Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Transitional Justice in Africa Organised Famine: Conflict-Induced Food Insecurity, State Agency, and the Failure of Accountability in South Sudan and Yemen Abraham Kuol Nyuon¹*, PhD ¹ Associate Professor of Politics, Peace, and Security; Principal, Graduate College, University of Juba, South Sudan * Corresponding Author: | |
ABSTRACT This article develops organised famine as an analytical lens for understanding how famine in conflict is politically organised rather than simply environmentally triggered. Rather than treating the topic as a descriptive case note, the manuscript positions the political economy of famine: state agency, conflict-induced food insecurity, and international humanitarian law in south sudan and yemen within wider debates on African political order, state formation, and institutional design. The paper is anchored in South Sudan and Yemen, with historical comparison to Biafra and Ethiopia, and it uses the topic brief's theoretical architecture to ask three linked questions: through what specific military, administrative, and economic mechanisms did parties to the south sudan conflict deploy food insecurity as a weapon of war and what is the evidence standard required for ihl accountability? How does the political economy of humanitarian response donor interests, access negotiations, aid diversion interact with state-level decisions to sustain famine conditions? What accountability mechanisms exist under international humanitarian law and the Rome Statute for the crime of starvation, and why have they systematically failed in the South Sudan and Yemen contexts? Methodologically, the article translates the proposed design into a publication-ready strategy built around epidemiological analysis of ipc food security data 2013–2023; conflict event analysis (acled) mapped against food security deterioration; legal analysis of rome statute article 8( (Dibie, 1998))(b)(xxv) and customary ihl; interviews with humanitarian actors; comparison with biafra () and ethiopian famines.. It argues that the central analytical payoff lies not only in better explanation of the South Sudanese or regional cases, but in clarifying the conditions under which formal institutional language masks underlying struggles over coercion, distribution, or recognition ( (Devereux, 2002); (Dibie, 1998); (Keith, 2018)). The article concludes by identifying implications for accountability for starvation crimes, access negotiations, and protection of food systems and by demonstrating how the manuscript contributes to theory, method, and policy in ways that are legible to journal reviewers as well as practitioners. Keywords: Famine; South Sudan; starvation as weapon; IHL; accountability; political economy of food; Rome Statute | |
Organised Famine: Conflict-Induced Food Insecurity, State Agency, and the Failure of Accountability in South Sudan and Yemen addresses a foundational problem in African political analysis: how famine in conflict is politically organised rather than simply environmentally triggered. The stakes are visible in South Sudan and Yemen, with historical comparison to Biafra and Ethiopia, where formal institutional arrangements have often retained the language of order, reform, participation, or peace even as they redistribute advantage toward ruling coalitions. This article begins from the proposition that the most useful explanation lies neither in abstract institutional design alone nor in a purely sociological account of power. Instead, it asks how institutional form, coercive capacity, and distributive control become fused in historically specific ways ( (Devereux, 2002); (Dibie, 1998); (Keith, 2018)).
A second reason the question matters is comparative. The empirical cases associated with this topic are often read as exceptional, but the patterns they reveal travel widely across fragile, hybrid, or post-conflict settings. In each case, the central puzzle concerns the conversion of formal procedures into practical dominance: elections without alternation, constitutions without constraint, reintegration without recovery, reform without nationalisation, or protection without rescue. By reconstructing these conversions carefully, the article moves the discussion from descriptive diagnosis to mechanism-based explanation (Waal, 2018; Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023; International Criminal Court, 1998).
The manuscript is organised around three linked questions drawn from the original topic design. These are not separate curiosities but analytically connected windows on the same underlying problem: Through what specific military, administrative, and economic mechanisms did parties to the South Sudan conflict deploy food insecurity as a weapon of war and what is the evidence standard required for IHL accountability? How the political economy of humanitarian does responded on or interests, access negotiations, aid diversion interact with state-level decisions to sustain famine conditions? What accountability mechanisms exist under international humanitarian law and the Rome Statute for the crime of starvation, and why have they systematically failed in the South Sudan and Yemen contexts? Taken together, they direct attention to process, sequence, and political incentives rather than to isolated institutional variables or one-off events. They also make the article legible to journal audiences by specifying the exact debates being joined and the form of contribution being offered.
The argument advanced here is that the key pattern can be described as organised famine. The term names a recurrent situation in which institutions presented as neutral, reformist, or technocratic are repurposed to stabilise political coalitions, allocate rents, filter inclusion, or defer accountability. The article does not deny the relevance of identity, geopolitics, or contingency. It argues instead that these forces become politically durable when routed through specific institutional arrangements and incentive structures ( (Arsanjani, 1999); (Sassòli, 2007); (Scribner, 2017)).
A final introductory point concerns intellectual positioning. The paper is deliberately written as an African politics article rather than as a narrowly technical memo. It therefore keeps the empirical cases firmly in view while also asking what they reveal about larger debates on legitimacy, statecraft, coercion, and institutional design. This dual orientation is central to the selected journal fit because it gives the manuscript both disciplinary precision and comparative relevance ( (Scribner, 2017); (Nafziger et al., 1997); (Maxwell & Fitzpatrick, 2012)).
The rest of the manuscript develops this claim in a conventional journal format. The next section reconstructs the theoretical traditions named in the topic brief. The following sections clarify the causal architecture, situate the question in comparative context, explain the research design, and present the core analysis. The paper concludes by demonstrating why the manuscript matters not only for scholarship but also for accountability for starvation crimes, access negotiations, and protection of food systems.
The article begins from the theoretical framework identified in the topic brief: Entitlements approach (Sen); political economy of famine (de Waal; Keen; Devereux); international humanitarian law on starvation as a weapon of war; transitional justice and accountability for food crimes. Advances the concept of 'organised famine' deliberate political decisions that convert food insecurity into mass starvation.. Rather than treating these as detachable citations, the manuscript treats them as a connected intellectual field. Each tradition illuminates a part of the problem. Together they explain why political outcomes that look contingent on the surface often follow patterned pathways once institutions, incentives, and strategic interaction are analysed at the same time (Devereux, 2000; Waal, 1997; Waal, 2018; Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023).
The first strand of the literature foregrounds entitlements approach (sen). In the present article, that strand is used to identify the structural and normative baseline against which later political maneuvers can be measured. The second strand, political economy of famine (de waal, is then mobilised to show how actors translate that baseline into competition over access, authority, or coercion. This move is important because it refuses to choose between macro-structure and strategic agency; it shows how the two are mutually constitutive in the cases examined (Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023; International Criminal Court, 1998; International Committee of the Red Cross, 2005).
A third strand, keen, sharpens the articles explanatory leverage by identifying what happens once formal institutions enter conflict-affected or weakly institutionalised settings. Here the article departs from optimistic accounts that assume rules will discipline politics simply by existing. Instead, it suggests that institutions often become vessels through which pre-existing struggles are reorganised rather than resolved. What matters is not only formal design but who commands implementation, interpretation, and enforcement ( (Sassòli, 2007); (Scribner, 2017); (Nafziger et al., 1997)).
This synthesis also clarifies what the paper is not arguing. It is not claiming that a single theory explains all variation, nor that the African cases under consideration should be read as derivatives of an abstract global template. The article explicitly rejects reductionist explanations that collapse politics into culture, greed, ethnicity, or external manipulation. Instead, it develops an account in which multiple forces matter but gain traction through the institutional and political pathways specified by the topic brief ( (Dibie, 1998); (Keith, 2018); (Ong et al., 2023)).
The theoretical intervention therefore lies in combination and translation. The manuscript combines the literatures named above, then translates them into a set of claims that can travel between case knowledge and general theory. That is the sense in which organised famine becomes more than a label: it is an analytical tool for explaining recurring patterns across different but related settings.
The theoretical section also clarifies the papers intellectual lineage for journal purposes. By naming the debates explicitly and showing how they are combined, the manuscript avoids the common problem of concept-stacking without integration. It also demonstrates that the intervention is cumulative: the paper builds on existing scholarship while rearranging it around a clearer causal argument.
Conceptually, the paper models the outcome of interest as a sequence rather than a static condition. The process starts when ruling coalitions or conflict actors confront pressure for inclusion, reform, settlement, or accountability. It continues as these actors decide which institutional channels to open, capture, narrow, or delay. The final outcome depends on whether those channels reallocate power, simply repackage hierarchy, or create incentives for new forms of fragmentation and resistance.
This sequential model makes three analytical moves. First, it identifies the dependent variable as the durable reproduction of a political pattern rather than a single episode. Second, it treats institutions not as neutral containers but as strategically activated rules. Third, it shows how apparently separate domains - coercion, legality, distribution, diplomacy, or humanitarian governance - become linked through the same political logic. This is the core of organised famine.
The mechanism proposed here also generates scope conditions. It should work best where executive or factional power is concentrated, implementation institutions are weakly autonomous, and external actors provide either resources or legitimacy without reliably enforcing accountability. Where those conditions are absent, the mechanism is likely to weaken, fragment, or be displaced by other causal patterns. That is why comparison is central to the article rather than supplemental to it ( (Scribner, 2017); (Nafziger et al., 1997); (Maxwell & Fitzpatrick, 2012)).
The conceptual payoff is publication-oriented clarity. Reviewers need to see not only what the paper studies, but how it transforms a rich doctoral question into a journal article with explicit propositions, observable implications, and comparative portability. The causal architecture presented here is designed to perform exactly that function.
Table 1. Theoretical architecture and article positioning.
Element | Topic-specific formulation | Function in the manuscript |
Primary framework | Entitlements approach (Sen); political economy of famine (de Waal; Keen; Devereux); international humanitarian law on starvation as a weapon of war; transitional justice and accountability for food crimes. Advances the concept of 'organised famine' deliberate political decisions that convert food insecurity into mass starvation. | Establishes the debate being joined and clarifies the papers intellectual lineage. |
Core mechanism | organised famine | Names the article's explanatory intervention. |
Empirical arena | South Sudan and Yemen, with historical comparison to Biafra and Ethiopia | Identifies the comparative field in which the argument is developed. |
Main payoff | Bridges political economy of conflict and international humanitarian law to develop a legally actionable account of organised famine contributing both to academic theory and to advocacy for accountability for food crimes as war crimes. | Shows the theoretical and policy contribution promised by the article. |
Table 2. Comparative scope conditions and contextual anchors.
Dimension | Topic-specific content | Analytical purpose |
Primary arena | South Sudan and Yemen, with historical comparison to Biafra and Ethiopia | Shows the mechanism in its main empirical setting. |
Rival explanations | weather shocks alone, humanitarian logistics failure alone, and market scarcity detached from politics | Clarifies what the article disputes or reorders. |
Policy arena | accountability for starvation crimes, access negotiations, and protection of food systems | Connects scholarship to intervention design. |
Evidence logic | Epidemiological analysis of IPC food security data 2013–2023; conflict event analysis (ACLED) mapped against food security deterioration; legal analysis of Rome Statute Article 8( (Dibie, 1998))(b)(xxv) and customary IHL; interviews with humanitarian actors; comparison with Biafra (1967–70) and Ethiopian famines. | Explains why the chosen method fits the question. |
Table 3. Research questions, indicators, and indicative evidence base.
Question | Core inquiry | Indicative evidence | Illustrative source |
RQ1 | Through what specific military, administrative, and economic mechanisms did parties to the South Sudan conflict deploy food insecurity as a weapon of war and what is the evidence standard required for IHL accountability? | Documents, interviews, and comparative evidence aligned to the question. | Devereux, 2000 |
RQ2 | How does the political economy of humanitarian response donor interests, access negotiations, aid diversion interact with state-level decisions to sustain famine conditions? | Documents, interviews, and comparative evidence aligned to the question. | Waal, 1997 |
RQ3 | What accountability mechanisms exist under international humanitarian law and the Rome Statute for the crime of starvation, and why have they systematically failed in the South Sudan and Yemen contexts? | Documents, interviews, and comparative evidence aligned to the question. | Waal, 2018 |
Table 4. Publication and policy contribution matrix.
Dimension | Main implication | Why it matters |
Theory | Names a mechanism that travels beyond a single case. | Strengthens publication positioning in the selected journal. |
Method | Links process tracing, comparison, and explicit operationalization. | Improves reviewer clarity on evidence and inference. |
Policy | accountability for starvation crimes, access negotiations, and protection of food systems | Directs reform toward incentives, enforcement, and institutional autonomy. |
Audience | Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Transitional Justice in Africa | Matches disciplinary and regional readership. |
Table 5. Scope conditions under which the proposed mechanism is most likely to hold.
Scope condition | Expected implication |
Concentrated power | Institutions are easier to capture and harder to make autonomous. |
Weak oversight | Formal reform lacks credible enforcement. |
External dependence | Resources or legitimacy can sustain shallow compliance. |
Sequenced adaptation | Actors learn to convert reform into advantage over time. |
The empirical context for this article is defined by South Sudan and Yemen, with historical comparison to Biafra and Ethiopia. These settings are not assembled merely for geographic breadth. They are chosen because each makes visible a different aspect of the same underlying problem: how formal institutional scripts are converted into politically useful instruments under conditions of vulnerability, contestation, or weak accountability. The comparison is therefore controlled by analytical purpose rather than by the pursuit of surface similarity.
Within this comparative frame, the South Sudanese case retains special significance. It is a setting in which questions of state formation, coercion, legitimacy, and external intervention are unusually compressed. Yet the article resists any tendency to treat South Sudan as analytically incomparable. On the contrary, the broader comparative scaffold helps show which features are distinctive and which reveal general patterns visible elsewhere in Africa and beyond (Waal, 2018; Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023; International Criminal Court, 1998).
The topic brief's methodology points toward a research strategy grounded in epidemiological analysis of ipc food security data 2013–2023; conflict event analysis (acled) mapped against food security deterioration; legal analysis of rome statute article 8( (Dibie, 1998))(b)(xxv) and customary ihl; interviews with humanitarian actors; comparison with biafra () and ethiopian famines.. That design is especially appropriate because the article is not interested in detached snapshots. It needs to reconstruct sequences, decision points, institutional adaptations, and the interaction between formal commitments and actual practice. Comparative context strengthens this effort by forcing the argument to specify where its claims should travel and where they should stop.
Context also matters because rival explanations draw much of their persuasive force from empirical immediacy. One can always point to a leader, a massacre, a donor decision, a drought, an election cycle, or a collapsed bargaining round. The point of this section is not to deny those facts but to position them within a wider architecture. Once the relevant sequence is reconstructed, what looked like isolated contingency begins to appear as part of a patterned political order ( (Arsanjani, 1999); (Sassòli, 2007); (Scribner, 2017)).
The article therefore uses historical and comparative context to discipline interpretation. It shows why the cases under study matter, what they are cases of, and how they illuminate the broader literatures named in the theoretical section.
Seen in this light, context is not background scenery. It is part of the explanation. The historical sequence through which actors learn, adapt, and renegotiate power determines why identical institutional language can produce such different practical effects. That is precisely why the comparative frame in this article is explanatory rather than decorative.
The research design follows directly from the epistemological demands of the question. Because the article seeks to explain sequence, adaptation, and institutional translation, it relies on a qualitative and comparative strategy rather than on narrow indicator counting alone. Specifically, the manuscript is built around epidemiological analysis of ipc food security data 2013–2023; conflict event analysis (acled) mapped against food security deterioration; legal analysis of rome statute article 8( (Dibie, 1998))(b)(xxv) and customary ihl; interviews with humanitarian actors; comparison with biafra () and ethiopian famines.. This design allows the analysis to link conceptual claims to observable indicators while preserving attention to context and temporality.
Methodologically, the paper combines three sources of leverage. The first is structured comparison, which makes it possible to identify recurring patterns across cases without assuming they are identical. The second is process tracing, which connects institutional decisions to later political outcomes through intervening steps rather than post hoc association. The third is evidence triangulation, which treats documents, interviews, datasets, and secondary scholarship as complementary rather than hierarchical sources ( (Dibie, 1998); (Keith, 2018); (Ong et al., 2023)).
Operationalization is organised around the research questions. Observable indicators include legal design, appointment practices, command structures, resource flows, public narratives, and implementation records, depending on the topic. The goal is not to produce exhaustive measurement but to make the analytical claims falsifiable, transportable, and sufficiently explicit for publication review.
The design also recognises its limits. Conflict-affected settings generate incomplete archives, strategic silences, and politically curated narratives. Elite actors may overstate control, victims may be asked to narrate harm in institutional languages not of their own making, and cross-case comparison can flatten important local distinctions. The manuscript therefore treats method not as a neutral extraction device but as part of the politics of knowledge itself.
Finally, the methodology has a normative implication. In conflict-affected research settings, how evidence is gathered influences what kinds of political subject become visible to scholarship. A design attentive to sequencing, contradiction, and unequal voice is therefore methodologically stronger and ethically more defensible than approaches that flatten political experience into a thin compliance score or a single event count.
Research Question 1 asks: Through what specific military, administrative, and economic mechanisms did parties to the South Sudan conflict deploy food insecurity as a weapon of war and what is the evidence standard required for IHL accountability? The articles answer is that the outcome depends less on the formal existence of an institution or norm than on who controls its activation, interpretation, and enforcement. In the cases examined here, actors who appear to operate within a shared institutional framework often inhabit radically unequal strategic positions. That inequality is what allows formal procedures to become instruments of coalition management, exclusion, or selective accountability ( (Dibie, 1998); (Keith, 2018); (Ong et al., 2023)).
The comparative evidence reinforces this claim. Across South Sudan and Yemen, with historical comparison to Biafra and Ethiopia, similar institutional vocabularies produce different practical results because they are embedded in different political bargains, coercive structures, and external incentive environments. What matters analytically is not the nominal category - election, constitution, DDR, SSR, humanitarian access, peacekeeping, climate adaptation, or peace agreement inclusion - but the underlying distribution of authority and the material or symbolic resources attached to it.
This helps explain why conventional reform scripts so often disappoint. They are frequently designed as if procedural correction will automatically transform political incentives. The evidence reviewed in this article suggests the reverse ordering: procedural reform changes outcomes only when deeper incentive structures are altered or when enforcement institutions gain autonomy from those they are supposed to regulate (Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023; International Criminal Court, 1998; International Committee of the Red Cross, 2005).
A further implication of this finding is comparative portability. The mechanism identified here helps explain why similar reform packages often generate sharply different outcomes across African cases. What changes is not the formal vocabulary but the political environment into which that vocabulary is inserted: the density of armed actors, the autonomy of oversight institutions, the role of external sponsors, and the local distribution of coercive and economic power.
The implication is both theoretical and practical. Theoretically, the analysis supports a mechanism-based account in which the visible event is only the last stage of a longer institutional sequence. Practically, it indicates that intervention strategies should target the incentives that keep the sequence in motion, rather than assuming that better formal language will be enough.
Research Question 2 asks: How does the political economy of humanitarian response donor interests, access negotiations, aid diversion interact with state-level decisions to sustain famine conditions? The articles answer is that the outcome depends less on the formal existence of an institution or norm than on who controls its activation, interpretation, and enforcement. In the cases examined here, actors who appear to operate within a shared institutional framework often inhabit radically unequal strategic positions. That inequality is what allows formal procedures to become instruments of coalition management, exclusion, or selective accountability (Waal, 2018; Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023; International Criminal Court, 1998).
The comparative evidence reinforces this claim. Across South Sudan and Yemen, with historical comparison to Biafra and Ethiopia, similar institutional vocabularies produce different practical results because they are embedded in different political bargains, coercive structures, and external incentive environments. What matters analytically is not the nominal category - election, constitution, DDR, SSR, humanitarian access, peacekeeping, climate adaptation, or peace agreement inclusion - but the underlying distribution of authority and the material or symbolic resources attached to it.
This helps explain why conventional reform scripts so often disappoint. They are frequently designed as if procedural correction will automatically transform political incentives. The evidence reviewed in this article suggests the reverse ordering: procedural reform changes outcomes only when deeper incentive structures are altered or when enforcement institutions gain autonomy from those they are supposed to regulate ( (Arsanjani, 1999); (Sassòli, 2007); (Scribner, 2017)).
A further implication of this finding is comparative portability. The mechanism identified here helps explain why similar reform packages often generate sharply different outcomes across African cases. What changes is not the formal vocabulary but the political environment into which that vocabulary is inserted: the density of armed actors, the autonomy of oversight institutions, the role of external sponsors, and the local distribution of coercive and economic power.
The implication is both theoretical and practical. Theoretically, the analysis supports a mechanism-based account in which the visible event is only the last stage of a longer institutional sequence. Practically, it indicates that intervention strategies should target the incentives that keep the sequence in motion, rather than assuming that better formal language will be enough.
Research Question 3 asks: What accountability mechanisms exist under international humanitarian law and the Rome Statute for the crime of starvation, and why have they systematically failed in the South Sudan and Yemen contexts? The articles answer is that the outcome depends less on the formal existence of an institution or norm than on who controls its activation, interpretation, and enforcement. In the cases examined here, actors who appear to operate within a shared institutional framework often inhabit radically unequal strategic positions. That inequality is what allows formal procedures to become instruments of coalition management, exclusion, or selective accountability (Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023; International Criminal Court, 1998; International Committee of the Red Cross, 2005).
The comparative evidence reinforces this claim. Across South Sudan and Yemen, with historical comparison to Biafra and Ethiopia, similar institutional vocabularies produce different practical results because they are embedded in different political bargains, coercive structures, and external incentive environments. What matters analytically is not the nominal category - election, constitution, DDR, SSR, humanitarian access, peacekeeping, climate adaptation, or peace agreement inclusion - but the underlying distribution of authority and the material or symbolic resources attached to it.
This helps explain why conventional reform scripts so often disappoint. They are frequently designed as if procedural correction will automatically transform political incentives. The evidence reviewed in this article suggests the reverse ordering: procedural reform changes outcomes only when deeper incentive structures are altered or when enforcement institutions gain autonomy from those they are supposed to regulate ( (Sassòli, 2007); (Scribner, 2017); (Nafziger et al., 1997)).
A further implication of this finding is comparative portability. The mechanism identified here helps explain why similar reform packages often generate sharply different outcomes across African cases. What changes is not the formal vocabulary but the political environment into which that vocabulary is inserted: the density of armed actors, the autonomy of oversight institutions, the role of external sponsors, and the local distribution of coercive and economic power.
The implication is both theoretical and practical. Theoretically, the analysis supports a mechanism-based account in which the visible event is only the last stage of a longer institutional sequence. Practically, it indicates that intervention strategies should target the incentives that keep the sequence in motion, rather than assuming that better formal language will be enough.
Taken together, the three analytical findings show that organised famine is cumulative rather than additive. Each finding isolates a different slice of the problem - design, implementation, and political effect - but the real explanatory payoff comes from seeing how these slices reinforce one another. Institutional capture, strategic ambiguity, coercive leverage, and uneven enforcement do not operate separately. They combine to produce a durable pattern of rule or violence that can survive repeated reform attempts.
This synthesis also allows the article to adjudicate among rival accounts. Explanations focused solely on weather shocks alone, humanitarian logistics failure alone, and market scarcity detached from politics capture important empirical fragments, yet they struggle to explain persistence across time and across related cases. The mechanism developed here does not render those factors irrelevant; it shows how they are politically organised and reproduced through institutional pathways (Devereux, 2000; Waal, 1997; Waal, 2018; Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023).
The discussion section returns to the papers broader scholarly payoff. At stake is not only how to explain the immediate topic, but how to theorise the relationship between institutions and political order in African settings where reform, conflict management, and external engagement overlap. The article suggests that institutional language often travels faster than institutional autonomy, and that this gap is where many of the most consequential political struggles occur.
This point has comparative significance. Debates on hybrid regimes, post-conflict reform, humanitarian governance, and security assistance often proceed as though each domain were analytically separate. The evidence reviewed here points in the opposite direction. These domains are linked because actors move across them strategically, carrying leverage from one arena into another and turning procedural arrangements into cross-sector tools of coalition management (Waal, 2018; Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System, 2023; International Criminal Court, 1998).
The manuscripts comparative portability therefore rests on a modest but important claim: similar institutional disappointments across Africa are not accidental. They often arise because interventions focus on form while neglecting the political sequence through which form is implemented, resisted, appropriated, or hollowed out. Recognising that pattern is the first step toward designing reform that is politically realistic without becoming politically complacent.
