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ID140001
Title ProperBargaining between rebel groups and the outside option of violence
LanguageENG
AuthorNygard, Havard Mokleiv ;  Weintraub, Michael
Summary / Abstract (Note)Although military cooperation among rebel groups in multi-party civil wars could help rebels defeat or extract concessions from an incumbent government, violent conflict among rebel groups is empirically prevalent. Why do rebel groups in multi-party civil wars choose to fight one another? This article models the strategic dilemma facing rebel groups in multi-party civil wars as an alternating-offer bargaining game of incomplete information with an outside option. The game-theoretic model explores the relationship between the status quo distribution of power among rebel groups, the costs of fighting, and the likelihood that one rebel group will opt to unilaterally end bargaining over a set of goods, such as access to supply routes, natural resources, and control over civilian populations. We show that the likelihood of violent conflict between rebel groups is lowest when the status quo distribution of benefits reflects the existing distribution of power.
`In' analytical NoteTerrorism and Political Violence Vol. 27, No.3; Jul/Aug 2015: p.557-580
Journal SourceTerrorism and Political Violence Vol: 27 No 3
Key WordsBargaining ;  Rebel Groups ;  Non - State Actors ;  Civil War ;  Multiparty Civil Wars


 
 
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