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ID157850
Title ProperTroop retention in civil wars
Other Title Informationdesertion, denunciation, and military organization in the democratic Republic of Congo
LanguageENG
AuthorRichards, Joanne
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article investigates the link between the organizational structure of nonstate armed groups and the ability of low-level combatants to desert without recapture. Throughout, I show that nonstate armed groups can adopt organizational structures that mimic those found in national armies and that are designed both to detect wannabe deserters and to facilitate the denunciation and recapture of those who manage to escape. The odds of a successful desertion are increased when territorial safe havens beyond the reach of these organizational structures are available. Three types of territorial safe haven are identified: (1) territory composed of rough terrain and/or free of nonstate armed groups and their informants; (2) United Nations (UN) bases and cantonment sites; and (3) other state and nonstate armed groups willing to accept deserters. These arguments are inductively developed from interviews with more than one hundred former members of nonstate armed groups in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Global security Studies Vol. 3, No.1; Jan 2018: p.38–55
Journal SourceJournal of Global security Studies Vol: 3 No 1
Key WordsDemocratic Republic of Congo ;  Desertion ;  Micro-Level Dynamics Of Civil Wars ;  Denunciation ;  Side-Switching ;  Semi-Structured Interviews


 
 
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