Marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in Côte d’Ivoire

This programmatic paper seeks to develop a new perspective on the military-political identity and performance of militias particularly in urban environments. The militia under consideration is the Groupement Patriotique pour la Paix (GPP), one of the oldest and most prominent of the southern militia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Arnaut, Karel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Gents Afrika Platform, Afrika Brug 2008-01-01
Series:Afrika Focus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.gap.ugent.be/africafocus/pdf/08-21-2-KArnaut.pdf
id doaj-23e82cb375064e5a9bb2da8ef7049886
record_format Article
spelling doaj-23e82cb375064e5a9bb2da8ef70498862020-11-24T21:43:45ZengGents Afrika Platform, Afrika BrugAfrika Focus0772-084X2008-01-0121289105Marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in Côte d’IvoireArnaut, KarelThis programmatic paper seeks to develop a new perspective on the military-political identity and performance of militias particularly in urban environments. The militia under consideration is the Groupement Patriotique pour la Paix (GPP), one of the oldest and most prominent of the southern militias. The GPP came into being as a civil society initiative in the aftermath of the September 2002 insurgency in Côte d’Ivoire a country which since then has lingered in a no-peace-no-war situation. The new perspective, here called ‘ludus pro patria’, looks at how the militias’ activity, organisation, and discourse is deployed in the urban public sphere and to what effect. Within the scope of this paper, this perspective serves to deconstruct the alleged process of ‘milicianisation’ as the combined effect of discursive appropriation and concrete insinuation of a subaltern youth initiative by national elites and international actors. In conclusion, this paper argues that the proposed approach is essential for a proper understanding of two main dimensions of the militias’ raison d’être and modus operandi: mobility and belonging.http://www.gap.ugent.be/africafocus/pdf/08-21-2-KArnaut.pdfCôte d’Ivoiregroupement patriotique pour la paixmilitiaspublic spheregovernance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Arnaut, Karel
spellingShingle Arnaut, Karel
Marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in Côte d’Ivoire
Afrika Focus
Côte d’Ivoire
groupement patriotique pour la paix
militias
public sphere
governance
author_facet Arnaut, Karel
author_sort Arnaut, Karel
title Marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in Côte d’Ivoire
title_short Marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in Côte d’Ivoire
title_full Marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in Côte d’Ivoire
title_fullStr Marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in Côte d’Ivoire
title_full_unstemmed Marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in Côte d’Ivoire
title_sort marching the nation: an essay on the mobility of belonging among militant youngsters in côte d’ivoire
publisher Gents Afrika Platform, Afrika Brug
series Afrika Focus
issn 0772-084X
publishDate 2008-01-01
description This programmatic paper seeks to develop a new perspective on the military-political identity and performance of militias particularly in urban environments. The militia under consideration is the Groupement Patriotique pour la Paix (GPP), one of the oldest and most prominent of the southern militias. The GPP came into being as a civil society initiative in the aftermath of the September 2002 insurgency in Côte d’Ivoire a country which since then has lingered in a no-peace-no-war situation. The new perspective, here called ‘ludus pro patria’, looks at how the militias’ activity, organisation, and discourse is deployed in the urban public sphere and to what effect. Within the scope of this paper, this perspective serves to deconstruct the alleged process of ‘milicianisation’ as the combined effect of discursive appropriation and concrete insinuation of a subaltern youth initiative by national elites and international actors. In conclusion, this paper argues that the proposed approach is essential for a proper understanding of two main dimensions of the militias’ raison d’être and modus operandi: mobility and belonging.
topic Côte d’Ivoire
groupement patriotique pour la paix
militias
public sphere
governance
url http://www.gap.ugent.be/africafocus/pdf/08-21-2-KArnaut.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT arnautkarel marchingthenationanessayonthemobilityofbelongingamongmilitantyoungstersincotedivoire
_version_ 1725912222353326080