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Subaltern and the civil war : an assessment of left-wing insurgency in South Asia.

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Subaltern and the civil war : an assessment of left-wing insurgency in South Asia. / Misra, Amalendu.
In: Civil Wars, Vol. 5, No. 4, 2002, p. 56-76.

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Misra A. Subaltern and the civil war : an assessment of left-wing insurgency in South Asia. Civil Wars. 2002;5(4):56-76. doi: 10.1080/13698240208402517

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@article{80b07f0f5aaf44799fae45a2cfe7e75a,
title = "Subaltern and the civil war : an assessment of left-wing insurgency in South Asia.",
abstract = "In the past decade and a half there has been a steady rise in left-wing violence in South Asia, confined mostly to India and Nepal. The key characteristics of this type of uprising are: (a) it is rural/agrarian in nature; (b) there is a strong element of ideological presence; (c) it targets a certain class, the state and its institutions; and (d) victims of this uprising are both civilians and officials (now estimated to be over 20,000). While both countries acknowledge the presence of these factors in their political process, their official definition of this conflict is ambiguous. Do these violent encounters satisfy the definition of civil war? Is it an insurgency? If indeed it is a civil war and the groups fighting the war against the state are insurgents, what constitutes their key objectives? This article seeks to place the nature and character of this conflict within a theoretical framework. It makes an ethno-political analysis of this uprising. It audits the human cost associated with this violence. And, finally, it explores the group motivational factors behind this uprising and the consequent responses of the concerned state",
author = "Amalendu Misra",
year = "2002",
doi = "10.1080/13698240208402517",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "56--76",
journal = "Civil Wars",
issn = "1369-8249",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Subaltern and the civil war : an assessment of left-wing insurgency in South Asia.

AU - Misra, Amalendu

PY - 2002

Y1 - 2002

N2 - In the past decade and a half there has been a steady rise in left-wing violence in South Asia, confined mostly to India and Nepal. The key characteristics of this type of uprising are: (a) it is rural/agrarian in nature; (b) there is a strong element of ideological presence; (c) it targets a certain class, the state and its institutions; and (d) victims of this uprising are both civilians and officials (now estimated to be over 20,000). While both countries acknowledge the presence of these factors in their political process, their official definition of this conflict is ambiguous. Do these violent encounters satisfy the definition of civil war? Is it an insurgency? If indeed it is a civil war and the groups fighting the war against the state are insurgents, what constitutes their key objectives? This article seeks to place the nature and character of this conflict within a theoretical framework. It makes an ethno-political analysis of this uprising. It audits the human cost associated with this violence. And, finally, it explores the group motivational factors behind this uprising and the consequent responses of the concerned state

AB - In the past decade and a half there has been a steady rise in left-wing violence in South Asia, confined mostly to India and Nepal. The key characteristics of this type of uprising are: (a) it is rural/agrarian in nature; (b) there is a strong element of ideological presence; (c) it targets a certain class, the state and its institutions; and (d) victims of this uprising are both civilians and officials (now estimated to be over 20,000). While both countries acknowledge the presence of these factors in their political process, their official definition of this conflict is ambiguous. Do these violent encounters satisfy the definition of civil war? Is it an insurgency? If indeed it is a civil war and the groups fighting the war against the state are insurgents, what constitutes their key objectives? This article seeks to place the nature and character of this conflict within a theoretical framework. It makes an ethno-political analysis of this uprising. It audits the human cost associated with this violence. And, finally, it explores the group motivational factors behind this uprising and the consequent responses of the concerned state

U2 - 10.1080/13698240208402517

DO - 10.1080/13698240208402517

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

SP - 56

EP - 76

JO - Civil Wars

JF - Civil Wars

SN - 1369-8249

IS - 4

ER -