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Between the Cracks: Actor Fragmentation and Local Conflict Systems in the Libyan Civil War
Authors:Andrea Carboni  James Moody
Affiliation:1. Department of Geography, University of Sussex, Brighton, UKA.Carboni@sussex.ac.uk, J.Moody@sussex.ac.uk;3. Department of Geography, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
Abstract:Abstract

After nearly four years of civil war, Libya continues to be described as an ‘ungoverned space’ where the collapse of state institutions reignited tribal, political, religious and ideological tensions. These accounts, however, obscure Libya’s complex subnational governance, and the role of non-state armed groups in shaping the emerging political orders. By contrast, we contend that distinct subnational political orders have emerged in Libya since 2014 in which actors engage in state-making practices driven by local interests. Using empirical evidence to explore the activity of non-state armed groups during the Libyan civil conflict, we highlight that the local conflict environments in eastern, western and southern Libya provide specific incentives that shape the process of armed group splintering and patterns of violence. The findings demonstrate that claims to authority and notions of statehood extend far beyond the state whereby governance relations are negotiated between state and non-state actors. Conflict patterns, (in)stability and the prevailing political order are therefore conditional on the nature of the dominant actor, their strategies and modes of violence within their areas of influence. Through this analysis, the paper provides a more granular understanding of the local political dynamics that drive violence in Libya and civil wars more generally.
Keywords:Fragmentation  violence  civil wars  political orders  Libya
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