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1. The Western Sahara conflict has been described as a ‘frozen conflict’ and as ‘decolonisation’s last stand.’ Despite the multiple ceasefires throughout its history, the conflict has not been fully resolved. Since 1974, Western Sahara has been on the shortlist of non-self-governing territories. However, it is the only one on the list that has not condoned this status. The Polisario Front spent 50 years fighting for the independence of the Sahrawi Arab Republic from Morocco, mostly using arms and guerrilla warfare. This period of violence was followed by a ceasefire between the two stakeholders. Nonetheless, in 2020, Morocco’s response to the Sahrawi protests resulted in a resumption of fighting by the Polisario Front, essentially reopening ‘Pandora’s Box’ and showing that, despite the ceasefire, a permanent solution is urgently needed. This would need to happen within the broader African security landscape, which is currently experiencing a shift amidst the weakening of United Nations (UN) peacekeeping operations, the growing presence of various private military companies (PMC), and the emerging role of countries such as Russia and Türkiye in African conflict situations. Considering the aforementioned changes, this article seeks to assess whether these shifts in the African security landscape will influence the situation in Western Sahara by maintaining the status quo or revitalising the efforts to resolve or exacerbate the existing tensions.

2. R2P Monitor, Issue 68, 1 March 2024

3. R2P Monitor, Issue 70, 1 September 2024

4. R2P Monitor, Issue 71, 1 December 2024

5. Worsening Risk of Mass Atrocities in South Sudan

6. On Designating the 14-Mile Area in the Cooperation Agreement: Missteps and Implications for Peace in South Sudan

7. Transferring Policy: The African Union’s Protection of Civilians Policy in Peacekeeping Missions in Somalia and South Sudan

8. Pay Day Loans and Backroom Empires: South Sudan’s Political Economy since 2018

9. R2P Monitor, Issue 67, 1 December 2023

10. R2P Monitor, Issue 66, 1 September 2023

11. R2P Monitor, Issue 65, 1 June 2023

12. R2P Monitor, Issue 64, 1 March 2023

13. Oxfam’s Engagement with Refugee-led Organisations in West Nile (Uganda): Lessons on opportunities and challenges

14. Local Perceptions of UN Peacekeeping: A Look at the Data

15. Changing Lakes State? Rin Tueny’s Inclusive Deterrence Approach in Practice

16. Research Report: Women’s Meaningful Participation in Post-Conflict: Mechanisms and Challenges in Colombia, Nepal and South Sudan

17. Immediate Risk of Mass Atrocities in South Sudan

18. Survivor-Centred Justice for Gender-Based Violence in Complex Situations

19. Gearing Up the Fight Against Impunity: Dedicated Investigative and Prosecutorial Capacities

20. R2P Monitor, Issue 63, 1 December 2022

21. R2P Monitor, Issue 62, 1 September 2022

22. R2P Monitor, Issue 61, 1 June 2022

23. R2P Monitor, Issue 60, 1 March 2022

24. Lives at Risk: A study of girls dropping out of school in Juba, Rumbek and Pibor Counties, South Sudan

25. The Periphery Cannot Hold: Upper Nile since the Signing of the R-ARCSS

26. 'And Everything Became War': Warrap State since the Signing of the R-ARCSS

27. The Civil-Military Relationship: From Theory to Practice in the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS)

28. Still Not There: Global Violent Deaths Scenarios, 2019–30

29. Seeing in the Dark: Real-Time Monitoring in Humanitarian Crises

30. Toward a Viable Future for South Sudan

31. Oil or Nothing: Dealing with South Sudan’s Bleeding Finances

32. Surface Tension: ‘Communal’ Violence and Elite Ambitions in South Sudan

33. A Climate Crisis in Africa: The Case of South Sudan

34. Compound Crisis Challenges Posed by Sudan’s Faltering Transition

35. Conflict and Crisis in South Sudan’s Equatoria

36. ‘Of Cattle and Conflict’ – Rethinking responses to pastoralism-related conflicts

37. R2P Monitor, Issue 55, 15 January 2021

38. R2P Monitor, Issue 56, 15 March 2021

39. R2P Monitor, Issue 57, 1 June 2021

40. R2P Monitor, Issue 58, 1 September 2021

41. R2P Monitor, Issue 59, 1 December 2021

42. The Center Is Not Holding: Analyzing South Sudan’s Social Cohesion Architecture in the Evolving Context of the Revitalized Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in the Republic of South Sudan

43. The pandemic will not stop us: The impact of COVID-19 on women’s peace activism in Colombia, the Philippines, South Sudan and Ukraine

44. Oil or Nothing: Dealing with South Sudan’s Bleeding Finances

45. South Sudan’s Civil War: Violence, Insurgency and Failed Peacemaking

46. Rethinking South Sudan’s Path to Democracy

47. Towards Anticipatory Information Systems and Action: Notes on Early Warning and Early Action in East Africa

48. Joint NGO Letter: The UN Human Rights Council should extend the mandate of the Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan

49. R2P Monitor, Issue 49, 15 January 2020

50. Resource-Backed Loans: Pitfalls and Potentialloan