The 2011 World Development Report on conflict, security and development highlights the centrality of ‘external stresses’ for generating insecurity and increasing the risk of violence in fragile areas. West African states are particularly vulnerable, with serious concerns around cross-border violence and illicit drug-trafficking. Policy responses need to: tackle the region’s recent legacy of conflict and violent upheaval; address weak governance and entrenched corruption; improve regional cooperation; and support border and outlying communities that have been marginalised by insecurity, poverty and unemployment.
Funding
UK Department for International Development
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Collodi, J. (2014) External Stresses in West Africa: Cross-border Violence and Cocaine Trafficking, IDS Policy Briefing 60, Brighton: IDS
Series
IDS Policy Briefing 60
IDS Item Types
IDS Policy Briefing
Copyright holder
IDS
Country
Sierra Leone; Côte d’Ivoire; Guinea; Liberia; Guinea-Bissau