Sanctions as a Coercive Leverage Within ECOWAS

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Abstract

Over the past few years, West Africa has become one of the most turbulent regions in the world and has shocked the world community with a series of military coups. However, escalating tensions between the “rebel states” and ECOWAS have received the most attention. ECOWAS has a wide range of means to exercise pressure on its member states. One of the most powerful is sanctions, but after the recent military coup in Niger, as a result of which the Community imposed unprecedentedly harsh sanctions against the state, the situation has changed radically. The authors list factors that determined the order and reasons for the particular political and economic sanctions before the coup in Niger, analyze the events after it. The paper dwells upon mechanisms of their economic and political impact on the economy of “rebel states” and the long-run efficiency in changing their foreign policy direction. The authors conclude that the economic sanctions have had a negative impact on the sustainability of the long-term development of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, which forced them to adopt compromise transition plans. However, sanctions turn out to be inefficient in trying to change the political regime to the one desired by ECOWAS. The disintegration of the association as a result of the creation of the Alliance of Sahel States can be considered a result of the ECOWAS sanction policy.

About the authors

T. A Andreeva

Institute for African Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: t.andreeva@inafr.ru
ORCID iD: 0009-0003-9195-3578
Junior Researcher Moscow, Russia

A. D Novikov

Institute for African Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: aleksandr.d.novikov@gmail.com
ORCID iD: 0000-0001-7759-8440
Junior Researcher Moscow, Russia

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