• fr Français
  • en English
CISA NEWSLETTER
Advertisement
  • February 2026
  • Editions
    • 2025
      • December 2025
      • November 2025
      • October 2025
      • September 2025
      • August 2025
      • July 2025
      • June 2025
      • May 2025
      • April 2025
      • March 2025
      • February 2025
      • January 2025
    • 2024
      • December 2024
      • November 2024
      • October 2024
      • September 2024
      • August 2024
      • July 2024
      • June 2024
      • May 2024
      • April 2024
      • March 2024
      • February 2024
      • January 2024
    • 2023
      • December 2023
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • Science
    • World
    Okada Operations In Ghana; Economic Necessity Or Security Risk

    Okada Operations In Ghana; Economic Necessity Or Security Risk

    Cedi Appreciation and National Security in Ghana: Currency Stability Amid Persistent Structural Risks

    Cedi Appreciation and National Security in Ghana: Currency Stability Amid Persistent Structural Risks

    The Mirror in the Politician: How Ghanaian Society Breeds the Corruption It Condemns

    The Mirror in the Politician: How Ghanaian Society Breeds the Corruption It Condemns

    Terrorism Financing in The Sahel/West Africa: Mechanisms, Drivers, And Responses

    Terrorism Financing in The Sahel/West Africa: Mechanisms, Drivers, And Responses

    The Silent Threat: Impact of Human and Sex Trafficking on National Security

    The Silent Threat: Impact of Human and Sex Trafficking on National Security

    How JNIM is dominating the terrorism landscape in the Sahel

    How JNIM is dominating the terrorism landscape in the Sahel

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Tech
    Securing Africa’s Digital Future: A Call to Action on Cybersecurity.

    Securing Africa’s Digital Future: A Call to Action on Cybersecurity.

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Security Contagion and the Urban Poor: Begging and the Invisible Threat in Accra’s Streets

    Security Contagion and the Urban Poor: Begging and the Invisible Threat in Accra’s Streets

    ECOWAS@50: Ghana as a Stakeholder in West Africa’s Integration Aspiration

    ECOWAS@50: Ghana as a Stakeholder in West Africa’s Integration Aspiration

    The Rise of Substance Abuse Among Ghanaian Youth: A Deep Dive into Music, Media, and Mental Health

    The Rise of Substance Abuse Among Ghanaian Youth: A Deep Dive into Music, Media, and Mental Health

    Impact Of Russia’s War in Ukraine on Africa’s Agriculture and Food Security

    Impact Of Russia’s War in Ukraine on Africa’s Agriculture and Food Security

    Transforming Africa’s Agriculture to Mitigate Food Crisis

    Transforming Africa’s Agriculture to Mitigate Food Crisis

    Framing Food Insecurity as A Security Contagion

    Framing Food Insecurity as A Security Contagion

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Game of Thrones
    • MotoGP 2017
    • eSports
    • Fashion Week
  • Review
    Key Drivers of Voter Choices for Ghana’s 2024 General Elections – A Review

    Key Drivers of Voter Choices for Ghana’s 2024 General Elections – A Review

  • CISA Ghana
  • January 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • February 2026
  • Editions
    • 2025
      • December 2025
      • November 2025
      • October 2025
      • September 2025
      • August 2025
      • July 2025
      • June 2025
      • May 2025
      • April 2025
      • March 2025
      • February 2025
      • January 2025
    • 2024
      • December 2024
      • November 2024
      • October 2024
      • September 2024
      • August 2024
      • July 2024
      • June 2024
      • May 2024
      • April 2024
      • March 2024
      • February 2024
      • January 2024
    • 2023
      • December 2023
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • Science
    • World
    Okada Operations In Ghana; Economic Necessity Or Security Risk

    Okada Operations In Ghana; Economic Necessity Or Security Risk

    Cedi Appreciation and National Security in Ghana: Currency Stability Amid Persistent Structural Risks

    Cedi Appreciation and National Security in Ghana: Currency Stability Amid Persistent Structural Risks

    The Mirror in the Politician: How Ghanaian Society Breeds the Corruption It Condemns

    The Mirror in the Politician: How Ghanaian Society Breeds the Corruption It Condemns

    Terrorism Financing in The Sahel/West Africa: Mechanisms, Drivers, And Responses

    Terrorism Financing in The Sahel/West Africa: Mechanisms, Drivers, And Responses

    The Silent Threat: Impact of Human and Sex Trafficking on National Security

    The Silent Threat: Impact of Human and Sex Trafficking on National Security

    How JNIM is dominating the terrorism landscape in the Sahel

    How JNIM is dominating the terrorism landscape in the Sahel

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Tech
    Securing Africa’s Digital Future: A Call to Action on Cybersecurity.

