutual interferences

chapter 7|14 pages

The politics of destabilisation