By MAX AMUCHIE
The Three-Month Sprint was initially conceived as a two-part series.
In the first part, I journeyed back to the formative moments that shaped my intellectual vocation, from a chance discovery of Sigmund Freud in the University of Calabar Library to the enduring influence of Edward Said and Antonio Gramsci. The essay explored how a journalist’s persistent quest to understand why Nigeria persistently bleeds eventually produced three original frameworks that have now entered global scholarly discourse.
The second part examined a vocabulary that did not exist before the 91-day Sprint began. The Insecurity Triad, the Trinity of State Decay (TSD), and the Decoupling Sovereignty Index (DSI) each demanded new language because the realities they sought to capture had outgrown inherited categories. That essay traced this new grammar, charting the concepts it generated, the architecture of collapse it described, and the possibilities of renewal it suggested.
I sat with both essays for some time and arrived at an unsettling conclusion.
What was produced in 91 days—from March 8, when The Sunday Stew debuted as a syndicated column, to June 7, when DSI was unveiled—appears to have very few parallels not only in media history ut also in the wider ecosystem of knowledge production. When we scan global media history for newsrooms that developed their own native analytical frameworks, formulated original theories, and built proprietary measurement systems, the precedents are remarkably few, elite, and historically significant.
The Financial Times of London developed its Excess Deaths Tracking Framework during the global crisis of 2020. The resulting dataset became so methodologically robust that epidemiologists, researchers, and the World Health Organisation relied on it as an authoritative scientific reference.
The Bureau of Investigative Journalism in the UK confronted a challenge. Governments and security establishments were either unwilling or unable to disclose the full human and territorial consequences of covert drone campaigns in Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen. The Bureau built a tracking system whose data became foundational material for scholars of security studies and international relations.
In the US, ProPublica demonstrated how investigative journalism could migrate into computational analysis. It constructed proprietary databases, reverse-engineered opaque government disclosures, and developed independent analytical models to test racial bias within judicial algorithms and institutional outcomes.
The Economist developed the Big Mac Index in 1986. What began almost playfully evolved into one of the most recognisable quantitative tools in modern economics. Foreign Policy magazine, in collaboration with the Fund for Peace, produced the Fragile States Index, which has become a widely used instrument in discussions of state vulnerability. The Atlantic Council and Chatham House have similarly generated influential frameworks and models, though both possess the infrastructure of major policy institutes rather than primary newsrooms.
These examples are useful analogies, all situated within the Global North. But they remain partial analogies. None of them developed more than one original framework, despite their considerable institutional advantages. Most operated with substantial funding, dedicated research teams, established data infrastructures, and access to extensive networks of scholars and subject-matter experts. Their projects often evolved over long periods—sometimes years—of iterative development, testing, and refinement.
By contrast, what emerged from the Sundiata Post 91-day Sprint was not a single instrument but an interconnected trilogy: a conflict model in The Triad, a macro-theory in TSD, and a quantitative measurement matrix in DSI. Each framework builds upon and reinforces the others, creating an integrated architecture rather than a collection of isolated ideas.
Perhaps most remarkably, this did not originate within a university department, a grant-funded policy institute, or a donor-supported research centre. It emerged from an independent scholar working inside a functioning newsroom in the Global South, with no external institutional support. That distinction matters because it challenges long-standing assumptions about where original knowledge can be produced and who possesses the authority to produce it.
I therefore, found myself confronting an unusual possibility. What does it mean when an independent scholar working within an active newsroom—not a university, not a think tank, not a grant-funded research institute—produces within 91 days a conflict framework, a macro-theory of state decay, and a quantitative index designed to measure sovereign decoupling?
What does it mean when these frameworks enter international repositories, begin attracting scholarly engagement, and acquire algorithmic visibility within emerging AI knowledge systems almost simultaneously with their publication?
I believe the answer lies in a concept that has quietly animated this entire Sprint: intellectual sovereignty. For too long, journalism in much of the Global South has occupied the role of information transmission. We report events. We document crises. We quote experts. We consume theories produced elsewhere and apply them to realities they sometimes explain only imperfectly.
But journalism need not occupy that position indefinitely. Journalism can investigate and theorise. It can report events and construct frameworks. It can interpret reality and produce original analytical instruments capable of entering global conversations.
