
New Books Network Peer Schouten, "Roadblock Politics: The Origins of Violence in Central Africa" (Cambridge UP, 2022)
Feb 8, 2026
Peer Schouten, researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies and author of Roadblock Politics, mapped over 1,000 roadblocks in Central Africa. He explores how roadblocks shape daily life, supply‑chain capitalism, and fragile forms of state authority. The conversation covers logistics, regional contestation over trade corridors, and the risks of removing entrenched extraction points.
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Roadblocks As Missing Puzzle Piece
- Schouten observed frequent roadblocks about every 10 miles during fieldwork, which existing state-failure and resource-conflict theories failed to explain.
- That empirical mismatch motivated his book to reframe how roadblocks shape state authority and everyday life.
Sovereignty Practiced At The Roadside
- Schouten reframes minimal sovereignty as a roadside practice: states set up checkpoints to levy passage fees when they lack broader infrastructural reach.
- He links this to European historical tolls to show it is not an African exceptionalism but a global state-making tactic.
Infrastructure Decline Enables Roadblock Politics
- Schouten outlines a three-part periodization where infrastructural power rises then recedes, enabling roadblock politics when transport grids decay.
- He argues roadblock politics re-emerges when capital concentrates in circulation rather than local production.







