THE GOVERNANCE–CONFLICT NEXUS IN THE HORN OF AFRICA: LESSONS FROM SOMALIA AND SUDAN
Keywords:
Governance, Conflict, State Collapse, Exclusion, Social Transformation, Horn of Africa, Somalia, SudanAbstract
This study critically examines the intricate and symbiotic relationship between governance failures and the perpetuation of violent conflict in the Horn of Africa, with a focused analysis on Somalia and Sudan. It posits that the nature of the state specifically its institutional architecture, legitimacy, and distributive logic is the primary determinant in either mitigating or fueling large-scale violence. Moving beyond simplistic narratives of ethnic hatred or resource scarcity, the argument centres on how colonial legacies birthed predatory and exclusionary post-colonial states. In Somalia, the complete collapse of central authority created a governance vacuum filled by clan militias and extremist groups, illustrating the perils of a failed state. Conversely, Sudan exemplifies the coercive state, where a hyper-centralized regime in Khartoum systematically marginalized peripheral regions, leading to protracted civil wars and eventual fragmentation. The paper employs a comparative case study methodology to dissect these two distinct manifestations of the governance conflict nexus. It further explores the relevance of conflict management models, arguing that while interest-based negotiation is essential for crafting political settlements, transformative mediation and reconciliation are indispensable for addressing the profound relational and psychological wounds of conflict. The central thesis is that sustainable peace is unattainable without fundamental social and political transformation aimed at constructing inclusive, accountable, and legitimate governance structures. The paper concludes with policy recommendations advocating for a dual-track approach that simultaneously strengthens institutional capacity and fosters grassroots social healing, asserting that technical fixes are futile without confronting the foundational political contracts that govern these societies.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17465341
Citation: Hussein, A. M., & Nyanchoga, S. A. (2025). THE GOVERNANCE–CONFLICT NEXUS IN THE HORN OF AFRICA: LESSONS FROM SOMALIA AND SUDAN. Journal of Religion, Conflict and Cohesion (JRCC), 2(1). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17465341
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Copyright (c) 2025 Abdiweli Mohamed Hussein, Prof. Samuel Alfayo Nyanchoga, PhD

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