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‘Killing a Mosquito with a Hammer’: Al-Shabaab Violence and State Security Responses in Kenya

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posted on 2024-09-05, 22:02 authored by Jeremy Lind, Patrick Mutahi, Marjoke Oosterom
Networked, transnational forms of violence pose a significant threat to peace and security in a number of sub-Saharan African countries. In recent years, Kenya has witnessed an expanding number of attacks involving Al-Shabaab – the Somali-based militant organisation. Kenya’s state responses to these attacks derive from a social construction of Somalis as a threatening presence, justifying a raft of hard security measures. However, this targeting has been counter-productive by driving a deeper wedge between Somalis, other Muslims and the state, and levels of Al-Shabaab violence have remained high. Seen from the social and political margins that Kenya’s Somali and Muslim populations occupy, recent violence continues a long-standing dynamic of insecurity in which the state itself is a central actor. Internal stress relating to state-led planning of social order built on unequal citizenships and the use of violence, enmesh with the external threat of Al-Shabaab, producing the conditions for insurgency and violence to spread. Reducing violence and building peace require greater understanding of how violence and security are seen and experienced at the margins.

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Publisher

Peacebuilding

Citation

Lind, J.; Mutahi, P. and Oosterom, M. (2017) ‘"Killing a Mosquito with a Hammer’: Al-Shabaab Violence and State Security Responses in Kenya', Peacebuilding, 5:2: 118-135

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Peacebuilding 5 2

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

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Article

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© 2017 The author(s). Published by Informa UK limited, trading as Taylor & Francis group.

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en

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Power and Popular Politics

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Default project::9ce4e4dc-26e9-4d78-96e9-15e4dcac0642::600

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