    Securing Africa’s Digital Future: A Call to Action on Cybersecurity.

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Security Contagion and the Urban Poor: Begging and the Invisible Threat in Accra’s Streets

    Security Contagion and the Urban Poor: Begging and the Invisible Threat in Accra’s Streets

    ECOWAS@50: Ghana as a Stakeholder in West Africa’s Integration Aspiration

    ECOWAS@50: Ghana as a Stakeholder in West Africa’s Integration Aspiration

    The Rise of Substance Abuse Among Ghanaian Youth: A Deep Dive into Music, Media, and Mental Health

    The Rise of Substance Abuse Among Ghanaian Youth: A Deep Dive into Music, Media, and Mental Health

    Impact Of Russia’s War in Ukraine on Africa’s Agriculture and Food Security

    Impact Of Russia’s War in Ukraine on Africa’s Agriculture and Food Security

    Transforming Africa’s Agriculture to Mitigate Food Crisis

    Transforming Africa’s Agriculture to Mitigate Food Crisis

    Framing Food Insecurity as A Security Contagion

    Framing Food Insecurity as A Security Contagion

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Game of Thrones
    • MotoGP 2017
    • eSports
    • Fashion Week
  • Review
    Key Drivers of Voter Choices for Ghana’s 2024 General Elections – A Review

    Key Drivers of Voter Choices for Ghana’s 2024 General Elections – A Review

  • CISA Ghana
  • January 2026
No Result
View All Result
CISA NEWSLETTER
No Result
View All Result
Home ANALYSTS

Ungoverned Spaces and the Erosion of Sovereignty in Fragile African States

Ungoverned Spaces and the Erosion of Sovereignty in Fragile African States
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Introduction

Across several African states, sovereignty is increasingly challenged not through outright territorial conquest but through gradual erosion in peripheral regions where state authority is weak. While many African states maintain de jure sovereignty through international recognition, their de facto sovereignty and effective control over territory and monopoly over legitimate violence remains uneven. Fragile African states and peripheral territories characterized by weak state presence become zones of alternative governance. In such areas, non-state actors gain legitimacy by providing security, justice, and economic regulation, thereby undermining the state’s authority.


State Failure and Fragility in the African Context


State failure theory suggests that fragility emerges when governments lose the capacity to control violence, deliver public goods, and maintain legitimacy (Rotberg, 2004). In Africa, fragility often manifests spatially rather than uniformly across the state. Capitals and major cities may remain under firm control, while rural and border regions experience administrative neglect.


The Fragile States Index (Fund for Peace, 2023) highlights indicators such as uneven development, security apparatus weaknesses, group grievance, and factionalized elites as central drivers of fragility. Countries such as Somalia, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Mali and Burkina Faso consistently rank among the most fragile states globally. Importantly, fragility in these contexts is often concentrated in peripheral territories far removed from political and economic centers.


Ungoverned Spaces in Africa

The concept of “ungoverned spaces” does not imply the absence of order. Rather, it refers to areas where the state lacks effective control, even though governance structures may still exist (Clunan & Trinkunas, 2010). In Africa, such spaces frequently emerge in borderlands, deserts, forests, and conflict-affected rural areas.

For example, in northern Mali and parts of Niger and Burkina Faso, jihadist groups linked to Jama’at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM) and Islamic State affiliates have established parallel governance systems. These groups collect taxes, enforce rules, and provide dispute resolution mechanisms, especially where state courts and security forces are absent (International Crisis Group, 2022). Communities may comply not necessarily out of ideological alignment but due to the absence of viable state alternatives.


Similarly, in eastern DRC, armed militias and rebel groups regulate mining activities, collect informal taxes and provide localized security. The Congolese state retains international recognition over the territory but struggles to exert consistent authority on the ground (Stearns, 2011). These examples demonstrate that sovereignty erosion in Africa is often gradual and territorially uneven.

