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Journal Article

Citation

Grubb AE. Sec. Stud. 2016; 25(3): 460-487.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/09636412.2016.1195625

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Violence varies in intensity across intrastate political conflicts. This study suggests that interactions between local state agents and nonstate radicals affect the intensity of violence. When contention develops in a community and nonstate actors radicalize, whether or not some local state agents deviate from their institutional role as providers of law and order to support radicals is a crucial feature that explains how some communities experience more violence than others. This argument explains the different trajectories of violence in two neighboring rural districts during the 1971-76 period of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. The major implication of the study is that these interactions affect not only the intensity of violence in particular communities but also the breadth, length, and end of violence in the overall intrastate conflict.


Language: en

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