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Abstract

This thesis investigates how late British colonial governance in Somaliland shaped the region’s relative post-independence stability. In contrast to Somalia’s state collapse and prolonged insecurity, Somaliland has developed a functioning, albeit unrecognized, state since its declaration of independence in 1991, with limited international aid. Drawing on extensive archival research conducted at the British National Archives, this study examines how colonial administrative practices, particularly the establishment of Advisory, Executive, and Local Government Councils between 1946 and 1960, introduced hybrid structures of governance that blended centralized colonial control with selective local participation. Drawing on extensive archival research, the study challenges existing literature by arguing that British colonial governance in Somaliland was neither wholly indirect and benevolent nor purely authoritarian, but rather a hybrid model that leaned more toward direct rule. While these reforms were embedded in a paternalistic framework and fell short of granting genuine autonomy, they offered a formative space for Somali political apprenticeship, inter-clan negotiation, and administrative experience. By incorporating clan elders and educated elites into local councils, the British colonial state laid a foundation for Somaliland’s grassroots, locally driven peacebuilding process after the collapse of the Somali state in 1991. The thesis argues that these late colonial institutions, not simply post-1991 initiatives, help explain Somaliland’s ability to forge stability from fragmentation. Employing a historical institutionalist approach, the research challenges binary classifications of British indirect rule and instead conceptualizes Somaliland’s colonial governance as a hybrid system that maintained centralized authority while seeding localized political capacity. It concludes that Somaliland’s relative stability cannot be understood apart from its colonial past, which, though exclusionary and top-down in design, fostered localized political experience and institutional mechanisms that brought dispersed clans into dialogue and promoted collective governance.

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