Mechanisms of Sovereignty Erosion


1. Security Substitution

The first mechanism through which sovereignty erodes is security substitution. When the state cannot protect citizens from violence, armed non-state actors step in to fill the vacuum. In Somalia, Al-Shabaab has maintained control over rural areas by providing predictable, albeit coercive, security and judicial systems (Menkhaus, 2014). In some regions, its courts are perceived as more efficient than state institutions.


2. Service Provision and Legitimacy

Second, non-state actors often gain legitimacy through service provision. The security-development nexus emphasizes that insecurity and underdevelopment reinforce each other (Duffield, 2001). In peripheral African regions where infrastructure, healthcare, education, and judicial systems are weak, armed groups sometimes provide basic services or regulate markets. By addressing local grievances such as land disputes or protection against banditry, they generate pragmatic acceptance among local populations.

3. Identity and Marginalization

Third, identity-based marginalization strengthens alternative authority structures. In the Sahel, Fulani communities have sometimes been targeted by state security forces or excluded from political processes. Armed groups exploit these grievances, framing themselves as defenders of marginalized populations (International Crisis Group, 2022). Sovereignty thus erodes not only because of absence but because of perceived injustice and exclusion.


4. Border Porosity and Transnational Networks

Finally, porous borders facilitate the persistence of ungoverned spaces. Many African states inherited colonial borders that cut across ethnic and ecological zones. Limited border control enables arms trafficking, smuggling, and cross-border insurgent movement. In the Lake Chad Basin, Boko Haram has leveraged cross-border mobility between Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon to evade state authority while maintaining operational capacity (Onuoha, 2014).

Layered Sovereignty in Africa

These dynamics produce what can be described as layered sovereignty. Urban centers may exhibit strong state presence, while rural or border regions experience contested or alternative governance. The result is a fragmented political order within internationally recognized boundaries. African states facing such conditions are sovereign in law but divided in practice.


Policy Implications

If sovereignty erosion stems from peripheral fragility, policy responses must extend beyond militarized counterinsurgency. While security operations are necessary, long-term sovereignty restoration requires infrastructure development, inclusive governance, decentralization reforms, and accountable security institutions. Strengthening state presence in marginalized regions through roads, schools, courts, and health services can enhance both legitimacy and control.

Conclusion

Territorial size alone does not determine sovereignty outcomes. Rather, in fragile African states, uneven governance and peripheral neglect create environments where non-state actors assume governance roles. These actors gain legitimacy by providing security and services that the state fails to deliver. Sovereignty, therefore, erodes gradually through governance substitution rather than abrupt collapse. Understanding sovereignty as spatially differentiated offers a more precise framework for analyzing fragility and designing sustainable policy interventions across Africa.

This is a good paper.  I believe that it has  been written very generally to reflect an overall perspective on Africa.  We could perhaps enrich this further by linking the issues and conclusions reached to Ghana.

Taking issues of galamsey into perspective, we see quite clearly that the government has lost control in certain areas across the country and takes sporadic measures occasionally to assert authority. 

There are many more creeping challenges across Africa, such as the reckless use of motorbikes and the failure to register and control them effectively, illegal land use and the incidence of landguards, the illegitimate use of middle men for official services etc strengthens the creeping loss of state control across Africa. Your conclusions therefore, that unless pragmatic measures are implemented that addresses joblessness, poor governance, provision of social services etc, the state would lose control becomes very strong.

References


Clunan, A. L., & Trinkunas, H. A. (2010). Ungoverned spaces? Alternatives to state authority in an era of softened sovereignty. Stanford University Press.

Duffield, M. (2001). Global governance and the new wars: The merging of development and security. Zed Books.

Fund for Peace. (2023). Fragile States Index 2023. https://fragilestatesindex.org/

International Crisis Group. (2022). The Sahel: Insurgency and governance in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso. International Crisis Group Report.

Menkhaus, K. (2014). State failure, state-building, and prospects for a “functional failed state” in Somalia. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 656(1), 154–172.

Onuoha, F. C. (2014). Why do youth join Boko Haram? United States Institute of Peace Special Report.

Rotberg, R. I. (2004). When states fail: Causes and consequences. Princeton University Press.

