2007
DOI: 10.1017/s0022278x06002291
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Hijacking civil society: the inside story of the Bakassi Boys vigilante group of south-eastern Nigeria

Abstract: Analyses of the rise of violent vigilantism in Africa have focused increasingly on the ‘uncivil' character of African society. This article challenges the recourse to cultural or instrumentalist explanations, in which vigilantism is portrayed as a reversion to violent indigenous institutions of law and order based on secret societies and occultist practices, or is viewed as a product of the contemporary institutional environment of clientelism and corruption in which youth struggle for their share of patronage… Show more

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Cited by 109 publications
(82 citation statements)
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“…12 Other scholars have argued that informal policing is not only popular in the absence of formal police but it has been proven to actually work. 13 In some areas, it has been anchored in the local traditional systems of governance. 14 Informal security networks, especially in slums, are a complex web of linkages of different groups that include gangs, youth groups and vigilantes.…”
Section: Understanding Gangsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…12 Other scholars have argued that informal policing is not only popular in the absence of formal police but it has been proven to actually work. 13 In some areas, it has been anchored in the local traditional systems of governance. 14 Informal security networks, especially in slums, are a complex web of linkages of different groups that include gangs, youth groups and vigilantes.…”
Section: Understanding Gangsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Aba shoe associations managed to capture the ear of the state by forming a vigilante group known as the Bakassi Boys to improve security in Aba. Far from contributing to enterprise development, however, this initiative was hijacked by Igbo state governors and turned into a notorious ethnic militia that terrorised much of south-eastern Nigeria during the run-up to Nigeria's 2003elections (Human Rights Watch 2002Meagher 2007a;Ukiwo 2002). Instead of contributing to pro-poor governance, exemplary efforts at popular organisation in all three clusters have tended to exacerbate a situation of lack of governance and economic decline.…”
Section: Cluster Associations and Public Actionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vigilante groups characteristically emerge when the police fail to protect citizens (Anderson 2002 ;Baker 2002a ;Buur 2006 ;Heald 1986 ;Meagher 2007). In the case of smuggling, the state does not fail to protect, but is simply not allowed to protect the actors and their property.…”
Section: T H E M a S A I A N D B W E R A A S A B O R D E R T O W Nmentioning
confidence: 99%