Trans-state security complexes and security governance in West Africa
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Date
Authors
Obamamoye, Babatunde
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Security discourse in contemporary times has brought to the fore the
relevance of regions as indispensable loci for analysing, understanding
and managing security challenges across many spaces of the globe. In
the process of deepening this discursive analysis of regional security,
scholars have developed a few concepts. Two of these analytical
concepts are ‘security complexes’ and ‘regional security governance’.
However, extant literature rarely examines the conceptual and
empirical interplay between these two constructs. It is on this note
that this article asks: how are security complexes and security
governance impacting one another? To what extent could their
pragmatic interactions shape the choice of regional organisations that
will coordinate joint security undertakings? It argues that while it is the
formation of security complexes from a trans-state perspective that
will generate the necessity for regional security governance, the
dissolution of such a complex equally demands an effective
orchestration of regional security governance. The article also
contends that the spatial scope of a trans-state security complex is a
central factor for determining the appropriateness of the regional
organisation that will coordinate its security governance project. It
specifically draws on empirical evidence from West Africa to bolster
these arguments.
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Source
African Security Review
Type
Book Title
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Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31