Monographie

Collaboration in authoritarian and armed conflict settings / edited by Juan Espindola and Leigh A. Payne

  • Texte
  • sans médiation
  • Volume
  • Collaboration in authoritarian and armed conflict settings / edited by Juan Espindola and Leigh A. Payne
  • Collaboration in Authoritarian and Armed Conflict Settings Juan Espindola, Leigh A. Payne 2023 Oxford Oxford University Press 978-0-19-198674-1
  • Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2022
  • 1 volume (XI-286 pages) ; 24 cm
  • Proceedings of the British Academy 0068-1202 248
  • 978-0-19-726705-9
  • 9780197267059 rel.
  • Proceedings of the British Academy 0068-1202 248
  • 364.131
  • Textes issus de communications, présentés lors d'un colloque, tenu à Mexico en 2019
  • Notes bibliogr. en bas de p. Bibliogr. en fin de chap. Index
  • Who is the collaborator, or in whose eyes ? What is the motivation to collaborate: for material gain, for ideology, for duty ? When is collaboration betraying a hated enemy, and when is it something else: personal revenge or an instrumental, rational, or even coerced response to a situation, for example? Why do collaborators meet such harsh punishment and stigma when they are revealed as such ? Can they ever atone or find redemption ? Beyond the perception of the stakeholders involved, how harmful is collaboration ? Does it exacerbate or abate violence ? Is it always evil or can it sometimes be seen as mitigating wrongs ? The chapters in Collaboration in Authoritarian and Armed Conflict Settings explore these thorny questions through a set of case studies, disciplinary approaches, and temporal and regional contexts. They show the range of the types of collaboration; the ubiquity of collaboration across time, countries, political systems, and political and cultural conflicts.
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