An acclaimed academic regarding security issues on the African continent,
Prof Hussein Solomon, recently launched the book
African Security in the twenty-first Century.
The book, which was launched on 13 March 2018 at the
Archive for Contemporary Affairs on the Bloemfontein Campus of the University of the Free State (UFS), took three years to complete and has 11 chapters and 300 pages.
“It has been difficult, some of the chapters did not appear, but will be released as journal articles,” Prof Solomon said.
Focus more on human than state security“This particular book project had its origins four years ago at the
African Studies Association conference, which was held in San Diego,” Prof Solomon said.
This is where he met Stephen Emmerson, co-author of the book. “We attempted to make the book as comprehensive as possible, covering all the major sources of insecurity on the African continent – from resource conflict to conflicting identities to drug-trafficking and terrorism,” he said.
The approach of this book was to focus on human security, which is the security of ordinary Africans, in contrast to that of the state and/or regime security.