下令暴力:解释武装集团与国家关系从冲突到合作

IF 0.7 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Alex Waterman
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2022年,印度政府与纳格里姆-伊萨克-穆伊瓦国家社会主义委员会(NSCN-IM)之间的停火进入了第25个年头。虽然停火大大减少了该组织与安全部队之间的暴力,但它绝不是结束暴力。尽管最近采取行动减少《武装部队特别权力法》的适用范围,但该地区仍然高度军事化;在和平谈判的紧张时期,一场“猫捉老鼠”的游戏在渴望巩固其在当地影响力的NSCN-IM武装分子和寻求遏制该组织的印度安全部队之间展开。偶尔,这演变成武装冲突和死亡,但通常会被限制和管理在“可容忍的范围内”。是什么导致了这些模糊的无战争、无和平的场景?芝加哥大学政治学副教授保罗·斯坦尼兰德在《暴力秩序:从冲突到合作解释武装团体-国家关系》一书中试图解决这个问题。在他近十年来对国家与武装团体关系的研究和内战研究中更广泛的“秩序转向”的基础上,《命令暴力》的中心论点是,国家的意识形态项目——与战术考虑相互作用——决定了国家是否与武装团体建立联盟、有限合作、遏制和全面战争的关系。虽然斯坦兰在2017年首次介绍了这四种形式的“武装秩序”,但《暴力秩序》为这一研究议程增加了理论和实证深度,并由此为南亚及其他地区的冲突动态研究做出了重要而新颖的贡献。根据本书前两章介绍的中心假设,各国对武装团体的看法在两个轴线上大相径庭。根据一个国家的意识形态偏好,武装团体可能大致“结盟”、“对立”,或者可能处于意识形态的“灰色地带”,而战术重叠程度则从“低”到“高”不等。通过在冲突和合作的范围内对武装秩序和武装团体政治角色的类型学,将这些组合理论化。武装盟友和死敌在这一范围的两端,但更有趣的是那些介于两者之间的人,比如“商业伙伴”或“奇怪的同床异梦者”,他们有中等或低的意识形态契合,但有很强的战术重叠。这一框架使我们超越了将武装团体规模和/或力量作为国家反应决定因素的笨拙解释,《战略分析》,2022年第46卷,第5期,542-544,https://doi.org/10.1080/09700161.2022.2115229
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ordering Violence: Explaining Armed Group-State Relations from Conflict to Cooperation
I n 2022, the ceasefire between the Government of India and the National Socialist Council of Nagalim–Isak-Muivah (NSCN–IM) entered its 25 year. While the ceasefire has greatly reduced violence between the group and security forces, it has by no means ended it. Despite recent moves to reduce the coverage of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), the region remains heavily militarized; during times of tension in the peace talks, a game of ‘cat and mouse’ ensues between NSCN–IM militants, keen to consolidate their local influence, and Indian security forces seeking to contain the group. Occasionally, this boils over into armed clashes and fatalities, but is generally capped and managed ‘within tolerable limits’. What gives rise to murky no-war, no-peace scenarios such as these? Paul Staniland, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago, seeks to address this question in Ordering Violence: Explaining Armed Group-State Relations from Conflict to Cooperation. Consolidating nearly a decade of both his own work on state-armed group relations and the broader ‘order turn’ in civil wars research, Ordering Violence’s central argument is that states’ ideological projects— interacting with tactical considerations—shape whether states enter into relations of alliance, limited cooperation, containment and total war with armed groups. While Staniland first introduced these four forms of ‘armed order’ in 2017, Ordering Violence adds theoretical and empirical depth to this research agenda and in doing so, makes an important and novel contribution to the study of conflict dynamics both in South Asia and beyond. According to the book’s central hypothesis, which is introduced in the first two chapters, States’ perceptions of armed groups vary broadly across two axes. Depending on a State’s ideological preferences, an armed group may be broadly ‘aligned’, ‘opposed’, or may fall somewhere within an ideological ‘grey zone’, while tactical overlap varies from ‘low’ to ‘high’. Combinations of these are theorized through a typology of both armed orders and armed group political roles across a spectrum of conflict and cooperation. Armed allies and mortal enemies sit at either end of this spectrum, but more interesting are those who sit between, such as ‘business partners’ or ‘strange bedfellows’ with middling or low ideological fit, but strong tactical overlaps (p. 31). This framework takes us beyond clunky explanations of armed group size and/or strength as a determinant of State responses, Strategic Analysis, 2022 Vol. 46, No. 5, 542–544, https://doi.org/10.1080/09700161.2022.2115229
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Strategic Analysis
Strategic Analysis INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
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