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  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID179934
Title ProperUnderstanding Election Violence in the Philippines
Other Title InformationBeware the Unknown Assassins of May
LanguageENG
AuthorReyes, Joseph Anthony L ;  Smith, Tom
Summary / Abstract (Note)Despite election violence being a commonly agreed upon phenomena in the Philippines, there had been a dearth in academic research in recent years, largely due to the lack of reliable sources of information. To address this, this article adapts recognised methods from studies such as Newman’s 2013 paper, together with McGrath and Gill’s 2014 research on terrorism and elections. To expose the timing of election violence, incidents were tracked relative to election dates for the period from 2004–2017, with the results indicating violence increases closer to an election date, and frequency substantially increased during the 14-year period. This is the first academic journal article since Linantud in 1998 to focus on the issue of election violence in the Philippines but through adaptive methodologies goes further to make national analysis. Furthermore, findings reveal statistically significant differences on the types of terrorist attacks and types of targets when comparing election and non-election periods. Complicating factors are explored in relation to majority of attacks attributed to ‘unknown’ actors and the complex situation during elections. The results also demonstrate that election violence in the Philippines is dominated by the New People’s Army and the use of assassination. The paper makes the case for further research and the creation of a dedicated database of election violence in the Philippines and elsewhere, and finally evaluating these few measures implemented by the government that have failed to stem election violence.
`In' analytical NotePacific Affairs Vol. 94, No.3; Sep 2021: p.491-518
Journal SourcePacific Affairs Vol: 94 No 3
Key WordsTerrorism ;  Philippines ;  Assassination ;  Election Violence ;  New People’s Army


 
 
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