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ID128868
Title ProperIdeology in civil war
Other Title Informationinstrumental adoption and beyond
LanguageENG
AuthorSanín, Francisco Gutiérrez ;  Wood, Elisabeth Jean
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)How important is ideology for the analysis of civil war? In contrast to literature that neglects ideology in its emphasis on structural variables or situational incentives, this article argues for the recognition of its essential role in the functioning of armed groups if they are to explain observed variation in armed group behavior. For example, sidelining ideology leaves major phenomena unexplained, including both mass killing and restraint in violence against civilians. Ideology is defined as a set of more or less systematic ideas that identify a constituency, the objectives pursued on behalf of that group, and a program of action (perhaps only vaguely defined). Ideology matters in two ways. First, it has instrumental value for armed groups, socializing combatants with heterogeneous motivations into a coherent group, dampening principal-agent problems, prioritizing competing goals, and coordinating external actors including civilians. Ideologies differ in the kind of institutions and strategies they prescribe for meeting these challenges and in the extent to which they do so. Yet this first approach is incomplete, as ideology has more than instrumental value. Members of some armed groups act on normative commitments in ways not reducible to instrumental reasoning, and some groups constrain their strategic choices for ideological reasons, often normative concerns prescribed by their ideology. Some groups, for example, engage in restraint, declining to use violence though it would have strategic benefit. The conclusion lays out a twin-fold research agenda: a 'weak program' that analyzes the instrumental adoption of ideology and a 'strong program' that explores normative commitments based on particular ideologies and on social preferences.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Peace Research Vol.51, No.2; March 2014: p.213-226
Journal SourceJournal of Peace Research Vol.51, No.2; March 2014: p.213-226
Key WordsState Policy ;  Conflicts ;  Armed Conflict ;  Armed Group Institutions ;  Civil War ;  Ideology ;  Political Violence ;  Politics ;  Ethnic Violence ;  Political Ideology ;  Strategic Violence ;  Strategy ;  Political Strategy


 
 
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