Uni-Tübingen

Sub-Project C05: Threatened Political Orders in African Developing Countries

Abstract

The project examines the behaviours of identity groups within the context of threatened orders in African developing countries. In many states in this region, the stability of the existing political order is precarious. Public goods are not sufficiently provided and excluded population groups demand greater participation or autonomy, while at the same time governments resort to repressive measures in order to stay in power, despite immense social dissatisfaction. Under these conditions, identity groups have to decide how to (re-)shape the political order so that they can live in security and peace. Within this context, they can – in principle – pursue their goals with either violent or non-violent means. Drawing on social movement studies, the project looks at the role of so-called collective action frames in mobilising identity groups to undertake peaceful or violent protest action. In doing so, it studies discourses of threat and their consequences in terms of strategy choices made by identity groups from a social science perspective.

Project Team

Project Leader

Prof. Dr. Andreas Hasenclever

Ph.D. Students:

Jan Sändig, Dipl.-Pol.

Anne Theobald, Dipl.-Soz.

Tanja Granzow, M.A. (assoc. member)

Student Assistants:

Natalia Herberg, B.A.

Carmen Belafi, B.A.

Academic Disciplines and Orientation

Political Science, Peace and Conflict Studies

Project Description

Theoretical Background

Around the world, armed intra-state conflicts are the most prevalent form of violent conflict and fundamentally threaten the survival of existing political orders. Since the end of the Cold War, scholarly attention in the field of conflict studies has thus shifted its focus from international wars to civil wars and other kinds of organised political violence.

The project brings together scholarship on civil wars and armed conflicts with theoretical approaches to understanding social movements. In current research on armed conflicts and civil wars, a number of political, economic, and social factors have been identified at the macro-level that affect the probability of armed confrontations. However, micro-mechanisms leading to the escalation of conflict into violence have barely been researched. Scholars in the field of social movement research, in contrast, have developed the framing concept as a micro-approach to analyse the mobilization of social support for protests. Framing suggests that there is no direct path leading from opportunity structures to organisation structures and the acquisition of resources in a social movement. Rather, social movements need programs that outline their goals and strategies in the form of so-called collective action frames (“frames” in short). These inter-subjective interpretative schemes simplify real situations and events in order to win over and mobilise followers as well as to demobilise potential opponents.

Approach

The project examines the behaviours of identity groups within the context of threatened orders in African developing countries. In many states in this region, the stability of the existing political order is precarious. Public goods are not sufficiently provided and excluded population groups demand greater participation or autonomy, while governments resort to repressive measures in order to stay in power despite immense social dissatisfaction. Under these conditions, identity groups have to decide how to (re-)shape the political order so that they can live in security and peace. Within this context, they can – in principle – pursue their goals with either violent or non-violent means. Empirical evidence shows that even under similar structural conditions, different protest behaviours can be observed: whereas many identity groups call for peaceful protest and act accordingly, others mobilise their supporters for violence and in fact make use of violence. Drawing on social movement studies, the project looks at the role of frames in mobilizing identity groups to undertake peaceful or violent protest action. In doing so, it studies threat discourses and their consequences in terms of strategy choices made by disadvantaged and threatened identity groups from a social science perspective.

The goal of the project is to identify micro-mechanisms that explain why identity groups choose to protest peacefully or violently against the state within the context of threatened orders. According to the project's working hypothesis, violent protest behaviour occurs if pro-violence elites successfully convince group members that the community is surrounded by a hostile environment (condition of exclusion), that their very existence is threatened (condition of threat), and that the use of violence promises success (prospect of success through violence). In contrast, groups protest peacefully when one or more of these conditions are not met. In order to determine whether discourses of threat decisively affect the behaviours of identity groups within the context of threatened orders, the project takes into account selective incentives, cultural factors, and coercive measures as alternative factors that can account for the use of violence. Additionally, it will look at opposing propaganda coming from the state and the ruling group that often try to deter disadvantaged identity groups from launching (violent) protests.

The goal of the project is to identify micro-mechanisms that explain why identity groups choose to protest peacefully or violently against the state within the context of threatened orders. According to the project's working hypothesis, violent protest behaviour occurs if pro-violence elites successfully convince group members that the community is surrounded by a hostile environment (condition of exclusion), that their very existence is threatened (condition of threat), and that the use of violence promises success (prospect of success through violence). In contrast, groups protest peacefully when one or more of these conditions are not met. In order to determine whether discourses of threat decisively affect the behaviours of identity groups within the context of threatened orders, the project takes into account selective incentives, cultural factors, and coercive measures as alternative factors that can account for the use of violence. Additionally, it will look at opposing propaganda coming from the state and the ruling group that often try to deter disadvantaged identity groups from launching (violent) protests.

The project compares group behaviour within and between different countries. Intra-state comparisons of different groups/sub-groups help to control for structural conditions, which makes it easier to identify micro-causes behind variations in behaviour. By comparing across countries, the explanatory power of framing accounting for different forms of political violence associated with varying degrees of violence can be tested.

Project-related Lectures and Publications

Hasenclever, Andreas

Granzow, Tanja

Sändig, Jan

Theobald, Anne

Congresses, Workshops, and Conferences