Abstract

The nature of insurgencies is an ambiguous concept. As a step toward theory about it and prudent action in regard to it, the authors argue that insurgency should be regarded as a syncretic phenomenon—a highly potent compound that combines the “spirit” of archaic peasant rebellions (their apocalyptic, millenarian passions) with modern revolutionary ideologies and organization, and the practice of guerrilla warfare. Insurgency thus supplies both the “steam” and the “piston box” that Trotsky considered an irresistible revolutionary combination. The syncretic mix of disparate elements in insurgency has stood in the way of proper conceptualization of the phenomenon, and of good theory and practice regarding it. The authors further maintain that insurgency is generally confused with the Latin American foco as well as with urban terrorism and guerrilla wars of all kinds; in fact thefoco may well foreshadow the end of insurgencies as a special type of collective political violence.

Keywords

InsurgencyGuerrilla warfarePeasantPolitical sciencePhenomenonPolitical economyMillenarianismCitizen journalismIdeologyPoliticsSociologyLawEpistemologyPhilosophy

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Publication Info

Year
1990
Type
article
Volume
42
Issue
4
Pages
441-465
Citations
59
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Raj M. Desai, Harry Eckstein (1990). Insurgency: The Transformation of Peasant Rebellion. World Politics , 42 (4) , 441-465. https://doi.org/10.2307/2010510

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/2010510