Citation

The Creation of Civil Administration by Guerrillas: The National Resistance Army and the Rwenzururu Kingdom Government in Uganda

Abstract | Word Stems | Keywords | Association | Citation | Get this Document | Similar Titles




STOP!

You can now view the document associated with this citation by clicking on the "View Document as HTML" link below.

View Document as HTML:
Click here to view the document

Abstract:

The two most important points argued here are that guerrilla organizations create civilian administrations and that they organize them differently. The issue is to explain the variations among them. A comparison of two Ugandan cases suggests a puzzle, since the guerrillas with less education, professional expertise and government experience invested greater energy and scarce resources into building more extensive, bureaucratic and centralized administration.
Early European state builders adopted administrative innovations under conditions somewhat similar to those of contemporary guerrillas. However, the literature about them suggests that a comparative advantage in surviving constant warfare lay with those who relied more on educated officials, took steps to centralize control and, in certain cases, introduced structures to collect new taxes. Postcolonial African state builders have created administrative structures that have functioned poorly. The literature about them indicates their distinctive performance is the consequence of gaining sovereignty through the protection of the international community rather than through state structures capable of repelling their enemies and responding to intense domestic opposition.
Both the National Resistance Army and the Rwenzururu Kingdom Government in Uganda created administrative structures that connected their guerrilla forces to residents living in their areas of operation, though neither set of leaders had made plans to do so before initiating their rebellions. Until the last three months of the war when they controlled one of Uganda’s four regions, the NRA consistently opted for a limited, decentralized, nonbureaucratic civilian administration with the exception of a few central policy initiatives. It did not collect taxes or keep records. It put civilian management into the hands of elected village officials. The NRA sought assistance internationally to fight its war, but made no effort to gain international recognition before taking power. Immediately after its leader announced its secession from Uganda, the RKG began to build an extensive, centralized, bureaucratic civilian administration, a process that took it almost four years. It collected taxes, kept records and trained its officials. It introduced an unprecedented degree of central control over civilian behavior and disputes. The RKG made repeated efforts to gain international protection, assistance and recognition as a sovereign state, but without any success.
The early European and African state-building literatures suggest hypotheses that help explain these divergent outcomes in guerrilla creation of civilian administration. These hypotheses grow out of guerrrillas’ responses that improve their chances in fighting wars by involving civilians and by gaining support from the international community. The hypotheses are generally responsive to the experience of the NRA and the RKG. Taken together, the hypotheses propose that more extensive and centralized civilian administration occurs where 1) terrain is less accessible, 2) a safe zone is created early, 3) an extensive pre-existing organization is available, 4) reliance is primarily on internal and dispersed resources, 5) no previous state sovereignty exists and 6) the guerrillas realize they cannot defeat or exclude the army of the existing government from the territory they claim. The next step would be to consider additional cases of guerrilla creation of civilian administration in order to decide whether other hypotheses would be more promising, and to begin to test the ones suggested here.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

state (123), civilian (116), nra (113), administr (112), govern (99), rkg (83), guerrilla (75), polit (72), organ (63), offici (55), intern (51), 2004 (51), new (51), war (51), gg (49), offic (49), apsa (49), ca (49), interview (47), militari (46), central (44),

Author's Keywords:

guerrillas, civil administration, state formation, state building, sovereignty
Convention
All Academic Convention makes running your annual conference simple and cost effective. It is your online solution for abstract management, peer review, and scheduling for your annual meeting or convention.
Submission - Custom fields, multiple submission types, tracks, audio visual, multiple upload formats, automatic conversion to pdf.Review - Peer Review, Bulk reviewer assignment, bulk emails, ranking, z-score statistics, and multiple worksheets!
Reports - Many standard and custom reports generated while you wait. Print programs with participant indexes, event grids, and more!Scheduling - Flexible and convenient grid scheduling within rooms and buildings. Conflict checking and advanced filtering.
Communication - Bulk email tools to help your administrators send reminders and responses. Use form letters, a message center, and much more!Management - Search tools, duplicate people management, editing tools, submission transfers, many tools to manage a variety of conference management headaches!
Click here for more information.

