Countering Jihadi Insurgencies in Africa: Repress, Resist & Reordercore
COUNTERRR · Horizon Europe grant · 2025-03-01–2030-02-28
EC contribution
Total cost
Beneficiaries
About the data
Source: CORDIS (official EU open data), Horizon Europe. Framework HORIZON · call ERC-2024-STG · scheme HORIZON-ERC · topic ERC-2024-STG. CORDIS record →
Objective
Many African countries, including Libya, Nigeria, Mali, DR Congo, Somalia, and Mozambique, have been affected by violence of jihadist armed groups. These groups pose a distinct threat to social, political, and economic orders across Africa as they violently reject the nation-state and can rely on support from the transnational violent networks of the Islamic State and al-Qaeda. Research has primarily focused on international responses to “violent extremism” in Africa, but international actors do not operate in a vacuum and interact with responses on the ground. If we want to understand and effectively tackle this violent threat, we need to know more about how domestic actors—governments, security forces, and affected communities—counter jihadist armed groups in Africa. Why do some governments repress these groups through domestic security operations, while others invite foreign countries to militarily intervene? Why do some governments respond immediately, while others delay a response to a new jihadist threat? Why do some communities decide to cooperate with jihadist groups, while others opt to resist them? Why do some communities attempt to resist these groups non-violently, while others form self-defence militias to protect themselves? And finally, how do domestic responses to jihadist armed groups reorder security in the region and shape conflict stabilization or escalation? COUNTERRR will deliver crucial analyses of when, how, and why domestic actors repress and resist jihadist armed groups and reorder security. It will adopt an innovative multi-level and multi-method comparative approach focused on variation within and across three countries (Mali, Nigeria, and Mozambique). Understanding how African countries and affected communities respond to jihadist insurgencies will help international actors to coordinate and adjust their responses to benefit from local knowledge and prevent further escalation of conflict.
Beneficiaries (1)
| Organisation | Country | Role | EC contribution | SME |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UNIVERSITEIT LEIDEN | NL | coordinator | €1,500,000 |
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