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GAWTHORPE, ANDREW J (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   153617


All counterinsurgency is local : counterinsurgency and rebel legitimacy / Gawthorpe, Andrew J   Journal Article
Gawthorpe, Andrew J Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Although the concept of legitimacy is central to Western counterinsurgency theory, most discourse in this area black-boxes the concept. It hence remains under-specified in many discussions of counterinsurgency. Fortunately, recent research on rebel governance and legitimacy contributes to our understanding of the problems faced by counterinsurgents who want to boost state legitimacy while undermining that of the rebels. Taken together, this research illustrates that a rational choice approach to legitimacy is simplistic; that micro-level factors ultimately drive legitimacy dynamics; and that both cooption of existing legitimate local elites and their replacement from the top–down is unlikely to succeed. Western counterinsurgency doctrine has failed to grasp the difficulties this poses for it.
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2
ID:   158012


Mad Dog?’ Samuel Huntington and the Vietnam War / Gawthorpe, Andrew J   Journal Article
Gawthorpe, Andrew J Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Harvard professor Samuel P. Huntington has frequently been considered a Vietnam War hawk. His observation that ‘forced-draft urbanization’ might help the United States win the war has come to define his engagement in contemporary strategic debates. This essay argues that both Huntington’s academic work and his private policy advice to the U.S. Government in fact urged a political settlement to the conflict. It argues that in spite of this, Huntington refused to break publicly with the U.S. policy because of his wider concern over what he saw as a crisis of authority in the U.S. foreign policy and governing institutions in the era.
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