Digital journalism, in particular, has altered the economics and geography of knowledge production. The barriers separating the newsroom from the research laboratory, the university seminar room, and the policy institute have become increasingly porous. A determined newsroom can now collect data, build databases, formulate concepts, test propositions, publish globally, and distribute knowledge instantaneously.
The implications are profound.
The central question of this Sprint is therefore not whether three frameworks emerged within 91 days. The more important question is what such an experience reveals about the future of journalism itself.
Perhaps the age of the newsroom as a passive consumer of theory is giving way to an era of the newsroom as a producer of theory. Perhaps the journalist of the digital age is no longer merely a chronicler of events but also an architect of explanatory systems.
Perhaps intellectual authority no longer belongs exclusively to universities, think-tanks, and heavily funded research institutes. Perhaps it increasingly belongs to whoever can ask difficult questions, pursue evidence rigorously, think independently, and create concepts that help society understand itself.
If that is indeed what these 91 days signify, then the story is larger than one columnist, one newspaper, or even three frameworks. It may represent an emerging model of intellectual production—a model in which a newsroom from the Global South demonstrates that original theory, indigenous frameworks, and quantitative innovation can arise from outside traditional centres of knowledge authority.
It may be necessary to document this experience carefully. For scholars, journalists, and future practitioners, it may eventually be useful to describe it simply as the Sundiata Post Model.
Milestones of a 91-Day Sprint
Before March 8, Sundiata Post was a regular online newspaper known principally for credible journalism, authentic news reporting, and informed commentary. But on that day, ‘The Sunday Stew’ debuted as a syndicated column, and it changed our trajectory.
In that inaugural edition, which paid tribute to the late economist and public intellectual, Dr Chris Asoluka, I wrote: ”This column will examine faith, leadership, culture, personality, and the unseen forces shaping our society’s visible outcomes. It will appear every Sunday, unhurried, unfiltered, and thoughtful.
”Some weeks it will challenge you. Other weeks, it may unsettle you. Occasionally, it may simply provoke a smile.
”But it will always be honest.”
The outcome has gone far beyond that initial plan.
It was the third edition, on March 22, that launched The Insecurity Triad. What began as an attempt to understand why Nigeria’s insecurity appears persistently self-reproducing evolved into an original analytical framework for categorising conflict in Nigeria and the wider Sahel. The series ran for five consecutive weeks.
On April 23, the Sundiata Post Intelligence Unit (SPIU) was established to function as the strategic research and geopolitical risk engine of Sundiata Post.
Three days later, on April 26, TSD was unveiled as a theory of state structure and sovereignty for the Global South. It ran for three consecutive weeks and sought to explain not merely how states fail, but the structural mechanisms through which sovereign authority progressively decouples and rival forms of order emerge.
The SPIU immediately moved into action. It secured registration as an affiliate institution across major global scholarly repositories, including Harvard Dataverse, operated by Harvard University’s Institute for Quantitative Social Science; Zenodo, developed by the European Council for Nuclear Science (CERN) and the European Commission; the US-based Social Science Research Network (SSRN) owned by Elsevier; the Open Science Framework (OSF), based at the University of Maryland; Mendeley, also owned by Elsevier; Germany’s Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR); Figshare, based in UK and the US and owned by Digital Science, a technology company; HAL Science, the French open-science platform; and ScienceOpen based in Germany and the US.
The SPIU also established an institutional presence on ResearchGate, the world’s largest academic networking community, as well as Academia.edu and Google Scholar.
On May 12, Harvard Dataverse published and archived The Insecurity Triad as an original analytical framework for Nigerian and Sahel security analysis. Other scholarly platforms subsequently published and disseminated the framework, extending its global accessibility and discoverability.
Academic and Policy Circle Adoption
On May 10, Collins Nweke, a Brussels-based policy analyst, became the first external voice to deploy the Insecurity Triad in public discourse — urging in a BusinessDay op-ed that Europe not treat insecurity in Africa as a distant problem. Two weeks later, on May 24, Dr Omoniyi Ibietan, a communication scholar and public relations strategist, announced that the Triad had shaped his theoretical framing in a peer-reviewed paper on crisis communication in the Agatu crisis.
