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African Arguments

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Burkina Faso

Home›African Arguments›Country›West›Category: "Burkina Faso"
  • African ArgumentsBurkina FasoCongo-KinshasaDebating IdeasMaliNigerPolitics

    Why African Borderlands Keep Burning

    By Olivier Walther and Steven Radil
    April 15, 2026
    Dr Olivier Walther and Dr Steven Radil share findings from their ongoing research on African borderlands including a forthcoming article in Applied Geography. Africa’s margins ...
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  • African ArgumentsBurkina FasoCôte d'IvoireDebating IdeasMaliPolitics

    Côte d’Ivoire, Mali and Burkina Faso: a shared history collides with political fractures

    By Gael Zozoro
    January 12, 2026
    For many decades, Côte d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso and Mali constituted one of the most integrated spaces of human and economic circulation in West Africa. ...
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  • Burkina FasoConflict & CrisisLong readTop story

    Could the jihadis dismantle the Sahelian state?

    By Nalova Akua
    June 7, 2023
    Beleaguered by a decade of Salafi-jihadist attacks, riven by internal grievances and undermined by the corrupt Francafrique system of clientelism and extraction, are the ...
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  • Burkina Faso's coup leaders on RTB, the national broadcaster.
    Burkina FasoPoliticsSociety

    Burkina Faso’s battle for the airwaves

    By Emma Heywood, Emmanuel Klimis, Lassané Yaméogo & Marie Fierens
    February 7, 2022
    One of the first things the coup leaders on taking power this January was to restore the internet and surround the national broadcaster with tanks. ...
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  • Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Damiba giving a public address after the coup in Burkina Faso. a
    Burkina FasoPolitics

    Making sense of the coup in Burkina Faso

    By Nick Westcott
    January 31, 2022
    The latest coup in the Sahel again points to domestic and international distrust and policy failures. Another day, another coup in the Sahel. Within ...
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  • boko haram Outside Kurmi Market in Kano, North West Nigeria. Credit: Eugene Kim.
    Burkina FasoMaliNigerNigeriaPolitics

    The most worrying aspect of the Kankara kidnapping

    By Audu Bulama Bukarti
    February 17, 2021
    Could Boko Haram’s spread in northwest Nigeria increase opportunities for coordination between Islamist groups in the Lake Chad Basin and Sahel? On 17 December, ...
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  • Burkina Faso elections A refugee camp in northern Burkina Faso. Credit: Pablo Tosco/Oxfam.
    Burkina FasoPolitics

    Elections will be tricky, but Burkina Faso has an even bigger problem

    By Brian J. Peterson
    November 20, 2020
    The Islamist militant threat constitutes a full-blown insurgency. Jihadist groups control significant territory and have displaced over 1 million people. When Burkina Faso holds ...
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  • Protesting on the 30th anniversary of former president Thomas Sankara's assassination. Credit: Balai Citoyen.
    Burkina FasoSociety

    How Burkina Faso took to the streets to remove a dictator, then stayed there

    By Ernest Harsch
    April 19, 2018
    Years after Burkinabé citizens overthrew a repressive regime, street protests continue apace over a wide range of issues. Early this month, Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougou was briefly ...
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  • Credit: Guillaume Colin & Pauline Penot.
    Burkina FasoSociety

    “We’re here to stay”: Vigilante policing spreading across Burkina Faso

    By Bram Posthumus
    January 26, 2018
    In the absence of the state, local armed units have emerged to enforce law and order. They have been welcomed by many, but not ...
    Read More
  • Burkina FasoPolitics

    The “People’s Victory”: President-elect Kaboré and the democratic road ahead for Burkina Faso

    By Brian J. Peterson
    December 4, 2015
    It’s tempting to think Roch Kaboré will simply replicate Compaoré’s old system, but the reality is that something has fundamentally changed in Burkina Faso. When ...
    Read More
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