Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Je vois des malheureux, mais, en vérité, je ne puis trouver des coupables.
Stendhal, L'abbesse de CastroWe have by our own imprudencies & irregular proceedings made more Enemies than have become so from mere inclination.
General Stephen Drayton, North Carolina, 1781Look at me – I hadn't wanted to fight, they made me!
A Chechen fighter, after a Russian atrocityThis chapter specifies the logic driving indiscriminate violence. Proposition 2 posits that indiscriminate violence is counterproductive in civil war contexts. If this is so, then why is it observed so often? Addressing this puzzle calls for a theory of indiscriminate violence. I begin by examining how and when indiscriminate violence is observed. Next, I discuss its logic and specify the conditions under which it is counterproductive. I then review four arguments that account for why indiscriminate violence is observed, despite its apparent counterproductivity, including the specious observation of indiscriminate violence because of truncated or misinterpreted data, and its commission as a result of ignorance, cost, and institutional constraints. I argue that indiscriminate violence emerges, when it does, because it is much cheaper than its selective counterpart. Yet, any “gain” must be counterbalanced by its consequences. Thus, indiscriminate violence is more likely either under a steep imbalance of power between the two actors or where and when resources and information are low. In the absence of a resolution of the conflict, even indiscriminate actors are likely to switch to more selective violence.
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