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ID169072
Title ProperNetworks of Cooperation
Other Title InformationRebel Alliances in Fragmented Civil Wars
LanguageENG
AuthorGade, Emily Kalah
Summary / Abstract (Note)When rebels make alliances, what informs their choice of allies? Civil wars are rarely simple contests between rebels and incumbent regimes. Rather, rival militant networks provide the context in which these fragmented conflicts unfold. Alliances that emerge within this competitive landscape have the power to alter conflict trajectories and shape their outcomes. Yet patterns of interrebel cooperation are understudied. The existing scholarship on rebel alliances focuses on why rebels cooperate, but little attention is given to the composition of those alliances: with whom rebels cooperate. We explore how power, ideology, and state sponsorship can shape alliance choices in multiparty civil wars. Employing network analysis and an original data set of tactical cooperation among Syrian rebels, we find compelling evidence that ideological homophily is a primary driver of rebel collaboration. Our findings contribute to an emerging literature that reasserts the role of ideology in conflict processes.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Conflict Resolution Vol. 63, No.9; Oct 2019: p.2071-2097
Journal SourceJournal of Conflict Resolution Vol: 63 No 9
Key WordsAlliances ;  Ideology ;  Syria ;  Social Network Analysis ;  Fragmentation ;  Civil War


 
 
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