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War-making as worldmaking: Kenya, the United States, and the war on terror

Hosted by Department of Sociology and ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Human Rights

OLD.3.24, Old Building, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, WC2A 2AE

Speaker

Dr Samar Al-Bulushi

Chair

Dr Mahvish Ahmad

Dr Mahvish Ahmad

Samar Al-Bulushi joins us to discuss her newly-released book  (Stanford Univeristy Press, 2024).

Since Kenya's invasion of Somalia in 2011, the Kenyan state has been engaged in direct combat with the Somali militant group Al-Shabaab, conducting airstrikes in southern Somalia and deploying heavy-handed police tactics at home. As the hunt for suspects has expanded within Kenya, Kenyan Muslims have been subject to disappearances and extrajudicial killings at the hands of U.S.-trained Kenyan police.

War-Making as Worldmaking explores the entanglement of militarism, imperialism, and liberal-democratic governance in East Africa today. Samar Al-Bulushi argues that Kenya's emergence as a key player in the "War on Terror" is closely linked—but not reducible to—the U.S. military's growing proclivity to outsource the labor of war. Attending to the cultural politics of security, Al-Bulushi illustrates that the war against Al-Shabaab has become a means to produce new fantasies, emotions, and subjectivities about Kenya's place in the world. Meanwhile, Kenya's alignment with the U.S. provides cover for the criminalisation and policing of the country's Muslim minority population.

How is life lived in a place that is not understood to be a site of war, yet is often experienced as such by its targets? This book weaves together multiple scales of analysis, asking what a view from East Africa can tell us about the shifting configurations and expansive geographies of post-9/11 imperial warfare.

Meet our speakers and chair

Samar Al-Bulushi is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Irvine.

Mahvish Ahmad is Assistant Professor of Human Rights and Politics in the Department of Sociology and Co-Director of ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Human Rights. 

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