Rather than fulfilling the promise of peace and stability, the recent experience of the Berbera Port and corridor reflects the potential for violent conflicts intrinsic in modern logistics and infrastructural development.
Authors
- Published in
- Denmark
Table of Contents
- Hovedmenu 1
- Breadcrumb 1
- Somaliland-Ethiopia deal reignites Horn of Africa conflicts 1
- Trade makes states 2
- The politics of trade corridors 3
- Somaliland at the centre of rising tensions in the Horn of Africa 4
- ‘Kinshipping’ 5
- Conflict in Las Anod and Crisis in Somaliland 6
- The politics of trade corridors 7
- Ports on the rise in Africa 8
- Gulf state rivalries in the Horn of Africa: Time for a Red Sea policy? 9
- You might also like: 9
- Redefining peacekeeping's impact on troop contributing countries 9
- Reconceptualizing peacekeeping: The impact on contributing countries and troops 10
- Conflict in Las Anod and Crisis in Somaliland 10
- Studying state, sovereignty and other stuff 10
- Trade makes states: Governing the greater Somali economy 10
- DIIS EXPERTS 10
- Finn Stepputat 11
- Jethro Norman 12
- Opening Hours 14
- Short cuts 14
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