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Stakeholder roles and ethical issues in African counterterrorism: Boko Haram case study

Last reviewed: October 30, 2016 ~4 min read

STAKEHOLDERS

There is a multitude of stakeholders in the case study of Boko Haram in the counterterrorism in Africa movement. The main stakeholder is the Christian government in Nigeria that is systematically losing territory to this terrorist organization. Another prominent stakeholder is the lawful citizens of that government. These citizens are routinely losing family members to instances of kidnapping at the hands of this organization (Burke, 2016). They are also being injured and murdered by the terrorist efforts of this organization (Urmacher and Sheridan, 2016). Finally, Boko Haram itself is a stakeholder in this case study. Its very livelihood depends on engaging in the very acts of terror that this case study is seeking to counteract and ultimately, undermine.

ROLES IN THE EVALUATION PROCESS

The roles in the evaluation process of the Nigerian government is pivotal to the success of this case study. It must comply with the needs of the researchers. Specifically, it should agree to deliver call records, information from text messages, and data from email that pertain to terrorist activity. That way the researchers can determine the relationship between these media channels (and others) and terrorist activities. Doing so will allow it to determine crucial links that could reduce the instances of terrorism. It is the role of the Nigerian citizens to rapidly report any instances of terrorism. Ideally, they could do so prior to these acts actually emerging. Therefore, they can help to provide additional intelligence that can in the connection between media analysis and terrorist events. This group has the most to gain from this study. The government has the next most to gain from the study because it will have hegemony over its land. Boko Haram is the final stakeholder that has interest in this research study and in the evaluation results. This study and its results could mitigate the effectiveness of this organization in carrying out terrorism opportunities.

ETHICAL ISSUES

The primary ethical issues that should be considered in this case study analysis pertain to privacy. Monitoring the communication of individuals involved with Boko Haram or associated with them could potentially compromise the privacy of ordinary citizens in Nigeria. It might be difficult to determine who is part of the organization or not, and this sort of pervasive monitoring could impact the privacy of those not involved with this organization.

MEETING THE NEEDS OF THE STUDY

Cooperation from the Nigerian government in disclosing data pertaining to public phone records and emails will enable the researchers to meet the needs of the evaluation thus far. This information will help to clarify relationships between media communication and terrorist activities. It will be invaluable to helping to decrease the nature of the threat that Boko Haram presents for the general public, and especially to those in Nigeria.

PUTTING THE EVALUATION RESULTS TO USE

It largely appears that the end results of this evaluation can be put to use by helping those involved with this group to understand its channels of communication. Once those are established, and once the principal actors for this organizations are established, it will be easier to anticipate its moves and prevent them.

CHANGES FOR THE DESIGN

There are no changes that this analysis suggests for the remaining sections of mt study design that I have already developed. Instead, this section simply provides more detail about the stakeholders in this research and serves as an addendum to information offered in other sections of this case study. It targets the interests of these stakeholders much better than before.

References

Burke, J. (2016). Nigeria: Chibok families reunited with 21 girls kidnapped by Boko Haram. www.theguardian.com Retrieved from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/16/nigerian-families-celebrate-after-release-of-21-girls-kidnapped-by-boko-haram

Urhmacher, K., Sheridan, M.B. (2016). The brutal toll of Boka Haram's attacks on civilians. www.washingtonpost.com Retrieved from https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/world/nigeria-boko-haram/

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PaperDue. (2016). Stakeholder roles and ethical issues in African counterterrorism: Boko Haram case study. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/modern-problems-in-nigeria-essay-2167490

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