Framing Injustice: Special Anti-Robbery Squads (SARS) in Nigeria and the #EndSARS Protest Response from a Social Movement Theory Perspective

Main Article Content

Akali Omeni

Abstract

This article employs Social Movement Theory (SMT) to examine collective action mobilisation against malfeasance by Nigeria’s Special Anti-Robbery Squads (SARS). Created in the 1990s to counter armed gangs, SARS gradually became discredited. Finally, in October 2020, after weeks of public protest, the unit was disbanded. The #EndSARS movement proved instrumental here. The present article explores the origins, nature and decline of SARS until the #EndSARS protests. #EndSARS arguably provoked police reform in Nigeria. Furthermore, whereas social media has dominated the discourse on the protesters’ agency, I employ framing theory, as a SMT sub-set, to show that #EndSARS employed diagnostic, prognostic and motivational frames, within “injustice” master frames, towards collective action mobilisation. In conducting this analysis, I situate the #EndSARS case within the broader literature debate on impactful protests against police brutality.

Article Details

How to Cite
Omeni, A. (2022). Framing Injustice: Special Anti-Robbery Squads (SARS) in Nigeria and the #EndSARS Protest Response from a Social Movement Theory Perspective. Modern Africa: Politics, History and Society, 10(2), 9–32. https://doi.org/10.26806/modafr.v10i2.409
Section
Articles
Author Biography

Akali Omeni, University of St. Andrews, UK

His research cuts across the history, sociology, and political science disciplines. He is a lecturer in Counterterrorism Studies at the CSTPV, University of St. Andrews, UK. He previously taught at the University of Leicester and at King’s College London’s War Studies Department, where he earned his PhD. He has published books on the Nigerian military, Boko Haram’s insurgency and the Nigeria Police Force. A fourth monograph, Picking Sides, with Oxford University Press and Hurst, is forthcoming. E-mail: aeo2@st-andrews.ac.uk