International Terrorism and Its Psycho-social Impacts in Africa: a Case Study of Kenya, 1998-2015
Abstract
International terrorism as a man-made event is a warfare whose battlefield is the mind. It is
a psychological warfare that seeks to influence humanity behaviour. Its consequences are
not only physical, but also psychological and social. This research seeks to examine and
assess the psychosocial impacts of international terrorism in Africa focusing on the victims
and first responders to terrorist attacks in Kenya between 1998 and 2015.This period covers
the US Embassy bombing in 1998 to the Garissa University College attack in 2015. The
study was carried out using a questionnaire administered to willing survivors and target
groups. The study first seeks to establish the key impacts of international terrorism globally,
then analyzes the psychosocial impacts on the victims and finally examines and assesses
how victims cope and respond to terror attacks. The assessment and analysis uses the
psychosocial model from Psychology since survivors experience the impacts with variably
depending on their location from the epicenter of the terror attack to its periphery. There is
scanty literature on the psychosocial impacts of international terrorism from an International
Relations perspective and the available literature is heavily dependent on the discipline of
Psychology. The study finds that majority of the survivors experience flashbacks and
memories of the attacks and suffer psychosocial effects such as horror, insomnia, anxiety,
fear of crowded places and avoided conversations, people and places that reminded them of
the traumatic event they were involved in. The research also finds that the government of
Kenya has not put in place sufficient measures that can assist the survivors of a terror attack.
No study, known to the researcher, has been done in the country on the psychosocial impacts
of international terrorism. There is need, therefore, for further research to be done in this
area and to develop a theoretical framework that can be applied in the analysis of the
psychosocial impacts of international terrorism form an International Relations perspective
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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