Stearns, J. (2011). Dancing in the glory of monsters: The collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa. PublicAffairs.

Tags: 20263rd Edition 2026Mar week3
ShareTweet
Previous Post

From Disinformation to Regime Change: Hybrid Influence and the New Politics of Destabilisation in Africa

Next Post

Foreign Wars, Ghanaian Fighters: Why a Foreign Fighters Act Is Now Urgent

Next Post
Foreign Fighters and Security Contagion: Implications for Ghana

Foreign Wars, Ghanaian Fighters: Why a Foreign Fighters Act Is Now Urgent

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Africa's Natural Resources: Who’s After What And What’s The Continent’s Strategy In The Scramble Game?

Africa’s Natural Resources: Who’s After What And What’s The Continent’s Strategy In The Scramble Game?

March 14, 2026
Effects of overpopulation in class on quality of education

Effects of overpopulation in class on quality of education

March 25, 2024
The Growing Influence Of AES On African Countries

The Growing Influence Of AES On African Countries

April 1, 2025
Slums and Security in Africa: A Growing Threat

Slums and Security in Africa: A Growing Threat

July 25, 2025
Integration of environmental security into Ghana’s National Security Strategy safeguards the future

Integration of environmental security into Ghana’s National Security Strategy safeguards the future

10
Border Security: A Door Left Wide Open

Border Security: A Door Left Wide Open

3
Polls close in Liberia

Liberia: Once a war-torn country, now Africa’s beacon of democracy – Lessons for Africa

1
Alliance Of Sahel States Formation: Objectives & Implications for ECOWAS

Alliance Of Sahel States Formation: Objectives & Implications for ECOWAS

1
The Expendable Vanguard: Recalibrating the African Geopolitical Response to Global Military Recruitment

The Expendable Vanguard: Recalibrating the African Geopolitical Response to Global Military Recruitment

March 16, 2026
Sovereignty at the Frontier: Mitigating the Unconscious Drift Toward Diplomatic Advocacy

Sovereignty at the Frontier: Mitigating the Unconscious Drift Toward Diplomatic Advocacy

March 16, 2026
Precarious Mobility and Proxy War: African Migration in the Shadow of Russia’s Militarisation Strategy

Precarious Mobility and Proxy War: African Migration in the Shadow of Russia’s Militarisation Strategy

March 16, 2026
Foreign Fighters and Security Contagion: Implications for Ghana

Foreign Wars, Ghanaian Fighters: Why a Foreign Fighters Act Is Now Urgent

March 16, 2026

Popular Stories

  • Africa's Natural Resources: Who’s After What And What’s The Continent’s Strategy In The Scramble Game?

    Africa’s Natural Resources: Who’s After What And What’s The Continent’s Strategy In The Scramble Game?

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Effects of overpopulation in class on quality of education

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Growing Influence Of AES On African Countries

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Slums and Security in Africa: A Growing Threat

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Concept of Beauty in Africa

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

CISA Newsletter

Headlining West African News

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • ANALYSTS
  • Business
  • ECONOMY
  • EDITORIAL
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Politics
  • Review
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • World

Recent News

The Expendable Vanguard: Recalibrating the African Geopolitical Response to Global Military Recruitment

The Expendable Vanguard: Recalibrating the African Geopolitical Response to Global Military Recruitment

March 16, 2026
Sovereignty at the Frontier: Mitigating the Unconscious Drift Toward Diplomatic Advocacy

Sovereignty at the Frontier: Mitigating the Unconscious Drift Toward Diplomatic Advocacy

March 16, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2023 CISA Ghana Newsletter - Headlines West Africa.

  • fr Français
  • en English
No Result
View All Result
  • February 2026
  • Editions
    • 2025
      • December 2025
      • November 2025
      • October 2025
      • September 2025
      • August 2025
      • July 2025
      • June 2025
      • May 2025
      • April 2025
      • March 2025
      • February 2025
      • January 2025
    • 2024
      • December 2024
      • November 2024
      • October 2024
      • September 2024
      • August 2024
      • July 2024
      • June 2024
      • May 2024
      • April 2024
      • March 2024
      • February 2024
      • January 2024
    • 2023
      • December 2023
  • News
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Review
  • CISA Ghana

© 2023 CISA Ghana Newsletter - Headlines West Africa.

  • English
  • Français (French)