Rethinking radicalisation and resilience in Mali and the Sahel

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What does resilience against radicalisation and violent extremism look like in Mali and the Sahel? And which drivers are present for the spread of extremism?

In this episode of the NUPI podcast The World Stage, Abdoul Wakhab Cissé and Morten Bøås are sitting at the bed of the river Niger. This mighty waterway floats from the high plains of Guinea through Mali and Niger before it makes its way to the Atlantic Ocean through Nigeria. They are discussing the manifestation of violent extremism in Mali and neighbouring Sahel countries like Niger and Burkina Faso.

Mali and the Sahel are often talked about as enabling environments – meaning that all the factors that, according to the literature, are conducive to the emergence of violent extremism seem to be present – but how does the reality look in this respect?

What is the role of the state, state repression and heavy-handed state responses? What is the role of religion as a driver? What promotes resilience? What does the future hold for Mali and the Sahel?

This video is part of the EU-funded PREVEX project that aims to understand drivers of violent extremism and how local communities respond and resist through various ways of expressing resilience. One of the more surprising finds in the project is why even people in the most enabling environments with so many good reasons for being angry still aren’t radicalised, but in various forms, try to resist and remain resilient. This is also the case for Mali and the Sahel.

Morten Bøås is a Research Professor at the NUPI and the Principal Investigator of the PREVEX project.

Abdoul Wakhab Cissé is a Senior Researcher at The Alliance for Good Governance in Africa (ARGA), a think tank and independent research institute with offices in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso.

PREVEX is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 programme under grant agreement No 870724.
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