DOI: 10.67310/eajcl.1966318 ISSN: 3062-4355

Conceptual Foundations: Defining Civil War, Political Violence, and Violent Nonstate Actors

Shadan Khairmohammad, Hüsamettin İnaç
Starting off, any real academic work on civil war and political violence has to tackle what we actuallymean by those terms. When ideas lack clear boundaries, studies become messy hard to repeat orbuild upon. The following pages dig into three linked areas shaping how researchers see internalwars. One path looks at why defining civil war stays controversial, showing how choices here ripplethrough both number crunching and deep case studies. Another angle shifts focus to groups outsidestate control, asking who counts as insurgents, rebels, armed bands, terror networks, or crime outfitsand how each stand against governments or allies. Starting differently each time, this part steps into awell-known clash of ideas old versus new ways of understanding war. Instead of just adding pointstogether, it probes a key question raised after the Cold War faded: are today’s internal battlessomething entirely fresh or simply older forms wearing modern clothes? Rather than treating labelsas neutral boxes, the section shows they carry weight they guide who gets seen, how actions appear,and which solutions seem possible. Definitions aren’t background noise; they frame what counts, whomatters, and where attention goes. By naming things like "civil war" or "combatant," choices getmade choices shaping both knowledge and response. Noticing this shifts how one reads conflict notas fixed categories but as contested ground shaped by words used. Ends here.

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