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African Studies Seminar: Extralegal Groups in Post-Conflict Liberia

07 March 2019, 1:15 pm–2:45 pm

christine cheng

The UCL African Studies Seminar welcomes Christine Cheng ,LSE, for the launch of her book Extralegal Groups in Post-Conflict Liberia (OUP, 2018). Seminars will take place every other Thursday this term.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Cost

Free

Organiser

Hélène Neveu Kringelbach

Location

IAS Seminar room 20
First floor, South Wing, UCL
London
WC1E 6BT
United Kingdom

In the aftermath of the Liberian civil war, groups of ex-combatants seized control of key natural resource enclaves in the country. With some of them threatening a return to war, these groups were widely viewed as the most significant threats to Liberia’s hard-won peace. Building on fieldwork and socio-historical analysis, this book shows how extralegal groups were incentivized to provide basic governance goods in their bid to create a stable commercial environment during the country’s war-to-peace transition. By analysing the trajectory of extralegal groups in three sectors of the Liberian economy— rubber, diamonds, and timber— this book traces how livelihood strategies merged with the opportunities of Liberia’s post-war political economy. At the same time, this is also a context-specific story that is rooted in the country’s geography, its history of state-making, and its social and political practices. Extralegal groups did not emerge in a vacuum.

Where the state is weak and political authority is contested, where rule of law is corrupted and government distrust runs deep, extralegal groups can provide order and dispute resolution, forming the basic kernel of the state. Further, they can establish public norms of compliance and cooperation with local populations. This logic counters the prevailing “spoiler” narrative, forcing us to reimagine violent non-state actors as accidental statebuilders in an evolutionary state-making process, and not simply as national security threats. These are not groups who seek to rule; they provide governance because they need to trade— not as an end in itself. This leads to the book’s broader argument: it is trade, rather than war, that drives contemporary statebuilding. Along the way, this book poses some uncomfortable questions about what it means to be legitimately governed, whether our trust in states is misplaced, whether entrenched corruption is the most likely post-conflict outcome, and whether our expectations of international peacebuilding and statebuilding are unrealistic and self-defeating.

Download the Winter 2019 programme here

All welcome.

This seminar series is convened by the African Studies Research Centre/IAS: