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To browse Academia. Benno Zogg. Understanding the latest election results in the Democratic Republic of the Congo DRC requires an unprejudiced analysis of the political system. Political power in the DRC is negotiated through complex networks that mix formal and informal notions of statehood. Actors' relations to each other can quickly shift between symbiosis and conflict , which fosters violence, corruption and underdevelopment.
Hussein Solomon. Randi Solhjell. Kai Koddenbrock. Despite growing scholarly criticism in IR and various strands of research like practice theory, governance and governmentality, the failed state is alive and well in Congo analysis. Building on a performative understanding of the state as an effect of practice, this paper enacts the Congo in three ways: Using interview material gathered in Goma and New York, I first argue that one reading of this material sees foreign humanitarians and peacekeepers engaged in enacting the Congo as a failed state.
A second reading, by contrast, sees them performing it as an entity which deals with the intricacies of human nature, collective interaction and the role of history. After highlighting the fact that both of these performances can usefully be made to undercut the seeming inescapability of the state norm in International Relations, I argue that doing IR ethnographically is in itself a performative practice.
The third performance of the Congo offered here is thus the one made by the analyst himself - an ambiguous performance which strives to bring the state back out to render continued intervention in the Congo harder to justify. Sonja Wolf. Dr Jideofor Adibe. We looked at the region, the problems of conflicts, dictatorships, wars, weapon proliferation, identity, and development trajectory. We asked some key questions: What political agendas, if any, do the competing historical narratives of ethnic identities serve in the region?