Journal ArticleDOI
Organizing Rebellion: Rethinking High-Risk Mobilization and Social Networks in War
Reads0
Chats0
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.read more
Citations
More filters
Posted Content
Structure, Meaning, and Network Causality
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on network structures to the exclusion of the meanings those social ties have for the members of the networks and present a risk of misidentifying causal mechanisms.
Journal Article
Bitter Friends: How Relationships Between Violent Non-State Actors Form, Are Used, and Shape Behavior
Journal ArticleDOI
Networks, Informal Governance, and Ethnic Violence in a Syrian City
TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of the Syrian city of Homs in the 2011 uprising is presented, which demonstrates how the Syrian regime's strategies of managing the Sunni population of Homs shaped patterns of challenge.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
The Strength of Weak Ties
TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that the degree of overlap of two individuals' friendship networks varies directly with the strength of their tie to one another, and the impact of this principle on diffusion of influence and information, mobility opportunity, and community organization is explored.
Journal ArticleDOI
Economic Action and Social Structure: The Problem of Embeddedness
TL;DR: In this article, the extent to which economic action is embedded in structures of social relations, in modern industrial society, is examined, and it is argued that reformist economists who attempt to bring social structure back in do so in the "oversocialized" way criticized by Dennis Wrong.
Book
Case Studies and Theory Development in the Social Sciences
TL;DR: In this paper, a text that emphasizes the importance of case studies in social science scholarship and shows how to make case study practices more rigorous is presented, with a focus on case studies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Threshold models of collective behavior.
TL;DR: This article developed models of collective behavior for situations where actors have two alternatives and the costs and/or benefits of each depend on how many other actors choose which alternative, and the key...