
New Books in Anthropology Peer Schouten, "Roadblock Politics: The Origins of Violence in Central Africa" (Cambridge UP, 2022)
Feb 8, 2026
Peer Schouten, a researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies who maps infrastructure and conflict in Central Africa, discusses how roadblocks reshape authority and supply chains. He traces roadblocks from extractive army tolls to contested local control. Topics include mapping 1,000+ roadblocks, nonconventional logistics, regional trade corridor struggles, and the policy dilemmas of removing roadblocks.
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Everyday Roadblocks Reframe Conflict
- Roadblocks were a pervasive, everyday feature of mobility that existing conflict and state theories ignored.
- Peer Schouten mapped them to show how they shape authority and livelihoods in Central Africa.
Infrastructure Loss Enables Local Power
- Infrastructure expansion then retreat changed how states exercised control over territory.
- Schouten argues receding infrastructural power enables local actors to exploit 'frictions of distance'.
Circulation-Centered Capital Drives Roadblocks
- Roadblock politics thrives where capital is concentrated in circulation not production.
- Mobile economies create incentives to extract value from movement rather than sites of production.







