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Friend or Foe

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Under what circumstances are civil-war combatants more or less likely to commit ethnic violence? Nils Hägerdal examines the Lebanese civil war to offer a new theory that highlights the interplay of...
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  • 06 July 2021
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When civil conflicts break out in plural societies, violence often occurs along group divides—running the risk of spiraling into ethnic cleansing. Yet for militants who do not seek ethnic separation as a political goal, indiscriminate attacks are detrimental to their cause. Under what circumstances are such combatants more or less likely to commit ethnic violence?

Nils Hägerdal examines the Lebanese civil war to offer a new theory that highlights the interplay of ethnicity and intelligence gathering. He shows that when militias can obtain reliable intelligence—particularly in demographically intermixed areas where information can cross ethnic boundaries—they are likely to refrain from indiscriminate tactics. Access to local intelligence helps armed groups distinguish between neutral and hostile non-coethnics to target individual opponents while leaving civilians in peace. Conversely, when militias struggle to access local information, they often fall back on ethnicity as a proxy for political allegiance, with bloody consequences. As intelligence capabilities shape the course of sectarian strife, the role of ethnicity can vary even within a particular conflict.

Hägerdal conducted sixteen months of fieldwork in Lebanon, interviewing former militia fighters and commanders and collecting novel statistical evidence. He combines documentation by government agencies, NGOs, local news media, and the United Nations with firsthand narratives by participants to provide an unparalleled account of the processes that generate violence or coexistence when a diverse society descends into armed conflict. Theoretically innovative and descriptively rich, Friend or Foe sheds new light on the logic and dynamics of ethnic violence in civil wars.

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Price: $145.00
Pages: 240
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Columbia Studies in Middle East Politics
Publication Date: 06 July 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231200646
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Middle Eastern, HISTORY / Middle East / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Terrorism, HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century / General
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A must-read to fathom the dynamics of violence in the complex and multifaceted Lebanese civil war. In a rich and rigorous account, Hägerdal explains how local demographics and intelligence shaped incentives and opportunities for selective violence or ethnic cleansing. Using novel and granular data, he shows that wartime violence in Lebanon was not wanton, but rather followed a political cleansing logic.
Nils Hägerdal is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Center for Strategic Studies at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Ethnic Violence in Non-Separatist Wars
2. The Lebanese Civil War, 1975–1990
3. Demographics, Migration, and Violence
4. Lebanon’s Christian Militias
5. Palestinian, Muslim, and Left-Wing Armed Groups
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index