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ID171707
Title ProperFrance’s interventions in Mali and the Sahel
Other Title Informationa historical institutionalist perspective
LanguageENG
AuthorChafer, Tony ;  Cumming, Gordon D ;  Velde, Roel van der
Summary / Abstract (Note)France’s interventions in Mali and the wider Sahel appear to mark a new departure in French military policy in terms of the approach to multilateralism adopted, the regionalisation of the response, and the levels of violence deployed. Yet how ‘new’ is this approach, when set against the historical backdrop of French military interventions in Africa? Should it be seen as a modified version – an adaptation – of the new type of multilateral engagement that emerged in the wake of the 1994 Rwandan genocide? Using a historical institutionalist lens, employing the notions of critical junctures, ‘layering’, and ‘drift’, this article briefly sets out the unilateral approach that marked French military policy in Africa prior to 1994 before going on to analyse the multilateral approach and associated path-dependent practices that emerged after the Rwandan genocide. Drawing on elite interviews in Europe, the US and Africa, the article shows that, while France’s engagement in the Sahel is characterised by an ostensibly novel multilateral approach, it does in fact combine new and old norms, ideas and practices.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Strategic Studies Vol. 43, No.4; Aug 2020: p.482-507
Journal SourceJournal of Strategic Studies Vol: 43 No 4
Key WordsSecurity ;  Africa ;  France ;  Sahel ;  French Military Policy


 
 
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