
The Post-cold War Era Has Seen An Unmistakable Trend Toward The Proliferation Of Violent Non-state Groups-variously Labeled Terrorists, Rebels, Paramilitaries, Gangs, And Criminals-near Borders In Unstable Regions Especially. In Borderland Battles, Annette Idler Examines The Micro-dynamics Among Violent Non-state Groups And Finds Striking Patterns: Borderland Spaces Consistently Intensify The Security Impacts Of How These Groups Compete For Territorial Control, Cooperate In Illicit Cross-border Activities, And Replace The State In Exerting Governance Functions. Drawing On Extensive Fieldwork With More Than 600 Interviews In And On The Shared Borderlands Of Colombia, Ecuador, And Venezuela, Where Conflict Is Ripe And Crime Thriving, Idler Reveals How Dynamic Interactions Among Violent Non-state Groups Produce A Complex Security Landscape With Ramifications For Order And Governance, Both Locally And Beyond. A Deep Examination Of How Violent Non-state Groups Actually Operate With And Against One Another On The Ground, Borderland Battles Will Be Essential Reading For Anyone Involved In Reducing Organized Crime And Armed Conflict-some Of Our Era's Most Pressing And Seemingly Intractable Problems.
This book investigates how the micro-dynamics between violent non-state groups in borderland regions influence local security, governance, and state stability. Annette Idler, a researcher specializing in security and conflict, utilizes an extensive empirical framework derived from over 600 interviews conducted in the borderlands of Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela. She argues that these border spaces act as catalysts that intensify the competitive and cooperative interactions of armed groups, ultimately creating complex, alternative governance structures that challenge traditional state authority.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in international security and Latin American studies frequently cite this work for its rigorous, ground-level methodology and its contribution to understanding the complexity of non-state actor cooperation. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which makes it a foundational text for scholars and practitioners focused on conflict zones and border governance.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190849169
ISBN-13:
9780190849160
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