About this item
Highlights
- Resilience beyond Rebellion addresses a critical question in insurgency studies: Why some rebel groups successfully become political parties, while others die trying.
- About the Author: Sherry Zaks is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Southern California.
- 300 Pages
- Political Science, Political Process
Description
About the Book
"Resilience beyond Rebellion examines how rebels' wartime organizational structures affect the process and prospects of transforming into viable political parties after war ends. Using archival evidence from El Salvador and novel quantitative data, the author finds that the rebels who build politically salient structures transform by repurposing those structures to build parties."--Book Synopsis
Resilience beyond Rebellion addresses a critical question in insurgency studies: Why some rebel groups successfully become political parties, while others die trying.
Only half of rebel groups with political aspirations manage to reinvent themselves as lasting political parties. Sherry Zaks argues that the key to successful rebel-to-party transformations lies in the organizational structures and institutions that rebels build during wartime. These proto-party structures, which involve governance, political messaging, social outreach, and other noncombat tasks, equip rebel groups with the personnel, skills, and routines needed to succeed in the electoral arena.
Zaks draws on insights from organizational sociology to reconceptualize how rebel groups operate. Through examining the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front in El Salvador and other cases, they demonstrate that rebel groups with established proto-party structures often form the core of post-conflict parties and attract more votes. Innovative in approach and rich in evidence, Resilience beyond Rebellion advances our understanding of rebel group dynamics both during and after conflict by showing that party-building begins not with the last bullet fired but with the very first.
About the Author
Sherry Zaks is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Southern California.