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Journal Article

Citation

Cyr CJ, Widmeier M, Leitz L. Res. Soc. Mov. Confl. Change 2021; 44: 63-90.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

We examine why some groups use violence while others use nonviolence when they push for major political change. Nonviolence can be less costly, but nonstate actors must mobilize a large number of people for it to be successful. This is less critical for violent rebellion, as successful attacks can be committed by a small number of people. This means that groups that believe that they have the potential to mobilize larger numbers of people are less likely to use violence. This potential is related to the lines along which the group mobilizes. Campaigns mobilized along ethnic or Marxist lines have fewer potential members and are most likely to use violence. Prodemocracy campaigns have a higher number of potential members and are more likely to use nonviolence. For movements against a foreign occupation, campaigns in larger countries are more likely to use nonviolence. These predictions are supported in a multilevel logit model of campaigns from 1945 to 2006. The mechanism is tested by looking at the interactive effect of democratic changes on the likelihood of nonviolence and looking at a subsample of 72 campaigns that explicitly draw from certain ethnic or religious groups.


Language: en

Keywords

Civil war; Conflict; Mobilization; Nonviolent resistance; Protest; Rebel groups

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