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El. knyga: Effects of Rebel Parties on Governance, Democracy and Stability after Civil Wars: From Guns to Governing

Edited by (University of North Texas, USA), Edited by (University of York, UK)
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This book provides a systematic overview and in-depth analysis of the effects of rebel group inclusion on democracy following the end of conflict across the globe.

This book provides a systematic overview and in-depth analysis of the effects of rebel group inclusion on democracy following the end of conflict across the globe.

It examines different types of rebel groups, addressing the subject matter through the lens of three dimensions – democracy, stability and governance – which structure the book and the individual chapters. As such, it affords a rare opportunity to bring together two heretofore separate research traditions – conflict studies and political parties.

This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of political parties and party theory, civil wars and peacebuilding, democratization studies and state building and more broadly to comparative politics, development studies, and security studies.



This book provides a systematic overview and in-depth analysis of the effects of rebel group inclusion on democracy following the end of conflict across the globe.

1. Introduction: Rebel group inclusion and post-war democratisation Part
1: Rebel group inclusion and good governance
2. The Effects of Rebel Parties
on Governance: Organizational Endowments, Ideology, and Governance after
Civil Wars End
3. Dynamics of post-rebel party governance in Aceh and East
Timor: Balancing patronage politics and popular democracy
4. From Rebel
Justice to the Rule-of-Law: The cases of Hamas and Hezbollah
5. The
Struggle for Political Stability and Governance in Northern Ireland after the
Peace Process: The role of Sinn Féin and the IRA
6. The KLA successor parties
and the spoils of peace in Kosovo Part 2: Rebel group inclusion and democracy
7. How does the inclusion of post-rebel parties shape democracy? Parties,
elections and peace in Mozambique, 1992-2018
8. The Political Integration of
Islamist Armed Groups: A Viable Path to Peace and Democracy?
9. Adapting too
well? Rebel reconversion and democratization in El Salvador
10. Post-War
Ruling Parties and their Youth Wings: How Old Rebels handle the African
Millennials
11. Rebel Participation and Political Transition in Post-War Sri
Lanka Part 3: Rebel group inclusion and political stability
12. Political
Parties in De Facto States: Links with External Patrons
13. The Ethiopian
Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front: Coalition Dynamics and Post-War
Politics
14. Contingency, Inclusion, and Democracy: A Critical Analysis of
Jamyat-e- Islami in the Afghan State Building Process
15. Virtual Politics,
post-Islamism and authoritarian Inertia in post-conflict Tajikistan
16.
Conclusion: Towards a theory of rebel group inclusion and democratisation
John Ishiyama is a University Distinguished Research Professor of Political Science at the University of North Texas, USA.

Gyda M. Sindre is an Associate Professor in International Politics at the University of York, UK.