THE CIVIL WAR IN ETHIOPIA (2020-2022) AND THE AFRICAN UNION'S ROLE IN THE PEACE PROCESS

Authors

  • THAIS HORN

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.DT0425.3

Keywords:

Civil War, Ethiopia, African Union, Peace Negotiations

Abstract

The war that erupted between the government of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in November 2020 left the country embedded in an unprecedented humanitarian crisis, combining internal displacement, famine, and widespread human rights violations by external forces still present in the region. This research examines the conflict using the Contentious Politics Approach to Civil War (Florea, 2017) and discusses the role of the African Union in the peace negotiations in Pretoria, South Africa. After understanding the structural conditions that led to the authority and legitimacy crisis, and consequently, civil conflict, we identified in the war cycle in Ethiopia several mechanisms of radicalization and militarization. The interference of AU’s shuttle diplomacy resulted in the beginning of the peace negotiations and represented a remarkable achievement in independent African conflict resolution. Nonetheless, AU failed to oversee the full implementation of the agreement. The disarmament and demobilization phases were never completed, for instance, and Tigrayans currently find themselves on the edge of another conflict.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

THAIS HORN

Scholar in African Studies and holds a Master’s degree from the European Interdisciplinary Master in African Studies (EIMAS) at the University of Porto (Portugal), having defended her thesis Ethiopia at War: Political causes of the civil war between the Ethiopian Federal Government and the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF, 2020-2022) in September 2024. She holds a background in International Relations and specializes in topics such as war, nationalism, and post-colonial identity in the Horn of Africa. Thaís combines interdisciplinary approaches to investigate how historical legacies, geopolitical shifts, and social identities shape contemporary African political realities, especially in Ethiopia.

Published

2025-10-20