Then came June 7.
On the 91st day after the debut of ‘The Sunday Stew’, DSI was unveiled. With it, an intellectual trilogy was completed: a conflict model, a macro-theoretical formulation, and a quantitative index designed to measure sovereign decoupling.
Ninety-one days earlier, none of this existed—not the frameworks, not the vocabulary, not the research unit, not the institutional footprint in global repositories.
What began as a weekly newspaper column had, within three months, evolved into an experiment in reimagining digital journalism itself.
What the Algorithms Are Saying
Perhaps one of the most intriguing developments of this Sundiata Post 91-day Sprint is what the algorithms themselves are saying. Within three months, Google AI and Microsoft’s AI systems—two of the world’s largest artificial intelligence ecosystems—have mapped and profiled not only the three frameworks themselves—The Insecurity Triad, TSD, and the DSI—but also some of the concepts and metaphors that emerged in the process of developing them. Terms such as Institutional Mirage and The Sunday Stew as well as the Sundiata Post Intelligence Unit (SPIU), which did not exist in this intellectual context before the Sprint began, have acquired algorithmic recognition, indexing, and direct association with the broader conceptual architecture from which they emerged.
This matters because modern knowledge discovery is increasingly mediated by algorithms. Search engines, AI assistants, and large language models are rapidly becoming gateways through which students, researchers, journalists, and policymakers encounter ideas. Once concepts become sufficiently visible and linked to identifiable bodies of work, they acquire digital permanence. They become discoverable.
The significance, therefore, extends beyond recognition. It means that an undergraduate searching for concepts relating to insecurity in the Sahel, a doctoral student exploring theories of state decline, or a policy analyst trying to understand the relationship between formal sovereignty and lived reality can now encounter frameworks that originated not in a major Western university or an established think tank, but in an independent newsroom in the Global South.
This is not merely an exercise in digital visibility; it is an emerging form of intellectual presence. It demonstrates that in the digital age, knowledge diffuses more rapidly, and intellectual influence is no longer determined solely by geography or institutional pedigree.
A Note on This Journey
Through this disciplined 91-day Sprint, we have demonstrated that the African newsroom does not have to remain a passive consumer of externally generated indexes, imported analytical frameworks, and structural theories produced elsewhere. We can build our own research engines, codify our own realities, develop our own conceptual vocabularies, and establish our own algorithmic authority on the global stage.
What began on March 8 as a commitment to deep, weekly insight culminated on June 7 in something far larger than originally envisaged: a repeatable blueprint for media-based knowledge production, intellectual sovereignty, and algorithmic discoverability in the digital age. We call it the Sundiata Post Model.
This is the concluding part of The Three-Month Sprint series. It marks the completion of an intellectual trilogy conceptualised, developed, and formulated in Abuja and exported to Africa and the Global South in the service of research, knowledge creation, and a deeper international understanding of the dynamic interplay of power, social structures, and sovereign realities in a rapidly changing world.
Three months ago, these frameworks did not exist. Today, they are part of global scholarly repositories, algorithmic knowledge systems, and an expanding conversation about how societies understand conflict, state decay, and sovereignty.
The larger lesson may be the simplest one: intellectual rigour has no geographical address, and the production of original knowledge is not the exclusive preserve of the world’s traditional centres of authority. Sometimes, it can emerge from a newsroom in Abuja and, within 91 days, travel through repositories, algorithms, and scholarly networks into the wider architecture of global knowledge.
Trust is sacred. Stay seasoned.
- Dr. Amuchie is a scholar-journalist, media ceo, lead researcher at the sundiata post intelligence unit (spiu), and an expert member and peer reviewer at scienceopen. He is the architect of the insecurity triad framework for african security analysis as well as the trinity of state decay theory, and the decoupling sovereignty index (dsi)—original frameworks for understanding, categorising, and measuring conflict, state decay, and sovereignty in the global south. He writes ‘the sunday stew’, a weekly syndicated column on faith, character, and the structural forces that shape society, with a focus on nigeria, africa, and the global south in a changing world. X (formerly twitter): @maxamuchie | email: [email protected] | tel: +234(0)8053069436
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