Rapid urbanisation in Somalia, as in many other war-torn countries, is driven by in-migration of displaced people who are often amassed in camps. Although such camps become institutionalised sites of exclusion where ‘bare life’ is generated and disposed, they are also characterised by socially messy and continuously evolving relations of space, power, violence and displacement. The article draws on fieldwork with displaced people in Somali cities to analyse claims to property and (often violent) competition to uphold them in contestation for sovereignty. Comparing two cities, Mogadishu and Bosaaso, we show how a broad range of international and local actors, including displaced people themselves, negotiate (urban) property and establish rel...
Over the past decades, Somalia has experienced civil wars, inter-clan conflicts, militias warlords, ...
This blog summarises an article published in the journal of Conflict, Security and Development and h...
The reconstruction of a larger polity in a violence-torn society such as Somalia requires negotiatio...
Rapid urbanisation is in Somalia, as in many other war-torn countries, driven by in-migration of dis...
Rapid urbanisation in Somalia, as in many other war-torn countries, is driven by in-migration of dis...
Somalia has one of the largest populations of internally displaced people (IDPs) in the world: an es...
Displacement is urbanizing. Urban violence increasingly contributes to displacement while a growing ...
This paper addresses precarity from a spatial perspective. It draws attention to how power becomes i...
The article uses the example of the Somali war to analyse how globally travelling ideas and politica...
Somalia is an exceptionally insecure state that nevertheless offers an arena in which police officer...
Displaced people settling at the margins of Somali cities live in conditions of extreme precarity. T...
In 1960, Britain and Italy ended their colonial rule in Somaliland. British Somaliland and Italian S...
The article studies the everyday of violent conflicts and wars. It uses Somalia as a case study to e...
Background: Forced evictions are common in conflict-affected settings. More than 500 internally dis...
In this chapter, the transformation of violence in Somalia is explored alongside concomitant shiftin...
Over the past decades, Somalia has experienced civil wars, inter-clan conflicts, militias warlords, ...
This blog summarises an article published in the journal of Conflict, Security and Development and h...
The reconstruction of a larger polity in a violence-torn society such as Somalia requires negotiatio...
Rapid urbanisation is in Somalia, as in many other war-torn countries, driven by in-migration of dis...
Rapid urbanisation in Somalia, as in many other war-torn countries, is driven by in-migration of dis...
Somalia has one of the largest populations of internally displaced people (IDPs) in the world: an es...
Displacement is urbanizing. Urban violence increasingly contributes to displacement while a growing ...
This paper addresses precarity from a spatial perspective. It draws attention to how power becomes i...
The article uses the example of the Somali war to analyse how globally travelling ideas and politica...
Somalia is an exceptionally insecure state that nevertheless offers an arena in which police officer...
Displaced people settling at the margins of Somali cities live in conditions of extreme precarity. T...
In 1960, Britain and Italy ended their colonial rule in Somaliland. British Somaliland and Italian S...
The article studies the everyday of violent conflicts and wars. It uses Somalia as a case study to e...
Background: Forced evictions are common in conflict-affected settings. More than 500 internally dis...
In this chapter, the transformation of violence in Somalia is explored alongside concomitant shiftin...
Over the past decades, Somalia has experienced civil wars, inter-clan conflicts, militias warlords, ...
This blog summarises an article published in the journal of Conflict, Security and Development and h...
The reconstruction of a larger polity in a violence-torn society such as Somalia requires negotiatio...