Assignment 1
Semester 2 2025
Due 18 August 2025
, GGH2601
Assignment 1
Semester 2
Due 18 August 2025
Question 1: Diversity as a Driver of Conflict in Africa
Introduction: Diversity as a Double-Edged Sword
Africa’s extraordinary cultural, ethnic, linguistic, and religious diversity constitutes both
its greatest asset and its most persistent vulnerability. While such pluralism can foster
creativity, resilience, and innovation, it often becomes a source of tension and violent
conflict when mismanaged by fragile institutions, manipulated by political elites, or
amplified by historical grievances. This discussion examines how diversity fuels conflict
in Africa, focusing on ethnic, linguistic, and religious dimensions, and supported by key
theoretical frameworks and historical examples.
1. Ethnic Diversity: Engineered Divisions and Political Instrumentalization
Africa is home to over 3,000 ethnic groups, a complexity rarely reflected in post-colonial
state boundaries. Ethnic conflict often stems not from diversity itself, but from the way
political and economic structures distribute (or fail to distribute) power and resources.
Case Studies: Rwanda and Nigeria
• Rwanda (1994): Colonial administrations institutionalized ethnic divisions,
elevating the Tutsi minority over the Hutu majority. Post-independence, these
divisions became entrenched in national politics. The genocide, which claimed
over 800,000 lives, was less an ethnic inevitability than a consequence of elite