Many ceasefire and peace agreements stipulate the disarmament and demobilization of pro-state armed groups involved in the conflict, yet few of these groups ever completely demobilize. This study seeks to explain the process of incomplete demobilization by advancing a theoretical argument that pro-state armed groups are least likely to disarm and demobilize when the monopoly on violence is fragmented, and when there is relative balance of capabilities and interests between the government and pro-state armed groups. Under these circumstances, both governments and pro-state armed groups may favor incomplete demobilization enabling them to pursue their strategic objectives. We draw on unique interview data with pro-state paramilitaries from Uk...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The survey is part of the ESRC-funded project “After...
Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration (DDR) is the largest intervention in nearly all the U...
How do foreign powers disengage from a conflict? We study this issue by examining the recent, large-...
This article challenges the well-established presentation within conflict studies of paramilitary or...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2011.Cataloged f...
Previous research on non-state actors involved in civil wars, has tended to disregard the role of ex...
This article uses Burma/Myanmar from 1948 to 2011 as a within-case context to explore why some arme...
The research to date on pro-governm`ent militias demonstrates that numerous pro-regime militia group...
This article introduces the global Pro-Government Militias Database (PGMD). Despite the devastating ...
Militia groups have only recently started to attract scholarly attention in the literature on intern...
Civil conflicts are conceptualized as asymmetric, population centric military struggles. The argumen...
This article examines whether the incidence of civil wars and the presence of violent non-state acto...
Defence date: 24 October 2017Examining Board: Donatella della Porta, SNS/EUI (Supervisor); Sidney Ta...
Governments and political parties with an armed history are not unusual, yet how these groups functi...
How do wartime legacies affect repression after the conflict ends? Irregular forces support the gove...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The survey is part of the ESRC-funded project “After...
Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration (DDR) is the largest intervention in nearly all the U...
How do foreign powers disengage from a conflict? We study this issue by examining the recent, large-...
This article challenges the well-established presentation within conflict studies of paramilitary or...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2011.Cataloged f...
Previous research on non-state actors involved in civil wars, has tended to disregard the role of ex...
This article uses Burma/Myanmar from 1948 to 2011 as a within-case context to explore why some arme...
The research to date on pro-governm`ent militias demonstrates that numerous pro-regime militia group...
This article introduces the global Pro-Government Militias Database (PGMD). Despite the devastating ...
Militia groups have only recently started to attract scholarly attention in the literature on intern...
Civil conflicts are conceptualized as asymmetric, population centric military struggles. The argumen...
This article examines whether the incidence of civil wars and the presence of violent non-state acto...
Defence date: 24 October 2017Examining Board: Donatella della Porta, SNS/EUI (Supervisor); Sidney Ta...
Governments and political parties with an armed history are not unusual, yet how these groups functi...
How do wartime legacies affect repression after the conflict ends? Irregular forces support the gove...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The survey is part of the ESRC-funded project “After...
Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration (DDR) is the largest intervention in nearly all the U...
How do foreign powers disengage from a conflict? We study this issue by examining the recent, large-...