Overcoming Area Studies’ Policy-Relevant Research Problem: The Case of the Sahel

Abstract

Despite seven years of external military interventions to counter violent extremism, the security situation in the Sahel continues to deteriorate. Hard military approaches
predominate in the region despite widespread recognition amongst Sahel specialists that the militarisation of the Sahel may actually be getting in the way of the search for a long-term
political solution. This raises a number of questions that are important for Area Studies specialists: what type of information is brought into policymaking? Who produces it? How is
it processed and what influence does it have? How does, or should, Area Studies fit within that? This research note argues that analysis undertaken by area specialists is indispensable
in order to understand the complex nature of the various interlocking armed conflicts in the western Sahel. It suggests however that the type of thick description that characterises much
area studies analysis can sometimes be too dense and too specific to be of immediate use to policymakers. Drawing on insights from Comparative Area Studies (intra-regional and crossregional
comparison in particular), it explores how Area Studies could contribute more effectively to policy relevant research on the Sahel.

Chafer, T., Stoddard, E. and Toltica, S., 2020. Overcoming Area Studies’ Policy-Relevant Research Problem: The Case of the Sahel. New Area Studies, 1(1), pp.25–40.

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L’impossible décolonisation des sciences sociales françaises ?

À la suite de l’entretien donné par le ministre de l’Éducation nationale au Journal du dimanche le 25 octobre, une tribune rassemblant cent universitaires entreprend dans Le Monde de défendre ses propos sur l’« islamo-gauchisme » mais aussi sur le risque que représentent :

« les idéologies indigéniste, racialiste et “décoloniale” (transférées des campus nord-américains), « bien présentes » dans les universités et y « nourrissant une haine des “Blancs” et de la France. »

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Originally published on The Conversation FR