<<
>>

References

Baker, B. (2006). Beyond the state police in urban Uganda and Sierra Leone. Afrika Spectrum, 41 (1), 55-76.

BBC News. (2003, November 6). Ex- Leone enemies ride together. BBC News.

Retrieved from http://news.bbc.co.uk/2Zhi/africa/3241687.stm

Boas, M. (2010). Liberia and Sierra Leone - Dead ringers?: The logic of neopatrimonial rule. Third World Quarterly, 22(5), 697-723.

Body, T. (2005). Reintegration of ex-combatants through micro-enterprises: An operational framework. Clementsport: Canadian Peacekeeping Centre.

Bolten, C. (2012). “We have been sensitized”: Ex-combatants, marginalization, and youth in postwar Sierra Leone. American Anthropologist, 114(3), 496-508.

Burge, M. (2011). Riding the narrow tracks of moral life: Commercial motorbike riders in Makeni, Sierra Leone. Africa Today, 58(2), 59-95.

Chabal, P., & Daloz, J. (1999). Africa works: Disorder as political instrument. London: Interna­tional African Institute.

Christensen, M. M. (2012). Big man business in the borderland of Sierra Leone. In M. Utas (Ed.), African conflicts and informal power: Big men and networks (pp. 60-77). London/New York: Zed Books in association with the Nordic Africa Institute.

Christensen, M. M., & Utas, M. (2008). Mercenaries of democracy: The ‘politricks’ of remobilized combatants in the 2007 general elections, Sierra Leone. African Affairs, 107(429), 515-539.

Coulter, C. (2009). Bush wives and girl soldiers: Women’s lives through war and peace in Sierra Leone. Ithaca: Cornell University.

Cubitt, C. (2012). Political youth: Finding alternatives to violence in Sierra Leone. In G. Maina (Ed.), Opportunity or threat: The engagement of youth in African societies (pp. 15-53). Durban: African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD).

Denov, M. (2010). Child soldier: Sierra Leone’s Revolutionary United Front.

New York: Cam­bridge University Press.

Denov, M. (2011). Social Navigation and power in post-conflict SierraLeone: Reflections from a former child soldier turned bike rider. In A. Ozerdem & S. Podder (Eds.), Child soldiers: From recruitment to reintegration (pp. 191-212). New York/Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan.

Denov, M. (2012). Child soldiers and iconography: Portrayals and (mis)representations. Children & Society, 26, 280-292.

Denov, M., & Buccitelli, A. (2013). Navigating crisis and chronicity in the everyday: Former child soldiers in urban Sierra Leone. Stability: International Journal of Security and Development, 2 (2), 45, 1-18.

Fithen, C., & Richards, P. (2005). Making war, crafting peace: Militia solidarities and demobili­zation in Sierra Leone. In P. Richards (Ed.), No peace, no war: An anthropology of contem­porary armed conflicts (pp. 117-136). Oxford: Currey.

Guyer, J. I. (1993). Wealth in people and self-realization in Equatorial Africa. Man, 28(2), 243-265.

Ibrahim, A. F., & Shepler, S. (2011). Introduction: Everyday life in postwar Sierra Leone. Africa Today, 58(2), v-xii.

Kaihko, I. (2012). Big man bargaining in African conflicts. In M. Utas (Ed.), African conflicts and informal power: Big men and networks (pp. 181-204). London/New York: Zed Books in association with the Nordic Africa Institute.

Keen, D. (2003). Greedy elites, dwindling resources, alienated youths: The anatomy of protracted violence in Sierra Leone. Internationale Politik und Gesellshaft, 2, 67-94.

Leff, J. (2008). The nexus between social capital and reintegration of ex-combatants: A case for Sierra Leone. African Journal of Conflict and Resolution, 8(1), 9-38.

Lindell, I., & Utas, M. (2012). Networked city life in Africa: Introduction. Urban Forum, 23, 409-414.

Maina, G. (2012). Introduction. In G. Maina (Ed.), Opportunity or threat: The engagement of youth in African societies (pp. 11-14). Durban: African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD).

Massaquoi, M. (2008). Sierra Leone: Police wage war on Okada riders. Retrieved February 18, 2009, from http://allafrica.com/stories/200811200960.html

Menzel, A. (2011). Between ex-combatization and opportunities for peace: The double edged qualities of motorcycle-taxi driving in urban postwar Sierra Leone. Africa Today, 58(2), 97-127.

Murphy, W. P. (2010, December). Non-refoulement - Transnational and local idioms: Moral economy of patrimonial injustices in post-conflict Liberia and Sierra Leone. Presented at the 3rd Conference of the Research Group “Integration and Conflict along the Upper Guinea Coast”, The Upper Guinea Coast in Transnational Perspective, Halle/Salley.

Peters, K. (2007). From weapons to wheels: Young Sierra Leonean ex-combatants become motorbike taxi-riders. Journal of Peace and Conflict, 10, 1-23.

Reno, W. (1995). Corruptionand state politics in Sierra Leone. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.

Sahlins, M. D. (1963). Poor man, rich man, big-man, chief: Political types in Melanesia and Polynesia. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 5(3), 285-303.

Search for Common Ground. (2006). Key findings bike riders in Sierra Leone: A case study of the intervention by Search for Common Ground. Search for Common Ground. Retrieved from www.slcg.org/programmes/sierra/pdl/bike.pdf

Utas, M. (2005). Building a future?: The reintegration and remarginalization of youth in Liberia. In P. Richards (Ed.), No peace, no war: An anthropology of contemporary armed conflicts (pp. 137-154). Oxford: Currey.

Utas, M. (2012). Introduction: Bigmanity and network governance in African conflicts. In M. Utas (Ed.), African conflicts and informal power: Big men and networks (pp. 1-31). London/New York: Zed Books in association with the Nordic Africa Institute.

Vigh, H. (2006). Navigating terrains of war: Youth and soldiering in Guinea-Bissau. New York/ Oxford: Berghahn Books.

Voldby, K. (2011, June). The ambiguity of bike riding: A study of political order and postwar patronage-networks in contemporary Sierra Leone. Presented at the 4th European Conference on African Studies, Uppsala.

<< | >>
Source: Harker C., Horschelmann K. (Eds.). Conflict, Violence and Peace. Springer,2017. — 456 p.. 2017

More on the topic References: