DIIS Working Paper

Roadblocks and revenues: The politics of passage

New working paper series

From Afghanistan and Yemen and from Mali to Somalia, checkpoints are central to dynamics of armed conflict, funding insurgents, driving violence and shaping governance by various types of armed actors, state and non-state alike. Nonetheless, checkpoints and roadblocks are often overlooked in debates over what drives conflict and how we should understand order in areas of contested statehood. 

The new working paper series on Roadblocks and revenues sets out to address this gap, shedding lights on checkpoints in conflict contexts across the world and providing a new window into dynamics of authority and power. The series is based on a partnership between DIIS, the International Centre for Tax and Development and the Centre on Armed Groups and a series of workshops hosted in Copenhagen (2023) and Caux (2024), which brought together an international community of scholars with a shared interest in checkpoints in conflict.

The first paper, which introduces the working paper series, shows that checkpoints constitute a distinct claim to authority with their own logic and effects on conflict dynamics and political order-making. The authors coin the idea of the politics of passage, which refers to the struggles over movement and authority that play out at roadblocks in fragile and conflict-affected settings. In addition, the authors provide a definition of roadblocks, explore the historicity of circulation struggles in relation to state formation, and outline a new research agenda on roadblocks, offering reflections from existing research and avenues for future work.

The working paper series is generously funded by the Carlsberg Foundation under the Semper Ardens: Accelerate grant ‘TRADECRAFT’. Read more about the project here.

DIIS Experts

Peer Schouten
Peace and violence
Senior Researcher
+45 3269 8654
Cover DIIS Working Paper series Roadblocks and revenues 01.jpg
The politics of passage
Roadblocks, taxation and control in conflict
Tradecraft head photo - map of Somalia and Kenya