Rethinking Somali State-building: In View of the Comprehensive Perspective of Somali Studies

Volume 8, Issue 5, October 2024     |     PP. 241-272      |     PDF (823 K)    |     Pub. Date: October 7, 2024
DOI: 10.54647/sociology841323    17 Downloads     1340 Views  

Author(s)

Abdurahman Baadiyow, Professor of Modern Islamic History and a Senior Adviser for the Somali President on Peace and Reconciliation.

Abstract
Somali studies is a multidisciplinary field that explores the Somali people in the Horn of Africa, their global diasporic communities, and their interactions with other societies. Positioned between Africa and the Middle East, Somali studies draw heavily from both African and Middle Eastern scholarship. Despite significant advancements in the field, key questions—such as the reasons behind the Somali state’s collapse within 30 years of independence (1960-1991) and how to successfully reinstitute it—remain contested. Moreover, the political culture and policies of Somalia’s former military regimes continue to influence contemporary state-building processes, perpetuating past governance challenges.While this paper focuses on Somalia, its central thesis extends to other postcolonial states in conflict with traditional societal structures, such as Yemen, Libya, Sudan, Chad, Mauritania, and Afghanistan. These countries have followed a similar trajectory, from weak postcolonial governments to military dictatorships, civil wars, and ongoing state-society conflict. This paper outlines the theoretical framework underpinning the research, identifies the critical challenges to Somali state-building, and provides an overview of diverse perspectives within Somali studies. It culminates in a discussion of the main conflicts in Somalia and proposes an Inclusive Reconciliation Framework (IRF), which could serve as the foundation for a Stability Model (SM) to guide future state-building efforts.

Keywords
Somali studies, comprehensive perspective, Somali state-building, theory of state-society relations, elite theory, ibn-Khaldun’s theory of solidarity, Somali elite culture, Stability Model of Somali State-building

Cite this paper
Abdurahman Baadiyow, Rethinking Somali State-building: In View of the Comprehensive Perspective of Somali Studies , SCIREA Journal of Sociology. Volume 8, Issue 5, October 2024 | PP. 241-272. 10.54647/sociology841323

