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Alex de Waal: Sudan Crisis States Papers

April 24th, 2007

These two papers have been written by Justice Africa Director Alex de Waal for the Crisis States Research Centre at the London School of Economics and Political Science

In its half century of independent statehood, Sudan has only rarely and briefly been at peace. From the eve of independence until 1972, a separatist rebellion in the South caused hundreds of thousands of deaths. Peace in the South coincided with an on-off civil war in the North between a secular leftist government and conservative sectarian forces. “National reconciliation” between the Northern foes in 1977 prompted a slow slide into renewed war in the South, which crystallised into all-out rebellion in 1983 and the spreading of the conflict to adjoining areas in the North in 1985 and to eastern Sudan in 1994. Intermittent low-level conflicts in Darfur from 1987 exploded into full-scale insurrection in 2003, just as efforts to conclude the Southern war were leading towards a landmark peace agreement. Is Sudan fated to experience perpetual instability and a constant round of bloody provincial conflicts? Does the intractability of these wars portend a collapse of the state? Or is there a possibility of a new political dispensation that deals with both the “root” and “brute” causes of Sudan’s wars?

Crisis States Occasional Paper No.2

This paper presents the ethnic and ideological factors in the Sudan crisis as products of other processes, notably the strategies adopted by successive governments for managing the peripheries and the militarisation of society. It differs from many scholarly analyses in its emphasis on the importance of failed consolidation at the centre of power. The implication of the analysis is that Sudan faces possibly insuperable challenges in attempting to achieve democracy and a fair distribution of national wealth and power, and that the hopes raised by the 2005 CPA between the Khartoum government and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) for national unity and democracy are fading

  • Adobe pdf icon Alex de Waal - Sudan: What Kind of State? What Kind of Crisis?
  • Crisis States Occasional Paper No.3

    This paper locates the internationalisation of Sudanese governance in a historical context and highlights some of the implications for post-independence politics. It also examines Sudan’s relationship with its donors and creditors and analyses how successive Sudanese governments have dealt with the debt burden and with financing its wars. Finally it considers Sudan’s relationships with its neighbours and its place in the region

  • Adobe pdf icon Alex de Waal - Sudan: international dimensions to the state and its crisis
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    One Response to “Alex de Waal: Sudan Crisis States Papers”

    1. Lt NJ Salmwang Says:

      Your understanding and description of the Sudanese state and why it is in crisis is an eye-opener to the whole situation.you may please fwd some of your articles to my email pertaining this subject for discussion with my colleagues for an ever brighter understanding.thank you

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