This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing these complex and often uneasy relations between elites and grassroots of insurgency is important for understanding the success or failure of peace processes. This is because internal contestation over authority between rival rebel leaders can drive a movement’s external strategy. Based on ethnographic research on the Karen and Kachin rebellions in Myanmar and insights from Political Sociology, the article suggests that leadership authority is linked to social identification and the claim to recognition among insurgent grassroots. If rebel leaders manage to satisfy their grassroots’ claim to recognition, their insurgent orders are stable. Fa...
This paper analyzes the importance of legitimacy in Myanmar’s peacemaking efforts, from 2011 onwards...
Although non-state armed groups are primary stakeholders in contemporary political conflicts, there ...
This thesis argues that the relationship between rebel leaders and rebel field commanders is an imp...
This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing...
This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing...
This article argues that attempts to buy insurgency out of violence can achieve temporary stability ...
This thesis asks why some ethnic insurgencies in Myanmar have de-escalated since 2011, while others ...
This paper argues that attempts to co-opt rebels into peace with economic incentives can buy tempora...
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...
Rebel Politics analyzes the changing dynamics of the civil war in Myanmar, one of the most entrenche...
Common beliefs posit that rebel fragmentation and the emergence of splinter groups are often associa...
The global fame—or ignominy—of rebel leaders is often determined by the degree of violence and uphea...
Much of the recent literature on rebel governance and violent political orders works with 'centred' ...
This paper analyzes the importance of legitimacy in Myanmar’s peacemaking efforts, from 2011 onwards...
Although non-state armed groups are primary stakeholders in contemporary political conflicts, there ...
This thesis argues that the relationship between rebel leaders and rebel field commanders is an imp...
This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing...
This article asks how rebel leaders capture and lose legitimacy within their own movement. Analysing...
This article argues that attempts to buy insurgency out of violence can achieve temporary stability ...
This thesis asks why some ethnic insurgencies in Myanmar have de-escalated since 2011, while others ...
This paper argues that attempts to co-opt rebels into peace with economic incentives can buy tempora...
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...
Rebel Politics analyzes the changing dynamics of the civil war in Myanmar, one of the most entrenche...
Common beliefs posit that rebel fragmentation and the emergence of splinter groups are often associa...
The global fame—or ignominy—of rebel leaders is often determined by the degree of violence and uphea...
Much of the recent literature on rebel governance and violent political orders works with 'centred' ...
This paper analyzes the importance of legitimacy in Myanmar’s peacemaking efforts, from 2011 onwards...
Although non-state armed groups are primary stakeholders in contemporary political conflicts, there ...
This thesis argues that the relationship between rebel leaders and rebel field commanders is an imp...