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Session Submission Type: Full Paper Panel
This collection of papers examines the origins, outcomes, and legacies of armed rebellion. Lewis investigates perceptions of non-state actors that initiate peripheral rebellions. Papers by Clarke, Lachapelle, and Liu examine how origins in conflict and revolution shape subsequent authoritarian regimes that come to power. Conversely, Perkoski studies how irregular transitions affect the likelihood of democratization.
Violent Origins and Authoritarian Order - Killian Clarke, Georgetown University
Legacies of Revolutionary Violence in Algeria - Jean Lachapelle, Université de Montréal
Political Entrepreneurs or Bandits? “Criminal” Origins of Peripheral Rebellions - Janet I. Lewis, George Washington University; Stephen Rangazas, George Washington University
Varieties of Insecurity and Rebel-Civilian Ties across Time - Shelley Liu, Duke University
Irregular Regime Transitions and Democratization - Evan Perkoski, University of Connecticut