Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:579Hits:19896900Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID163759
Title ProperDeep Roots of Libya’s Security Fragmentation
LanguageENG
AuthorRomanet Perroux, Jean-Louis
Summary / Abstract (Note)Six years after the 2011 revolution that toppled the Gaddafi regime, the political transition in Libya is at a standstill. The fragmented security landscape fuels chronic local conflicts, lawlessness, and insecurity, and paralyzes the political transition with destabilizing consequences on its neighbors. What explains the rapid, profound, and lasting security fragmentation that affected post-Gaddafi Libya? Notwithstanding the manifest failures of the international intervention during and after the 2011 conflict, this article argues that the security fragmentation in post-Gaddafi Libya is deeply rooted in domestic economic, cultural, and political factors. In particular, the Libyan economy offers almost no employment opportunities, and the country lacks a unitary government and functioning state institutions that it needs to redistribute its oil wealth. Under these circumstances, Libyans attempt to cope with economic hardship, insecurity, and lawlessness by turning towards their family, tribe, neighborhood, or ethnic group, thereby fueling the fragmentation of security. Libya’s current security fragmentation and instability can be seen as part of the messy historical process of state formation. During this phase, political and security agreements are brokered and institutionalized through localized processes of rebel governance whose realm of possible arrangements are determined by contextual economic, political and cultural constraints.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 55, No.2; Mar 2019: p.200-224
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies Vol: 55 No 2
Key WordsSecurity ;  Civil Society ;  State Building ;  Political Culture ;  Libya ;  Democratization ;  Regime Change ;  MENA


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text