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ID193897
Title ProperAre Non-Inclusive Peace Agreements Effective Counter-Insurgency Strategies?
LanguageENG
AuthorOlson Lounsbery, Marie ;  DeRouen, Karl Jr
Summary / Abstract (Note)Civil wars are complex in ways that challenge effective resolution. Civil war actors tend to be dynamic in nature and often splinter then coalesce over time potentially evolving into multiple dyads pitted against their government. Previous work has demonstrated that when multiple rebel factions emerge, civil wars tend to be longer in duration as satisfying multiple factions tends to be more challenging. However, governments may choose to pursue dyadic agreements hoping to end the conflict either through subsequent dyadic negotiations or through more targeted military tactics focusing intently on the remaining faction(s). This study suggests that which dyads will be excluded from the peace is predictable, but also seeks to better understand what happens to those excluded factions that hedge their bets to continue the fight. Propositions are tested on all civil war peace agreements between 1945-2013. Key findings indicate the importance of political power-sharing provision and third-party assistance in bringing excluded groups into the fold.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Peacekeeping Vol. 31, No.2; Apr 2024: p.235-259
Journal SourceInternational Peacekeeping 2024-05 31, 2
Key WordsUN Peacekeeping ;  Mediation ;  Peace Agreements ;  Power-Sharing ;  Foreign Military Intervention ;  Inclusivity ;  Civil War ;  Rebel dynamics