Authors :
Joseph Nylander
Volume/Issue :
Volume 10 - 2025, Issue 9 - September
Google Scholar :
https://tinyurl.com/4eanbfvt
Scribd :
https://tinyurl.com/2pbt7dfp
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/25sep123
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Abstract :
Sierra Leone, a nation forged in the crucible of a brutal civil war (1991-2002), has made significant strides in rebuilding
its state institutions and establishing peace. However, its journey remains a testament to the persistent challenges of post-conflict
state-building. Endemic poverty, political fragility, corruption, and external shocks like the 2014-2016 Ebola epidemic and the
COVID-19 pandemic have continually tested the nation's resilience. Traditional state-centric security sector reform (SSR), while
necessary, has proven insufficient in addressing the multifaceted and localized nature of insecurity that citizens experience daily.
This article argues that the path from fragility to sustainable resilience in Sierra Leone lies in a fundamental rethinking of the
security paradigm. It posits that a community-driven approach, which empowers local actors and integrates informal justice
and safety mechanisms with the formal state apparatus, is not merely an alternative but an essential component for building
lasting peace. Through a comprehensive review of existing literature, policy documents, and case studies, this article examines
the limitations of the top-down security model and analyses the effectiveness and potential of community-based security
structures. It concludes that a hybrid security governance model, fostering synergy between state and community actors, is
critical for addressing the root causes of insecurity and cultivating a resilient social fabric capable of withstanding future crises.
Keywords :
Sierra Leone, Security Sector Reform (SSR), Community-Driven Security, Human Security, State Fragility, Resilience, Post- Conflict Reconstruction, Community Policing.
References :
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- Afrobarometer. (2022). Summary of Results | Afrobarometer Round 9 Survey in Sierra Leone. Afrobarometer Dispatch No. 562.
- Albrecht, P., & Jackson, P. (2013). Security System Transformation in Sierra Leone, 1997-2007. Global Institutions.
- Baker, B. (2010). Security in Post-Conflict Africa: The Role of Nonstate Policing. CRC Press.
- Ball, N., & Bryden, A. (2005). Security Sector Reform: Potentials and Challenges for Conflict Transformation. In A. Austin, M. Fischer, & N. Ropers (Eds.), Transforming Ethnopolitical Conflict: The Berghof Handbook (pp. 341-358). VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften.
- Bangura, A. (2018). Politics, Patronage and the Persistence of the ‘Two-Party System’ in Sierra Leone. The Journal of Modern African Studies, 56(2), 291-314.
- Bøås, M., & Jennings, K. M. (2007). ‘Failed states’ and ‘state failure’: Deconstructing the new orthodoxy. In K. M. Jennings & M. Bøås (Eds.), The Politics of State Failure: Global Responses to the New World Order (pp. 1-16). Zed Books.
- Denney, L. (2015). Justice and Security in Sierra Leone: A Review of the Literature. Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium.
- Fanthorpe, R. (2007). Sierra Leone: The Influence of the Secret Societies, with Special Reference to Female Genital Mutilation. UNHCR.
- Ferme, M. C. (2001). The Underneath of Things: Violence, History, and the Everyday in Sierra Leone. University of California Press.
- Government of Sierra Leone. (1999). The Lomé Peace Agreement.
- Hänggi, H. (2004). Conceptualising Security Sector Reform and Reconstruction. In H. Hänggi & T. H. Winkler (Eds.), Challenges of Security Sector Governance (pp. 3-20). DCAF.
- Harris, D. J. (2014). State-Building and the ‘Other’ Justice: The Exclusion of Customary Law in Sierra Leone. Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, 46(1), 28-50.
- Human Rights Watch. (2023). Sierra Leone: Events of 2022. Retrieved from https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2023/country-chapters/sierra-leone
- Lieshout, P. van. (2016). From Security Sector Reform to Security Sector Transformation: Human Security as a Strategic Framework. Clingendael.
- Malan, M. (2008). Security Sector Reform in Sierra Leone 1997-2007: Views from the Ground. GFN-SSR.
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- Paris, R. (2004). At War's End: Building Peace After Civil Conflict. Cambridge University Press.25
- Raleigh, C. (2012). The search for security: The geopolitics of hybrid order in Africa. In D. M. Tull & A. Mehler (Eds.), The Politics of Security in Africa (pp. 21-41). GIGA.
- Richards, P., Amara, J., Kabbah, J. O., Kamara, B., Sinah, K., & Sovula, M. (2015). Community-led Ebola response in Sierra Leone: a case study from the Eastern region. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
- Rotberg, R. I. (Ed.). (2004). When States Fail: Causes and Consequences. Princeton University Press.
- Sam-Kpakra, R. (2012). The Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces (RSLAF): From Pariah to Professional Force. African Security Review, 21(2), 52-64.
- Sesay, A. (2017). The Role of the Office of National Security (ONS) in Consolidating Peace in Sierra Leone. In M. K. Jalloh (Ed.), Peace and Security in Sierra Leone (pp. 87-104). Palgrave Macmillan.
- Stauffer, C. (2012). Fambul Tok and the Gacaca: A Comparative Analysis of Two Community-Based Reconciliation Initiatives in Sierra Leone and Rwanda. African Conflict and Peacebuilding Review, 2(1), 1-32.
- United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). (1994). Human Development Report 1994: New Dimensions of Human Security. Oxford University Press.
Sierra Leone, a nation forged in the crucible of a brutal civil war (1991-2002), has made significant strides in rebuilding
its state institutions and establishing peace. However, its journey remains a testament to the persistent challenges of post-conflict
state-building. Endemic poverty, political fragility, corruption, and external shocks like the 2014-2016 Ebola epidemic and the
COVID-19 pandemic have continually tested the nation's resilience. Traditional state-centric security sector reform (SSR), while
necessary, has proven insufficient in addressing the multifaceted and localized nature of insecurity that citizens experience daily.
This article argues that the path from fragility to sustainable resilience in Sierra Leone lies in a fundamental rethinking of the
security paradigm. It posits that a community-driven approach, which empowers local actors and integrates informal justice
and safety mechanisms with the formal state apparatus, is not merely an alternative but an essential component for building
lasting peace. Through a comprehensive review of existing literature, policy documents, and case studies, this article examines
the limitations of the top-down security model and analyses the effectiveness and potential of community-based security
structures. It concludes that a hybrid security governance model, fostering synergy between state and community actors, is
critical for addressing the root causes of insecurity and cultivating a resilient social fabric capable of withstanding future crises.
Keywords :
Sierra Leone, Security Sector Reform (SSR), Community-Driven Security, Human Security, State Fragility, Resilience, Post- Conflict Reconstruction, Community Policing.