ABSTRACT

This Whitehall Paper explores the ways in which Mogadishu’s inhabitants try to stay out of harm’s way, from security officials in the presidential compound of Villa Somalia to the city’s powerful district commissioners, from patrolling policemen to the women road-sweepers in the rubbish-filled alleyways of the Waberi district. Its central proposition is that security is best understood as a coherent relationship or activity based on the need for physical safety today, rather than in the future. It uses the neighbourhood-watch schemes developed in certain districts of Mogadishu - most notably Waberi - to understand the ways in which the city’s inhabitants respond to the security models promoted by international advisers.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter I|18 pages

Making Mogadishu Safer

chapter II|25 pages

Policing Mogadishu

chapter III|21 pages

Managing Neighbourhood Security

chapter IV|14 pages

ICT for Community Security

chapter V|15 pages

Hargeisa's Modest Experiment

chapter |5 pages

Conclusions