Insurgent Collective Action and Civil War in El SalvadorCambridge University Press, 2003年8月4日 Widespread support among rural people for the leftist insurgency during the civil war in El Salvador challenges conventional interpretations of collective action. Those who supplied tortillas, information, and other aid to guerillas took mortal risks and yet stood to gain no more than those who did not. Wood's rich tapestry of explanation is based on oral histories gathered from peasants who supported the insurgency and those who did not over a period of many years during and immediately following the war, and interviews with military commanders of both sides. Peasants supported the FMLN, Wood found, not for any material gain that was contingent on their participation, but rather for moral and emotional reasons. Wood's alternative model places emotions and morals, as well as conventional interests, at the heart of collective action. |
內容
ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH IN THE SHADOW OF CIVIL | |
THE REEMERGENCE OF CIVIL SOCIETY | |
CAMPESINO ACCOUNTS OF INSURGENT PARTICIPATION | |
EXPLAINING INSURGENT COLLECTIVE ACTION | |
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