"This volume comprises key essays by Ted Robert Gurr on the causes and consequences of organized political protest and rebellion, its outcomes and strategies for conflict management. From the Castro-inspired revolutionary movements of Latin America...
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Universität Konstanz, Kommunikations-, Informations-, Medienzentrum (KIM)
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"This volume comprises key essays by Ted Robert Gurr on the causes and consequences of organized political protest and rebellion, its outcomes and strategies for conflict management. From the Castro-inspired revolutionary movements of Latin America in the 1960s to Yugoslavia's dissolution in ethnonational wars of the 1990s, and the popular revolts of the Arab Spring, millions of people have risked their lives by participating in protests and rebellions. Based on half a century of theorizing and social science research, this book brings together Gurr's extensive knowledge and addresses the key questions surrounding this subject: What grievances, hopes and hatreds motivated the protesters and rebels? What did they gain that might have offset myriad deaths and devastation? How effective are protest movements as alternatives to rebellions and terrorism? What public and international responses lead away from violence and toward reforms? The essays in the volume are updated and are organized around the evolving themes of the author's research, including theoretical arguments, interpretations and references to the evidence developed in his empirical research and case studies. The concluding essays bring theory and evidence to bear on the past and future of political violence in Africa. This book will be of much interest to student of rebellion, political violence, conflict studies, security studies and IR"--Provided by publisher
Includes bibliographical references (p. [257] - 278) and index
Part I. The Why Men Rebel Project : theories of rebellion, repression, and responses to scarcityIntroduction to Part I -- Psychological factors in political violence -- War, revolution, and the growth of the coercive state -- On the political consequences of scarcity and economic decline -- Part II. The Minorities At Risk Project : patterns, causes and management of ethnopolitical conflict -- Introduction to Part II -- Peoples against states : ethnopolitical conflict and the changing world system -- Minorities, nationalists, and Islamists : explaining communal conflict in the twenty-first century -- Attaining peace in divided societies : five principles of emerging doctrine -- Part III. Protest, rebellion, terrorism : outcomes and alternatives -- Introduction to Part III -- On the outcomes of violent conflict -- Self-determination movements and their outcomes -- Terrorism in democracies : when it occurs, why it fails -- Nonviolence in ethnopolitics : strategies for the attainment of group rights and autonomy -- Part IV. Out of Africa -- Introduction to Part IV -- Explaining political violence and revolution in Africa -- How Africa's civil wars ended : lessons for prevention? -- The security challenges of Somalia : toward a confederal solution -- Why men rebel revisited : observations on revolution in contemporary Africa.