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Insurgencies
Swords into ploughshares? Why human rights abuses persist after resistance campaigns
In this article, I explore how violent and nonviolent campaigns shape future state repression. I find that nonviolent campaigns lead to significantly fewer extrajudicial killings after campaign termination compared to violent campaigns.
Christopher Wiley Shay, PhD
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The Long-term Consequences of Violent Vs. Nonviolent Rebellion
In this blog post, I discuss my article
Swords Into Ploughshares?
which explores how nonviolent resistance leads to less future state repression compared to violent resistance.
Christopher Wiley Shay, PhD
Link to Civil War Paths
Updating Nonviolent Campaigns: Introducing NAVCO 2.1
In this article, we introduce the Nonviolent and Violent Campaigns and Outcomes (NAVCO) 2.1 dataset, which adds several new variables to NAVCO 2.0 as well as significantly expanding its temporal scope. We use these data to describe seven decades of global resistance and to probe several claims garnered from existing literature.
Christopher Wiley Shay, PhD
,
Erica Chenoweth
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The Naxalite conflict: heating up or fading away?
The Maoist insurgency in east India is facing a recruitment crisis and increasing numbers of fatalities and surrenders – but its decline is not inevitable.
Christopher Wiley Shay, PhD
Link to IISS Blog
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