Previous studies have shown that many recent Jihadist insurgencies differ from other types of civil wars due to their high levels of civilian victimization and their incidence among tribal and honorific societies. We argue that these characteristics of Jihadist wars may have an effect on anti-rebel mobilization among the local population. Notwithstanding the importance of political and sectarian motives, brutal violence against civilians frequently ignites cycles of blood feuds in societies still abiding by customary traditional laws. We argue that excessive violence against civilians that facilitates blood revenge should not be overlooked as one of the primary causes of anti-rebel mobilization in Jihadist civil wars. We draw our empirical ...
This article explores the strategic motivations for insurgent violence against civilians. It argues ...
Civilian deaths during times of war is usually seen as a horrific tragedy that armed forces should t...
Previous large-N studies on conflict lethality have focused in large part either on structural facto...
Despite a considerable amount of ethnographic research into the phenomena of blood revenge and blood...
Existing research has argued that terrorism is common in civil war because it is "effective." Surpri...
Existing research has argued that terrorism is common in civil war because it is "effective." Surpri...
This research presents analysis for identifying common risk and resilience factors that contributed ...
Why do some groups fighting in civil wars target civilians more than others? We propose an explanati...
As an embedded sociocultural code, blood revenge is present in many societies where civil wars occur...
Contemporary civil wars frequently involve numerous armed groups. How do armed groups compete with...
What explains variation in patterns of violence across time and space in armed conflict? Answering t...
A central question in intrastate conflicts is how insurgents are able to mobilize supporters to part...
This article explores the strategic motivations for insurgent violence against civilians. It argues ...
This article explores the strategic motivations for insurgent violence against civilians. It argues ...
How does the presence of armed pro-regime groups affect conflict lethality? This study examines the ...
This article explores the strategic motivations for insurgent violence against civilians. It argues ...
Civilian deaths during times of war is usually seen as a horrific tragedy that armed forces should t...
Previous large-N studies on conflict lethality have focused in large part either on structural facto...
Despite a considerable amount of ethnographic research into the phenomena of blood revenge and blood...
Existing research has argued that terrorism is common in civil war because it is "effective." Surpri...
Existing research has argued that terrorism is common in civil war because it is "effective." Surpri...
This research presents analysis for identifying common risk and resilience factors that contributed ...
Why do some groups fighting in civil wars target civilians more than others? We propose an explanati...
As an embedded sociocultural code, blood revenge is present in many societies where civil wars occur...
Contemporary civil wars frequently involve numerous armed groups. How do armed groups compete with...
What explains variation in patterns of violence across time and space in armed conflict? Answering t...
A central question in intrastate conflicts is how insurgents are able to mobilize supporters to part...
This article explores the strategic motivations for insurgent violence against civilians. It argues ...
This article explores the strategic motivations for insurgent violence against civilians. It argues ...
How does the presence of armed pro-regime groups affect conflict lethality? This study examines the ...
This article explores the strategic motivations for insurgent violence against civilians. It argues ...
Civilian deaths during times of war is usually seen as a horrific tragedy that armed forces should t...
Previous large-N studies on conflict lethality have focused in large part either on structural facto...