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  1. Home
  2. Battle for Allegiance: Governments, Terrorist Groups, and Constituencies in Conflict

Battle for Allegiance: Governments, Terrorist Groups, and Constituencies in Conflict

Seden Akcinaroglu and Efe Tokdemir 2020
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Domestic terrorist groups, like all violent nonstate actors, compete with governments for their monopoly on violence and their legitimacy in representing the citizenry. Battle for Allegiance shows violence is neither the only nor the most effective way in which nonstate actors and governments work to achieve their goals. As much as nonviolent strategies are a rarely considered piece of the puzzle, the role of the audience is another crucial piece often downplayed in the literature. Many studies emphasize the interactions between the government and the terrorist group at the expense of the constituency, but the constituency is the common cluster for both actors to gain legitimacy and to demand its allegiance. In fact, the competition between the two actors goes far beyond who is superior in terms of military force and tactics. The hardest battles are fought over the allegiance of the citizens.

Using a multimethod approach based on exclusive interviews and focus groups from Turkey and large N original data from around the world, Seden Akcinaroglu and Efe Tokdemir present the first systematic empirical analysis of the ways in which terrorist groups, the government, and the citizens relate to each other in a triadic web of action. They study the nonviolent actions of terrorist groups toward their constituencies, the nonviolent actions of governments toward terrorists, and the nonviolent actions of governments toward the terrorist group's constituencies. By investigating the causes, targets, and consequences of accommodative actions, this book sheds light on an important, but generally ignored, aspect of terrorism: interactive nonviolent strategies.

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ISBN(s)
  • 978-0-472-12684-2 (ebook)
  • 978-0-472-13199-0 (hardcover)
Subject
  • Political Science:Conflict Resolution & Peace Studies
  • Political Science:Governance
  • Political Science:International Relations
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  • Table of Contents

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  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • One. Introduction
  • Part I. Nonviolent Strategies of Terrorist Groups
    • Two. The Choice of Terrorist Group Strategies
    • Three. The Impact of Violent vs. Nonviolent Strategies on the Achievements of Terrorist Groups
    • Four. Precedents and Consequences of Audience Relations
    • Five. Empirical Analysis of Audience Relations
  • Part II. Nonviolent Strategies of Governments in Counterterrorism
    • Six. Forcing the Government’s Hand
    • Seven. Empirical Analysis of Government Concessions to Constituency as a Counterterrorism Strategy
    • Eight. Constituency Reforms
    • Nine. Conclusion
  • Appendix
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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Group Features and Constituency Relations

Substantive effects of Group Features on Audience Relations

From Chapter 5

Fig. 5.4. Substantive effects of Group Features on Audience Relations

An appendix chart for chapter 5

Multinomial Logistic Regression Findings

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Fig. A5.2. Multinomial Logistic Regression Findings

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