From separatism to violence: A typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishment

This paper suggests two new theoretical contributions: The first such contribution is a typology of interactions between the people and the authorities (central government, local municipalities, company managements, others). Looking inductively at various case studies dealing with this kind of relat...

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Main Author: Gadi Hitman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Cogent Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2020.1832345
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spelling doaj-014f54eaa3024a3f897526ea0efa366b2021-08-24T15:34:24ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Social Sciences2331-18862020-01-016110.1080/23311886.2020.18323451832345From separatism to violence: A typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishmentGadi Hitman0Ariel UniversityThis paper suggests two new theoretical contributions: The first such contribution is a typology of interactions between the people and the authorities (central government, local municipalities, company managements, others). Looking inductively at various case studies dealing with this kind of relationship, the proposed continuum moves from separatism at one end (Catalunya, 2017, as an instance) to violence at the other end of the scale, while between the two poles other patterns of activity are indifference, identification, and protest. The second contribution is a model of four independent variables (policy; scale of policy’s implementation; external occasions relevant to the protest group; decision-making of group’s leadership) for explaining political violence. Additionally, political aspirations, ideologies, leader’s decisions, and responses from the authorities influence the final choice that any given group makes. Empirical case studies from different states (USA, Spain, Israel) illustrate the theoretical framework of this study.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2020.1832345separatismindifferenceidentityprotestviolence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gadi Hitman
spellingShingle Gadi Hitman
From separatism to violence: A typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishment
Cogent Social Sciences
separatism
indifference
identity
protest
violence
author_facet Gadi Hitman
author_sort Gadi Hitman
title From separatism to violence: A typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishment
title_short From separatism to violence: A typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishment
title_full From separatism to violence: A typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishment
title_fullStr From separatism to violence: A typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishment
title_full_unstemmed From separatism to violence: A typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishment
title_sort from separatism to violence: a typology of interactions between the citizen and the state establishment
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Social Sciences
issn 2331-1886
publishDate 2020-01-01
description This paper suggests two new theoretical contributions: The first such contribution is a typology of interactions between the people and the authorities (central government, local municipalities, company managements, others). Looking inductively at various case studies dealing with this kind of relationship, the proposed continuum moves from separatism at one end (Catalunya, 2017, as an instance) to violence at the other end of the scale, while between the two poles other patterns of activity are indifference, identification, and protest. The second contribution is a model of four independent variables (policy; scale of policy’s implementation; external occasions relevant to the protest group; decision-making of group’s leadership) for explaining political violence. Additionally, political aspirations, ideologies, leader’s decisions, and responses from the authorities influence the final choice that any given group makes. Empirical case studies from different states (USA, Spain, Israel) illustrate the theoretical framework of this study.
topic separatism
indifference
identity
protest
violence
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2020.1832345
work_keys_str_mv AT gadihitman fromseparatismtoviolenceatypologyofinteractionsbetweenthecitizenandthestateestablishment
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