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State Services in an Insecure Environment: Perceptions among Civil Society in Mali

front cover
Publisher: SIPRI
December, 2018
The 2012 crisis in Mali saw the collapse of the state and disruption of the provision of basic services to the population in large parts of the country. Six years on, the focus of the Malian Government and of its international partners is still firmly on the restoration of state services and the return of state administration to the entire territory of Mali. In a questionnaire in March 2017, respondents showed that the Malian state is perceived by large parts of the Malian population as being the most legitimate actor to deliver essential services to the population. However, the state is also perceived as not being able to provide these services to a satisfactory level. Non-state actors—foreign organizations and Malian civil society—have partly taken its place. The respondents also demonstrate the capacity of Malians to find resources themselves. When communities realize that the state may not be able to provide the services that they require, they either turn to other service providers or create their own mechanisms to respond to their most pressing demands.
Contents

I. Introduction

II. Background

III. Perceptions of insecurity

IV. Responses to insecurity

V. Local demand for state services

VI. Perceptions of the state’s ability to deliver basic services

VII. Local initiatives to fill the security gap: Security from below

VIII. Conclusions

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)/EDITORS

Aurélien Tobie was a Senior Researcher and Activity Coordinator for the SIPRI Mali Civil Society and Peacebuilding Project.
Dr Grégory Chauzal was a Senior Researcher and the Director of the SIPRI Sahel West Africa Programme.