Mobilizing Multinational Military Operations in Africa: Quick Fixes or Sustainable Solutions?

Participants

Professor Tony Chafer, University of Portsmouth
Professor Gordon Cumming, Cardiff University
Dr Roel van der Velde, Cardiff University
Ahmed Soliman, Research Fellow, Horn of Africa, Chatham House
Dr Elisa Lopez Lucia, Université Libre de Bruxelles; University of Portsmouth
Chair: Janet Adama Mohammed, West Africa Programme Director, Conciliation Resources

Peacekeeping missions which have sought to address evolving forms of conflict and instability on the African continent – led by the United Nations, African Union and European Union – have frequently been overstretched.

Across regions including the Sahel, the Horn and West Africa, the issues of violent extremism and criminality – often set against a backdrop of collapsing or severely weakened central states – have led to the mobilisation of a diverse set of new collective responses.

These include notable African-led efforts such as AMISOM in Somalia or more recently the G5 Sahel, where France have played a pivotal role in initiating new and more ad hoc approaches to coalition-building.

As existing multinational missions in Africa continue to evolve on the ground and while new collective opportunities increasingly present themselves, it is critical for policymakers to understand how far such efforts reflect meaningful long-term solutions to the challenges of conflict and insecurity.

At this roundtable event, participants will reflect on how such missions become mobilised and legitimised, the extent to which they can be defined as ‘new’, and whether they represent a truly sustainable means to tackle the issue of conflict in Africa.

This roundtable is held in partnership with Cardiff University and the University of Portsmouth and is supported by the Leverhulme Trust.

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Les déportés algériens vers la Nouvelle-Calédonie, objet d’un nouvel ouvrage

“Le travail de recherche m’a pris plus de quatre ans. Cependant, je suis soulagé de trouver des vérités sur cette douloureuse histoire de notre pays tant ignorée même dans les programmes scolaires. Je pense aussi que cet ouvrage tendra à réhabiliter le peuple avec son passé, car avec le rappel du passé, la mémoire s’apaise”.

Après avoir édité son premier ouvrage en 2018, intitulé Les bagnards algériens de Cayenne, l’écrivain Mustapha Hadj Ali signe un autre ouvrage sur l’insurrection de 1871, plus particulièrement les déportations qui s’en sont suivi. Dans cet ouvrage intitulé Les Algériens en Nouvelle- Calédonie, l’insurrection de 1871, l’auteur qui lui a consacré des années de recherche a réussi à reconstituer une partie importante de cette page douloureuse de l’histoire des déportés algériens vers la Nouvelle-Calédonie, cette terre lointaine de l’océan Pacifique. 

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