Understanding agency in civilian-armed group interactions

RESEARCH PAPER

Ashley Jackson, Florian Weigand, Theo Tindall

Within both the academic and policy literature, civilians are rarely seen as having significant influence over armed actors, or over conflict dynamics more broadly – but that is starting to change.

This joint paper with ODI explores what we know about civilian–armed group relations, and raises new questions for investigation. It urges us to think of ‘civilians’ and ‘armed groups’ as diverse, fluid and overlapping categories, and refocus our attention on how civilians exercise agency.

The paper concludes by outlining a social capital-based framework for understanding these dynamics. Future research will test and build on this framework.

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Crime and communities: life under criminal group control

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Taliban case study - from words to deeds: ANSA practice and interpretation of IHL and human rights norms