ادعمنا

Aid, Securitization, and Defense Agreements

مقال أكاديمي محكم

Aid, Securitization, and Defense Agreements
المصدر: قضايا سياسية
الكاتب: Marie Besancon, Ebaidalla M. Ebaidalla, Sahar Elfaki
الملخص:

What makes African nations reach out to make pacts with their neighbors and the international community, or to militarize? Fisher and Anderson (2015) claim that African governments readily embrace militarization after internal strife and civil wars and that after 9/11, security agreements with the United States re-enforce this already occurring ‘illiberal’ state building phenomena in Africa; encouraging military security regimes. The cause de jour of this predicament from the US side being fear of terrorist elements spreading across the African continent from Asia and the Middle East all the way to Europe and the United States.[1] A nascent study by Le Van (2010) implies that countries in Africa receiving higher aid packages from the U.S. might be more likely to react positively to the presence of the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM)—the US’s newest theater command—and to be more likely to cooperate in international agreements on security and trade

الكلمات المفتاحية: Securitization، Defense Agreements، policy imperatives، African governments



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