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Never ending resource conflicts? The political economy of African economies
of violence.
Pages 150 – 162
Since years there is an ongoing debate whether resource scarcity or resource curse
is a causal factor for conflict and war especially in central and western Africa. The argument
in this paper starts with a review of both bodies of literature. Though resource
scarcity is and will be an important underlying factor for situations which may lead to
militant crisis, it is argued that empirical evidence supports assumptions based on the
paradox of the plenty. But it is argued that statistical and comparative studies are
perhaps misleading because important aspects of war economies, especially their
embeddedness within international networks, are neglected. The phrase "violent
nodes in global networks" is used here and illustrated in respect to the war economy
of the Democratic Republic Congo to analyze forms of local-global interplay. In this
way it becomes obvious that localized forms of violence are part of global commodity
chains and neoliberal restructuring of the world economy. Solutions for this kind of
conflicts presuppose either strong transnational norms or ongoing military interventions
by the UN.
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