This paper studies a model of regime change in which a rebel leader seeking to mobilize supporters faces a trade-off between increasing the rebel group’s size and risking information leaks. I find that repressing a rebellion via collective punishment — whereby not only rebel participants but also those individuals who knew about (but did not report) the rebellion are punished — may result in a smaller-sized rebel group than in the case of targeted punishment, under which only the actual rebel participants are punished. Authorities prefer collective punishment to induce information leaks from rebel groups, however one consequence of adopting collective punishment is that citizens are then put to side with the insurgency, which in turn reduces the regime’s odds of survival. My findings also indicate that, whereas targeted punishment helps prevent rebellion by ordinary citizens who simply desire policy changes, collective punishment helps prevent a revolution staged by those who are driven by pecuniary rewards. Finally, if authorities compete with rebel leaders for support by threatening retribution against non-supporters, then both parties prefer using relatively harsh methods as a means of forcing civilians to choose sides.
Optimal Size of Rebellions: Trade-off Between Large Group and Maintaining Secrecy Available to Purchase
*For helpful advice I am extremely grateful to Scott Ashworth, Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, Catherine Hafer, and Dimitri Landa for their help and useful comments. I would also like to thank Stephen Ansolabehere, Chris Berry, Dan Black, Alessandra Casella, Stephen Chaudoin, Oeindrila Dube, Olle Folke, Anthony Fowler, Scott Gehlbach, William Howell, Siyuan Liu, Pablo Montagnes, Salvatore Nunnari, Zachary Peskowitz, Giacomo Ponzetto, Robert Powell, Kris Ramsey, Mehdi Shadmehr, Milan Svolik, Dustin Tingley, Richard Van Weelden, Razvan Vlaicu, Stephane Wolton, and David Yanagizawa-Drott.
Zhou C (2021), "Optimal Size of Rebellions: Trade-off Between Large Group and Maintaining Secrecy". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 16 No. 2 pp. 157–183, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00017112
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