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ID165888
Title ProperDoes violent secessionism work?
LanguageENG
AuthorRyan D. Griffiths ;  Griffiths, Ryan D.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Recent research suggests that the strategic use of violence may increase a group’s chance of gaining independence. We investigate this topic using comprehensive data on all secessionist movements between 1900 and 2006 and an original data set on the institutional and extrainstitutional methods that secessionists have used from 1946 to 2011. Our analysis yields several important findings. First, strategy depends on context. Not all secessionist movements are the same, and many have legal and/or institutional routes to independence that shape the methods that they employ. Second, no secessionist movement challenging a contiguous state has won its sovereignty without using institutional methods, either exclusively or in combination with extrainstitutional methods. Finally, we identify four successful combinations of secessionist methods and discuss how these movements develop in relation to their strategic setting. Overall, we find no evidence that violence helps a secessionist movement to gain independence.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Conflict Resolution Vol. 63, No.5; May 2019: p.1310-1336
Journal SourceJournal of Conflict Resolution Vol: 63 No 5
Key WordsConflict ;  Civil Wars ;  Internal armed Conflict ;  Separatism ;  Rebellion


 
 
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