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Title
Youth and non-violence in Africa's fragile contexts / Akin Iwilade, Tarila Marclint Ebiede, editors.
ISBN
9783031131653 (electronic bk.)
3031131657 (electronic bk.)
9783031131646
3031131649
Published
Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, [2022]
Copyright
©2022
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xi, 191 pages) : illustrations
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-031-13165-3 doi
Call Number
HQ799.A35
Dewey Decimal Classification
305.235
Summary
This book makes an important contribution to the conflict literature and to new ways of thinking about agency and social life in fragile contexts. It does this by engaging with often ignored peace infrastructures. In this book, the contributors highlight different ways in which non-violence is deployed by Africas youth to navigate difficult violent contexts. Drawing on empirically grounded case studies from the Central African Republic to Zimbabwe, this book explores how similar (or indeed the same) social infrastructures can be deployed for both violence and non-violence and the important factors that drive many youth to take the non[1]violence option even when order appears to collapse around them. The authors also explore how, for instance, systems of organizing survive violent disruptions to the so-called rhythms of everyday life, and, when they do, how they are then repurposed by youth to help them survive violence. Akin Iwilade is a Lecturer in African Studies at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, and conducts research on the anthropology of youth and gangs in Africa. Tarila Marclint Ebiede is a Political Scientist. He is co-founder of Conflict Research Network West Africa. He is also an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of Kents Brussels School of International Studies and the Brussels School of Governance, both in Belgium.
Note
Includes index.
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Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Description based on print version record.
Chapter 1. Introduction: A theory of youth and (non) violence
Chapter 2. Staying away from arms? The non-violent trajectories of youth in times of conflict in the Central African Republic
Chapter 3. Ambiguous Agency and Strategies of Non-violence: Youth and Everyday Peace in the city of Jos, Nigeria
Chapter 4. Young people resisting violence in northeast Nigeria
Chapter 5. Good boys, gone bad: Navigating Youth Mobilisation and Gender in Post-Conflict Sierra Leone
Chapter 6. The Qeerroo movement in Ethiopia
Chapter 7. Youth and non-violent resistance: #ThisFlag Movement in Zimbabwe
Chapter 8. Ushahidis Nonviolent Technological Impact in the Kenyas 2008 Post- Election Violence.