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Telling the Difference: Guerrillas and Paramilitaries in the Colombian War
205
Citations
8
References
2008
Year
Latin American StudyCivil-military RelationPolitical BehaviorInternational ConflictSocial SciencesPolitical EconomyLatin American SocietyLatin American HistoryGeopoliticsCivil ConflictPolitical ChangeColombian WarInternational RelationsColombian ConflictLatin American StudiesEarly Political EconomyComparative PoliticsPolitical ConflictHumanitiesConflict StudySpanishPolitical Science
The effort to build a political economy of war without politics is finding its limits. The question now is what comes next. How to put politics back in? This article compares systematically two non-state armed groups that participate in the Colombian conflict, the main guerrilla (FARC) and the paramilitary. It shows that despite their similar financial bases, they appear to exhibit systematic differences— regarding both their social composition and their internal/external behavior—and claims that the key to understanding them is the set of organizational devices that each group crafts in its process of survival and growth. All this suggests that a main tenet of the early political economy of war, that all non-state armed groups can be understood as being strategically identical, is flawed. It also poses a classificatory challenge.
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