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dc.contributor.authorMASULLO, Juan
dc.date.accessioned2016-01-05T16:31:53Z
dc.date.available2016-01-05T16:31:53Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.citationWashington DC : International Center for Nonviolent Conflict, 2015, International Center on Nonviolent Conflict Monograph Seriesen
dc.identifier.isbn9781943271009
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/38274
dc.description.abstractIn irregular civil wars, armed groups strategically aim to conquer, preserve and control territories. Local civilians inhabiting these territories respond in a wide variety of forms. Although the two dominant responses seem to be to collaborate with the strongest actor in town or flee the area, civilians are not stuck inexorably within this dichotomous choice. Collectively defying armed groups by engaging in organized nonviolent forms of noncooperation, self-organization and disruption is another option. However, given huge disproportionality of force, it is still unclear why ordinary unarmed civilians choose to defy fully armed opponents, let alone how they manage to coordinate and act collectively, and even achieve results that often go against the strategic interests of the armed groups. This monograph examines this puzzle through a detailed case study of one instance of sustained and organized civil resistance led by ordinary peasants against state and nonstate repressive actors in Colombia’s longstanding civil war: the case of the Peace Community of San José de Apartadó (PCSJA). Building on interview and archival material collected during fieldwork, a dataset on civilian victimization, and secondary literature, this monograph describes and analyzes the emergence of the PCSJA, focusing on the key choices made to launch its civil resistance campaign; the methods of nonviolent action used; the evolution of peasants’ preference for nonviolent organizing and noncooperation; and the capacity for collective action. An improved knowledge of this form of civil resistance can serve as a solid basis for the diffusion of these strategies both in other areas of Colombia and abroad, as well as for the design of post-conflict reconstruction strategies.en
dc.description.tableofcontents-- Abstract -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- The Puzzle -- Research Question and Objectives -- The Structure -- Chapter 2. Literature Review -- Social Movements/Contentious Politics and the Study of Violence -- Civil War Studies and the Study of Civilian Agency -- Civil Resistance and the Study of Civil War -- Chapter 3. Conceptualizing Civil Resistance in Civil War -- Chapter 4. The Creation of the PCSJA: Describing the Process -- Local and Regional Dynamics of a National War -- The Decision to Stay -- The Choice of Nonviolent Methods -- The Guiding Principles and the Organizational Structure -- Armed Groups’ Reaction and PCSJA Response -- Chapter 5. The Emergence of the PCSJA: Identifying Explanatory Factors -- The Preference for Noncooperation -- Violence that Stimulated Nonviolent Resistance -- The Capacity to Resist -- Chapter 6. Civil Resistance: The Methods of Nonviolent Action -- Type of Nonviolent Actions -- Tactics of the PCSJA’s Nonviolent Struggle -- Chapter 7. Conclusion: Lessons from the PCSJA -- For External Actors Willing to Support a Resisting Community as an Accompanier -- For Policymakers Working to Bring Peace in War-Torn Countries -- Acronyms -- List of Figures -- Cited Literatureen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.titleThe power of staying put : non-violent resistance against armed groups in Colombiaen
dc.typeBooken
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