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Journal ArticleDOI

Organizing Rebellion: Rethinking High-Risk Mobilization and Social Networks in War

Sarah E. Parkinson
- 01 Aug 2013 - 
- Vol. 107, Iss: 3, pp 418-432
TLDR
In this paper, the authors trace the emergence and evolution of female-dominated clandestine supply, financial, and information networks in 1980s Lebanon, and demonstrate that mobilization pathways and organizational subdivisions emerge from the systematic overlap between formal militant hierarchies and quotidian social networks.
Abstract
Research on violent mobilization broadly emphasizes who joins rebellions and why, but neglects to explain the timing or nature of participation. Support and logistical apparatuses play critical roles in sustaining armed conflict, but scholars have not explained role differentiation within militant organizations or accounted for the structures, processes, and practices that produce discrete categories of fighters, soldiers, and staff. Extant theories consequently conflate mobilization and participation in rebel organizations with frontline combat. This article argues that, to understand wartime mobilization and organizational resilience, scholars must situate militants in their organizational and social context. By tracing the emergence and evolution of female-dominated clandestine supply, financial, and information networks in 1980s Lebanon, it demonstrates that mobilization pathways and organizational subdivisions emerge from the systematic overlap between formal militant hierarchies and quotidian social networks. In doing so, this article elucidates the nuanced relationship between social structure, militant organizations, and sustained rebellion.

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Citations
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Using ERGMs to Disaggregate Displacement Cascades

TL;DR: Exponential Random Graph Models that conceive of locations as nodes in a network and movements between those locations as ties can overcome challenges and assess aggregate trends while incorporating location characteristics and movement patterns.

Gender, Social Networks and Conflict Processes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors synthesize existing feminist research on dynamics of conflict and peacebuilding and bring a social network approach to understand gendered patterns of intersectional inequality, and reveal opportunities for bridging divides and transforming wartime networks into peacetime support structures.
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Civilian Participation in Politics and Violent Revolution: Ideology, Networks, and Action in Peru and India

TL;DR: This article explored variation in the confluence of civilians' participation in status quo politics through electoral channels and civil society action and in violent insurgencies that seek to conquer the state through a comparative comparison of Peru's Shining Path and the Naxalite movement in India.
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The Politics of Data Access in Studying Violence across Methodological Boundaries: What We Can Learn from Each Other?

TL;DR: The authors compare and contrast the research strategies and dilemmas confronted by researchers using quantitative methods to collect and analyze "big data" and those by researchers conducting interpretivist ethnography grounded in the method of participant observation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Going on the Run: What Drives Military Desertion in Civil War?

Holger Albrecht, +1 more
- 30 Oct 2017 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied individual military insubordination in the Syrian civil war, drawing on interviews with deserters from the Syrian army now based in Turkey, Jordan, and Lebanon.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Trending Questions (1)
What are the most recent works on armed group mobilisation?

The paper does not provide information about the most recent works on armed group mobilization. The paper focuses on the need to understand the timing and nature of participation in militant organizations and the relationship between social structure, militant organizations, and sustained rebellion.