TY - JOUR
T1 - Unique offerings
T2 - Ideological competition and rebel governance
AU - Akcinaroglu, Seden
AU - Berkowitz, Jeremy
AU - Moreno Leon, Carlos E.
AU - Ogutcu-Fu, Sema Hande
AU - Sedashov, Evgeny
AU - Tokdemir, Efe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/1/23
Y1 - 2025/1/23
N2 - This study examines the factors influencing non-state armed actors’ (NSAAs) ability and willingness to implement rebel governance, with a focus on the group's ideological distinction from adversaries and the government. We argue that a unique ideology acts as an effective branding tool, enhancing governance success as constituents recognize and align with it. This ideology allows NSAAs to offer a distinct social contract to their followers with minimal risk, fostering strong relationships with their constituents, and hence benefits from such governance. We propose that rebel governance increases when NSAAs are ideologically distinct from other armed factions and the state. We validate our hypotheses using the Rebel Quasi-State Institutions dataset, an original dataset on armed groups’ ideologies, and the Database for Political Institutions for government ideology. This study is the first to explore the link between an armed group's distinct ideology and its governance capacity in multi-party settings, and offers a novel contribution to the burgeoning literature on group ideology and rebel governance.
AB - This study examines the factors influencing non-state armed actors’ (NSAAs) ability and willingness to implement rebel governance, with a focus on the group's ideological distinction from adversaries and the government. We argue that a unique ideology acts as an effective branding tool, enhancing governance success as constituents recognize and align with it. This ideology allows NSAAs to offer a distinct social contract to their followers with minimal risk, fostering strong relationships with their constituents, and hence benefits from such governance. We propose that rebel governance increases when NSAAs are ideologically distinct from other armed factions and the state. We validate our hypotheses using the Rebel Quasi-State Institutions dataset, an original dataset on armed groups’ ideologies, and the Database for Political Institutions for government ideology. This study is the first to explore the link between an armed group's distinct ideology and its governance capacity in multi-party settings, and offers a novel contribution to the burgeoning literature on group ideology and rebel governance.
KW - Competition with government
KW - inter-rebel competition
KW - rebel governance
KW - rebel ideology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85216102745&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/c0771ee7-1b42-30c5-9cfd-53679e741571/
U2 - 10.1177/07388942241303397
DO - 10.1177/07388942241303397
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85216102745
SN - 0738-8942
JO - Conflict Management and Peace Science
JF - Conflict Management and Peace Science
ER -