Association:
Name: American Political Science Association
URL:
http://www.apsanet.org


Citation:
URL: http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p59614_index.html
Direct Link:
HTML Code:

MLA Citation:

Kasfir, Nelson. "The Creation of Civil Administration by Guerrillas: The National Resistance Army and the Rwenzururu Kingdom Government in Uganda" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Hilton Chicago and the Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, IL, Sep 03, 2004 <Not Available>. 2008-10-22 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p59614_index.html>

APA Citation:

Kasfir, N. , 2004-09-03 "The Creation of Civil Administration by Guerrillas: The National Resistance Army and the Rwenzururu Kingdom Government in Uganda" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Hilton Chicago and the Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, IL Online <.PDF>. 2008-10-22 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p59614_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Review Method: Peer Reviewed
Abstract: The two most important points argued here are that guerrilla organizations create civilian administrations and that they organize them differently. The issue is to explain the variations among them. A comparison of two Ugandan cases suggests a puzzle, since the guerrillas with less education, professional expertise and government experience invested greater energy and scarce resources into building more extensive, bureaucratic and centralized administration.
Early European state builders adopted administrative innovations under conditions somewhat similar to those of contemporary guerrillas. However, the literature about them suggests that a comparative advantage in surviving constant warfare lay with those who relied more on educated officials, took steps to centralize control and, in certain cases, introduced structures to collect new taxes. Postcolonial African state builders have created administrative structures that have functioned poorly. The literature about them indicates their distinctive performance is the consequence of gaining sovereignty through the protection of the international community rather than through state structures capable of repelling their enemies and responding to intense domestic opposition.
Both the National Resistance Army and the Rwenzururu Kingdom Government in Uganda created administrative structures that connected their guerrilla forces to residents living in their areas of operation, though neither set of leaders had made plans to do so before initiating their rebellions. Until the last three months of the war when they controlled one of Uganda’s four regions, the NRA consistently opted for a limited, decentralized, nonbureaucratic civilian administration with the exception of a few central policy initiatives. It did not collect taxes or keep records. It put civilian management into the hands of elected village officials. The NRA sought assistance internationally to fight its war, but made no effort to gain international recognition before taking power. Immediately after its leader announced its secession from Uganda, the RKG began to build an extensive, centralized, bureaucratic civilian administration, a process that took it almost four years. It collected taxes, kept records and trained its officials. It introduced an unprecedented degree of central control over civilian behavior and disputes. The RKG made repeated efforts to gain international protection, assistance and recognition as a sovereign state, but without any success.
The early European and African state-building literatures suggest hypotheses that help explain these divergent outcomes in guerrilla creation of civilian administration. These hypotheses grow out of guerrrillas’ responses that improve their chances in fighting wars by involving civilians and by gaining support from the international community. The hypotheses are generally responsive to the experience of the NRA and the RKG. Taken together, the hypotheses propose that more extensive and centralized civilian administration occurs where 1) terrain is less accessible, 2) a safe zone is created early, 3) an extensive pre-existing organization is available, 4) reliance is primarily on internal and dispersed resources, 5) no previous state sovereignty exists and 6) the guerrillas realize they cannot defeat or exclude the army of the existing government from the territory they claim. The next step would be to consider additional cases of guerrilla creation of civilian administration in order to decide whether other hypotheses would be more promising, and to begin to test the ones suggested here.

Get this Document:

Find this citation or document at one or all of these locations below. The links below may have the citation or the entire document for free or you may purchase access to the document. Clicking on these links will change the site you're on and empty your shopping cart.

Abstract Only All Academic Inc.
Associated Document Available American Political Science Association
Associated Document Available Political Research Online

Document Type: .pdf
Page count: 50
Word count: 13648
Text sample:
THE CREATION OF CIVIL ADMINISTRATION BY GUERRILLAS: The National Resistance Army and the Rwenzururu Kingdom Government in Uganda Nelson Kasfir Dartmouth College 6108 Silsby Hall Hanover NH 03755 kasfir@dartmouth.edu First Draft Comments welcome Prepared for delivery at the 2004 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association Chicago Illinois 3 September 2004 Copyright by the American Political Science Association When they are in active rebellion against existing governments guerrilla organizations have to decide whether and how they will manage
members Kawempe [Gombe] 1/8/2001 Wakyato 8/5/2002. A few peasants admitted to feeling GG CA APSA 2004 49 coerced to give food but in each case the demand appears to have been personal no based on an organized structure. Interviews with civilians Gombe 7/31/2002 8/1/2002 8/2/2002. 67 "Rwenzururu Kingdom Private Finance Committee Report " 1/25/1964. 68 Diary of an RKG official September 1972. 69 Separate interviews with an NRA military and a political officer (quoted) Kampala 7/30/2002 8/21/2002. Both of


Similar Titles:
Social and Political Attitudes of Civilians and Military Officers 2004

International Organizations and International Governance of Migration and Ethnic Politics


 
All Academic, Inc. is your premier source for research and conference management. Visit our website, www.allacademic.com, to see how we can help you today.