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Divided Not Conquered: How Rebels Fracture and Splinters Behave

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From terrorist disputes to splinter offshoots, an inside look at how armed groups break apart.

Terrorist, rebel, and insurgent groups are highly unstable. Amid fears of defeat and even death, intense disagreements have torn many organizations apart, from Syria to Iraq, Ireland to Spain. And while some of these divisions have preceded a group's decline and eventual defeat, others have launched some of the most notorious and deadly organizations in recent history.

In Divided Not Conquered, Evan Perkoski analyzes how armed groups fracture and how breakaway splinter groups behave. Perkoski takes an unprecedented look inside these organizations to understand the specific disagreements that cause groups to break apart, like those over ideology, leadership, and strategy. Drawing on research from organizational studies to social psychology, and leveraging analogies from business firms to religious sects, Perkoski shows how these disputes uniquely shape the behavior and survivability of emerging splinters. When motivated by single, shared disagreements, splinters exhibit higher cohesion, clearer objectives, and greater survivability. When motivated by strategy, splinters attract hardline operatives who steer the group towards increasingly lethal tactics and strategies.

Including case studies of republican militants in Northern Ireland, Basque militants in Spain, and the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, Divided Not Conquered demystifies a complex yet common phenomenon with ramifications for counterinsurgency, counterterrorism, and our understanding of increasingly fragmented conflicts around the globe.

Author: Perkoski Evan
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 304
ISBN: 9780197627075
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2022

1. Introduction
2. How Armed Groups Divide
3. Conflict in Northern Ireland: Contrasting Republican Splinter Groups
4. Statistically Evaluating How Splinter Groups Emerge and Behave
5. Creating a Menace: Al Qaeda and the Islamic State
6. Conclusions, Implications, and Future Research
Appendix

Evan Perkoski is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Connecticut. His research explores the inner working of armed groups, the dynamics of violent and nonviolent uprisings, and the evolution of cyber warfare. His work has been published in International OrganizationJournal of Conflict ResolutionInternational Studies QuarterlyJournal of Global Security Studies, and elsewhere. Perkoski received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania, and he has held fellowships at Harvard Kennedy School's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, and University of Denver's Korbel School of International Studies.

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