Stanford Libraries Stanford Libraries
Login My Account Feedback
Reporting from:
Check system status

(Stanford users can avoid this Captcha by logging in.)

Cancel

SearchWorks catalog

Home
Select search scope, currently: catalog
  • all catalog, articles, website, & more in one search
  • catalog books, media & more in the Stanford Libraries' collections
  • articles+ journal articles & other e-resources
  • Help
    • Need help?
      • Chat with us (limited to Stanford community)
      • Email a reference question
      • Find a subject specialist
      • Using SearchWorks
    • Connection
      • Connect to e-resources
      • Report a connection problem
    • If we don't have it
      • Interlibrary borrowing
      • Suggest a purchase (limited to Stanford community)
    • System status
  • Advanced search
  • Course reserves
  • Selections (0)
    • Clear all lists
Reporting from:
Check system status

(Stanford users can avoid this Captcha by logging in.)

Cancel

Librarian View

LEADER 02954nam a22003137i 4500
001 a12263398
003 SIRSI
005 20220514050002.0
006 m d
007 cr un
008 171205s2017 xx sm 000 0 eng d
040
  
  
a| CSt c| CSt
100
1
  
a| Jacobsen, Mark D. ?| UNAUTHORIZED
245
1
4
a| The scramble for political order h| [electronic resource] : b| state breakdown and armed group proliferation in civil war / c| Mark D. Jacobsen.
260
  
  
c| 2017.
300
  
  
a| 1 online resource.
500
  
  
a| Submitted to the Department of Political Science.
502
  
  
a| Thesis (Ph.D.)--Stanford University, 2017.
520
3
  
a| What explains the proliferation of armed groups during civil wars? Why do some civil wars become more fragmented than others? Many explanations for armed group fragmentation focus on characteristics of populations or armed groups themselves. In this dissertation I argue for the central importance of another variable: the strength of the state. All civil wars entail the loss of a state's monopoly on violence, but states can lose that monopoly in various ways. Variation in state strength across these different pathways into civil war largely determines the opportunity structure within which armed groups mobilize, and ultimately shapes the degree of fragmentation. State breakdowns—which encompass political paralysis and the collapse of security—are engines of fragmentation, and have a distinct logic from insurgency or conventional separatist wars. I develop and test aspects of the theory in three empirical sections. First, I explore the dynamics of state breakdown in Syria, leveraging a novel dataset compiled by The Carter Center of more than 3,000 YouTube videos announcing Syrian armed group formations. Second, I study the relationship between autocratic regime failures and armed group appearances in the universe of civil wars from 1946-2016 using the PRIO/UCDP Armed Conflict Dataset (ACD). Third, through a medium-N study of conflict episodes in modern Iraq, I contrast cases of state breakdown with cases of insurgency and conventional war.
700
1
  
a| Fearon, James D. e| primary advisor. 4| ths 0| http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2002026330 =| ^A2516606
700
1
  
a| Crenshaw, Martha, e| advisor. 4| ths 0| http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82156640 =| ^A326020
700
1
  
a| Weingast, Barry R. e| advisor. 4| ths 0| http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n84031088 =| ^A414172
700
1
  
a| Weinstein, Jeremy M. e| advisor. 4| ths =| ^A1923790
710
2
  
a| Stanford University. b| Department of Political Science. 0| http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2012110575 =| ^A2982702
596
  
  
a| 21 22
856
4
0
u| http://purl.stanford.edu/sh466yp3324 x| SDR-PURL x| item
916
  
  
a| DATE CATALOGED b| 20171206
999
  
  
a| 3781 2017 J w| ALPHANUM c| 1 i| 36105227905598 l| UARCH-30 m| SPEC-COLL r| Y s| Y t| NONCIRC u| 12/6/2017
999
  
  
a| INTERNET RESOURCE w| ASIS c| 1 i| 12263398-2001 l| INTERNET m| SUL r| Y s| Y t| SUL u| 12/6/2017 x| E-THESIS
Stanford Libraries
  • Hours & locations
  • My Account
  • Ask us
  • Opt out of analytics
  • System status
Stanford University
  • Stanford Home
  • Maps & Directions
  • Search Stanford
  • Emergency Info
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Trademarks
  • Non-Discrimination
  • Accessibility

© Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305.