References

[ 1 ] Abdi said M.A. “The Al-Shabaab Al-Mujahidiin: A Profile of the First Somali Terrorist Organisation.” Available from https://www.files.ethz.ch/isn/55851/AlShabaab.pdf (accessed on 25 April 2023).
[ 2 ] Abdullahi, Abdurahman. “Tribalism, Nationalism, and Islam: Crisis of the Political Loyalties in Somalia.” MA thesis, Islamic Institute, McGill University, 1992.
[ 3 ] Ibid. “Women, Islamists and Military Regime in Somalia: The New Family Law and Its Implications.” In Milk and Peace, Drought and War: Somali Culture and Politics, edited by M.V. Hoehne, and V. Luling, 137–60. London: Hurst, 2010. (accessed on 26 April 2023).
[ 4 ] Ibid. “Conceptions of Transitional Justice in Somalia: Findings of Field Research in Mogadishu.” North African Studies, Michigan State University Press 14, no. 2 (2014).
[ 5 ] Ibid. The Islamic Movement in Somalia: A Case Study of Islah Movement (1950-2000). London: Adonis & Abbey, 2015.
[ 6 ] Ibid. Recovering the Somali state: The Role of Islam, Islamism, and Transitional Justice. Adonis and Abbey Publishers, 2017.
[ 7 ] Ibid. Making Sense of Somali History, Volume One. Adonis & Abbey, 2018.
[ 8 ] Ibid. Making Sense of Somali History, Volume Two. Adonis & Abbey, 2018.
[ 9 ] Ibid. “Revisiting Somali historiography: Critique and Idea of Comprehensive Perspective.” Journal of Somali Studies: Research on Somalia and the Greater Horn of African Countries 5, no. 1–2 (2018).
[ 10 ] Ibid. “The Somali Elite Political Culture: Conceptions, Structures, and Historical Evolution.” Somali Studies: A Peer-Reviewed Academic Journal for Somali Studies 5, 2020.
[ 11 ] Ibid. “The Conception of Islam in Somalia: Consensus and Controversy.” Bildhaan 21, 2023.
[ 12 ] Abdurahman, Abdullahi, and Ibrahim Farah. “Reconciling the State, and Society: Reordering the Islamic work and Clan System.” Available from https://www.scribd.com/document/15327358/Reconciling-the-State-and-Society-in-Somalia#
[ 13 ] Abdullahi, Osman. “The Role of Egypt, Ethiopia the Blue Nile in the Failure of the Somali Conflict Resolutions: A Zero-Sum Game.” A paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association, Hilton Hawaiian Village, Honolulu, Hawaii, March 2005.
[ 14 ] Abuiyada, Dr. Reem, Traditional Development Theories have failed to Address the Needs of the majority of People at Grassroots Levels with Reference to GAD. Social Sciences Department Dhofar University Salalah, Sultanate of Oman. International Journal of Business and Social Science Vol. 9, No. 9. September 2018
[ 15 ] Aflare, Elmi. “Decentralization options for Somalia: Paper for the Heritage Institute for Policy Studies,” 2014. http://www.heritageinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Decentralization_Options_for_Somalia-ENGLISH.pdf (accessed on May 10, 2023
[ 16 ] Ahmed, Christine Choi. God, Anti-Colonialism, and Drums: Sheikh Uways and the Uwaysiyya. Available from https://escholarship.org/content/qt1mm6m9xc/qt1mm6m9xc_noSplash_2d2616bf7466070d31416d5476038d07.pdf?t=mniqgz (accessed on 24 May 2023)
[ 17 ] Al-Gousi, Hiam Salah El-din Ali. “Women’s Rights in Islam and Contemporary Ulama: Limitations and Constraints. (Egypt as Case Study).” Ph.D. thesis, University of Leeds, 2010. Available from https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/15221/1/535101.pdf (accessed on 15 May 2023), 91-103
[ 18 ] Al-Qaradawi, Yusuf. The Status of Women in Islam. Available from https://www.centuryassociation.org/download/marriage_2016/books/The_Status_of_Women_in_Islam__by_Yusuf_al_Qaradawi.pdf (accessed on 17 May 2023)
[ 19 ] Apperly, Ian A. and Butterfill, Stephen A. “Do humans have two systems to track beliefs and belief-like states?” Psychological Review 116, no. 4 (2009): 953–70.
[ 20 ] Aslan, Seyfettin. “Historical background and Principles of Kemalism.” NWSA–Social Sciences, 2013.
[ 21 ] Bagdons, Ozlem Demirtas. “A Poststructuralist Approach to Ideology and Foreign Policy: Kemalism in the Turkish Foreign Policy Discourse.” Ph.D. thesis, Central European University, Hungary, 2008.
[ 22 ] Building Peaceful States and Societies: A DFID Practice Paper. London: Department for International Development, 2010.
[ 23 ] Burnham, James. The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom. The John Day Company, 1943.
[ 24 ] Evans, Peter. Embedded Autonomy. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995.
[ 25 ] Farah, Ibrahim. “Foreign Policy and Conflict in Somalia, 1960-1990.” Ph.D. diss., University of Nairobi, 2009.
[ 26 ] Haggard, Stephen. Pathways from the Periphery. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1990.
[ 27 ] Hussein, Asaf, Political Perspectives on the Muslim World. New York: Praeger, 1981.
[ 28 ] Ibn-Khaldun, The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History. Princeton University Press, 1980.
[ 29 ] Johnson, David (dit). A Historical Companion to Postcolonial Literatures – Continental Europe and its Empires. Edinburgh University Press, 2008.
[ 30 ] Josef, Dan and Maruf, Harun. Inside al-Shabaab: The Secret History of al-Qaida’s Most Powerful Ally. Indiana University Press, 2021.
[ 31 ] Kassim, Mohamed M. “Aspects of Banadir Cultural History: The Case of Baravan Ulama.” In The Invention of Somalia, edited by Ali Jumale. Red Sed Sea Press, 1995.
[ 32 ] Khajeh-Sarvi, A. R., Political Competition and Political Stability in Iran. Tehran: Revolution Documents Center Publications, 2003.
[ 33 ] Kohli, Atul. “State, Society, and Development.” In Political Science: The State of the Discipline, edited by Ira Katznelson and Helen Milner (eds.). New York: Norton, 2002.
[ 34 ] K, Prewitt K, A, Stone. “The ruling elite.” In Olsen ME, Marger MN, Eds. Power in modern societies. Boulder. Westview Press 1993.
[ 35 ] Owusu, Maxwell. Colonial and Postcolonial Anthropology of Africa: Scholarship or Sentiment? De Gruyter Mouton, 1979.
[ 36 ] Martin, B.G. and Shaykh Uways Bin Mouhammad Al-Barawi. “A Traditional Somali Sufi.” In Urban Woes and Pious Remedies: Sufism in Nineteenth Century Banaadir (Somalia), edited by Scott Rees. Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1999.
[ 37 ] Midgel, Joel. State in Society: Studying How States and Societies Transform and Constitute Each Other. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001.
[ 38 ] Mozaffar, Shaheen, Dimensions of state-society Relations in Africa. African Studies Center, 1985.
[ 39 ] Muhammad Husayn Haykal. Life of Muhammad. Translated by Isma’il Al-Faruqi. Available from https://muqith.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/muhammadbyhaykal.pdf (accessed on 17 May 2023).
[ 40 ] Mukhtar, Mohamed. “Islam in the Somali History: Fact and Fiction.” In The Invention of Somalia, edited by Ali Jumale. Red Sed Sea Press, 1995.
[ 41 ] Poddar, Prem and Johnson, David (dit). A Historical Companion to Postcolonial Thought in English. Colombia University Press, 2007.
[ 42 ] Samatar, Ahmed. “Somali Studies: Towards an Alternative Epistemology.” Northeast African Studies 11, no. 1 (1989): 3–17. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43660258. David Laitin and Said Samatar, Somalia: In search of a state. (Boulder, Westview Press), 1987, 198. Also.
[ 43 ] Ibid. Samatar on Lewis: “A Modern History of Somali: Nation and State in the Horn of Africa” H-Africa, 2003.
[ 44 ] Ibid. “The Curse of Allah: Civic Disembowelment and the Collapse of the State in Somalia.” In The Somali Challenge: From Catastrophe to Renewal? Edited by Ahmed Samatar. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 1994.
[ 45 ] Samatar, Said. “Sheikh Uways Muhammad of Baraawe, 1847-1909: Mystic and Reformer in East Africa.” In The Shadows of Conquest: Islam in Colonial Northeast Africa, edited by Said S. Samatar. Trenton, NJ: The Red Sea Press, 1992.
[ 46 ] Spalding, Nancy Jackson. “State-Society Relations in Africa: An Exploration of the Tanzanian Experience.” Polity, vol. 29, no. 1, 1996, 65–96.
[ 47 ] Tipps, Dean. “Modernization Theory and Comparative Study of the Societies: A Critical Perspective.” Comparative Study of Society and History 15, no. 2 (1973): 199–226.
[ 48 ] Touval, Saadia. “The Organization of African Unity and Borders.” International Organization 21, no. 1, 1967.
[ 49 ] Weber M. The theory of social and economic organization. New York: Oxford University Press 1943.
[ 50 ] Wright, Erik. Approaches to Class Analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.