6
Understanding Insurrections

Understanding Insurrections. Social Structure Societal cleavages along racial, ethnic, and religious lines are frequently among the root causes of insurgency

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Understanding Insurrections

Social Structure

• Societal cleavages along racial, ethnic, and religious lines are frequently among the root causes of insurgency

• When one group enjoys disproportionate political/economic power relative to other groups insurgents tend to find opportunities to gain support if the relatively deprived group constitutes a majority of the population, the possibilities for gaining support are obviously greater

• Disadvantaged minority insurgents face many challenges in gaining support (Kikuyu in Kenya, Kurds in Iraq and Iran, Eritreans in Ethiopia)

Economic Factors

• While both stagnation and sudden downturns in the economy after a period of growth have been associated with insurgencies, violence may also occur during periods of prosperity

• Numerous past and current cases provide ample evidence that economic inequities that create a perception of relative deprivation are a major cause of insurrectionary violence (El Salvador, Nicaragua, Nepal, Philippines, FLN in Algeria)

• Many conflicts that seem on the surface to be based on communal rivalries turn out, upon closer inspection , to have significant economic dimensions (Northern Ireland, Lebanon, Kurds in Turkey/Iran/Iraq, blacks in southern Sudan, Muslim religious groups in Thailand)

• While economic factors are important in many conflicts, they are inconsequential in others (Afgan insurrection against the Soviets)

Political Culture

• Political culture refers to enduring attitudes or orientations of people towards aspects of politics, knowledge, feelings, judgments

• Almond & Verba develop three concepts to characterize differences in political culture:

• a. Parochial: Little or no awareness of the national political system (rural pop in Guatemala-1960)

• These populations generally do not lend support to insurgent movement

• b. Subject: Aware of political system but are not active in shaping it (slum dwellers in many countries)

• Skillful propaganda and organizing by insurgents may change orientation

Political Culture• c. Participant: Generally educated and wish to engage actively

in the political arena• Vulnerable to recruitment• Alienation of elites is a fundamental condition for revolution• Attitudes involving acceptance of authority, group trust, and

tolerance of violence and foreigners can be important with respect to analyzing insurgencies

• Where there is low tolerance to violence recruitment will suffer and sympathy will be low (The Red Brigades-Italy, Egyptians to Islamic militant violence)