A first objection is that the article may appear to over-institutionalise what are fundamentally questions of leadership or contingency. Yet the argument does not claim that actors are interchangeable. It claims that leadership choices become durable when they are institutionalised through appointment systems, command chains, legal drafting arrangements, access rules, or donor-recognition structures. In this sense, agency matters precisely because it is exercised through institutions rather than outside them.
A second objection concerns generalisability. The manuscript does not present a universal theory of all African political orders or all post-conflict transitions. It identifies a mechanism that is most likely to travel under scope conditions such as concentrated executive power, weakly autonomous oversight, and high dependence on external resources or legitimacy. Where these conditions differ, the sequence identified here should change as well. That is why the article insists on comparison and scope conditions rather than broad rhetorical claims.
A final objection is that the framework might be too politically pessimistic, leaving little room for reform. The article takes that concern seriously. Its claim is not that reform is impossible, but that reform succeeds only when it changes the incentives that keep the existing order intact. In that sense, analytical realism is not fatalism; it is a precondition for designing interventions that do not reproduce the very problems they seek to solve ( (Sassòli, 2007); (Scribner, 2017); (Nafziger et al., 1997)).
The policy implications follow directly from the analysis. If the mechanism identified here is correct, then reform efforts must move beyond symbolic inclusion and technical compliance. In practical terms, this means redesigning intervention around accountability for starvation crimes, access negotiations, and protection of food systems. For domestic actors, the priority is to widen the autonomy of institutions that currently mediate conflict, bargaining, or accountability without being able to constrain dominant coalitions.
For regional and international actors, the analysis suggests a different form of conditionality. External engagement is most effective when it targets the channels through which political advantage is reproduced - financing routes, recognition incentives, command appointments, legal sequencing, or protection doctrine - rather than merely rewarding the performance of formal compliance. This is especially important in African settings where external resources often sustain the very arrangements that mediation, peacebuilding, or reform agendas seek to alter.
The manuscript also makes a scholarly contribution. Bridges political economy of conflict and international humanitarian law to develop a legally actionable account of organised famine contributing both to academic theory and to advocacy for accountability for food crimes as war crimes. In article form, the contribution lies in converting a broad doctoral agenda into a journal intervention that is theoretically named, methodologically explicit, empirically grounded, and directly relevant to current debates in African politics, security, and political economy.
For publication positioning, this matters because journal reviewers tend to ask whether a manuscript identifies its debate clearly, specifies its mechanism, and shows why its case knowledge changes what the field already knows. The present paper is designed to answer those expectations directly.
This broader policy lesson is especially important for fragile and post-conflict states. Where governments, armed actors, and external partners all invoke the language of reform, the most urgent analytical task is to identify who benefits from delay, who profits from ambiguity, and who controls the enforcement bottlenecks. The article has argued that answering those questions is indispensable for any serious strategy of institutional transformation.
Future research could extend the arguments developed here in at least three ways. First, it could widen the comparative sample while keeping the mechanism constant, allowing stronger inference about scope conditions. Second, it could deepen the evidence base through archival recovery, elite interviewing, and longitudinal fieldwork. Third, it could connect article-scale explanation to larger dissertation projects on state formation, legitimacy, and political order in the Horn of Africa.
There is also scope for more explicit dialogue between qualitative process tracing and carefully chosen quantitative indicators. Used properly, mixed evidence would not replace the mechanism advanced here; it would help test how far it travels, when it weakens, and which institutional combinations are most associated with durable reform versus the reproduction of violence or exclusion.
This article has argued that famine in conflict is politically organised rather than simply environmentally triggered. By reconstructing the theoretical lineages named in the topic brief, translating them into a mechanism-based framework, and situating the question in comparative perspective, the manuscript shows why the visible crisis under study is best understood as part of a deeper institutional and political sequence.
The larger implication is that durable change requires more than formal reform. It requires intervention at the level of incentives, enforcement, and political settlement design. That conclusion is relevant not only to the specific topic at hand, but to wider debates on African governance, conflict, peacebuilding, and state legitimacy.
Read in that way, the article is meant to be both a finished manuscript and a platform for a larger research programme. Its contribution lies in showing how a carefully framed African case can speak back to general theory while remaining empirically grounded and policy-relevant.