This article argues that attempts to buy insurgency out of violence can achieve temporary stability but risk producing new conflict. While co-optation with economic incentives might work in parts of a movement, it can spark ripple effects in others. These unanticipated developments result from the interactions of differently situated elite and non-elite actors, which can create a momentum of their own in driving collective behaviour. This article develops this argument by analysing the re-escalation of armed conflict between the Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO) and Myanmar's armed forces after a 17-year-long ceasefire broke down in 2011. After years of mutual enrichment and collaboration between rebel and state elites and near organis...
Fighting in Kachin state flared back up just months after President Thien Sein came to power in Marc...
This article uses Burma/Myanmar from 1948 to 2011 as a within-case context to explore why some arme...
Civil wars involving non-state armed groups in Burma have been driven by a complex mix of historical...
This paper argues that attempts to co-opt rebels into peace with economic incentives can buy tempora...
This article argues that attempts to buy insurgency out of violence can achieve temporary stability ...
Since 2012 Myanmar’s oldest ethnic rebel group, the Karen National Union (KNU), has sought for consi...
Since 2012 Myanmar’s oldest ethnic rebel group, the Karen National Union (KNU), has sought for consi...
Since 2012 Myanmar’s oldest ethnic rebel group, the Karen National Union (KNU), has sought for consi...
This thesis asks why some ethnic insurgencies in Myanmar have de-escalated since 2011, while others ...
This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing...
This article reviews the first twelve months of the civil disobedience movement in Myanmar following...
abstractDemocratic transitions are often followed by conflict. This article explores one explanation...
Recent anti-Muslim violence in Myanmar cannot be understood primarily as a spontaneous outburst of r...
This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing...
Successive Myanmar governments have enlisted illiberal means in attempts to end the world’s oldest c...
Fighting in Kachin state flared back up just months after President Thien Sein came to power in Marc...
This article uses Burma/Myanmar from 1948 to 2011 as a within-case context to explore why some arme...
Civil wars involving non-state armed groups in Burma have been driven by a complex mix of historical...
This paper argues that attempts to co-opt rebels into peace with economic incentives can buy tempora...
This article argues that attempts to buy insurgency out of violence can achieve temporary stability ...
Since 2012 Myanmar’s oldest ethnic rebel group, the Karen National Union (KNU), has sought for consi...
Since 2012 Myanmar’s oldest ethnic rebel group, the Karen National Union (KNU), has sought for consi...
Since 2012 Myanmar’s oldest ethnic rebel group, the Karen National Union (KNU), has sought for consi...
This thesis asks why some ethnic insurgencies in Myanmar have de-escalated since 2011, while others ...
This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing...
This article reviews the first twelve months of the civil disobedience movement in Myanmar following...
abstractDemocratic transitions are often followed by conflict. This article explores one explanation...
Recent anti-Muslim violence in Myanmar cannot be understood primarily as a spontaneous outburst of r...
This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing...
Successive Myanmar governments have enlisted illiberal means in attempts to end the world’s oldest c...
Fighting in Kachin state flared back up just months after President Thien Sein came to power in Marc...
This article uses Burma/Myanmar from 1948 to 2011 as a within-case context to explore why some arme...
Civil wars involving non-state armed groups in Burma have been driven by a complex mix of historical...