The Ending of Tribal Wars
All over the world and throughout millennia, states have attempted to subjugate, control and dominate non-state populations and to end their wars. This book compares such processes of pacification leading to the end of tribal wars in seven societies from all over the world between the 19th and 21st centuries. It shows that pacification cannot be understood solely as a unilateral imposition of state control but needs to be approached as the result of specific interactions between state actors and non-state local groups. Indigenous groups usually had options in deciding between accepting and resisting state control. State actors often had to make concessions or form alliances with indigenous groups in order to pursue their goals. Incentives given to local groups sometimes played a more important role in ending warfare than repression. In this way, indigenous groups, in interaction with state actors, strongly shaped the character of the process of pacification. This volumes comparison finds that pacification is more successful and more durable where state actors mainly focus on selective incentives for local groups to renounce warfare, offer protection, and only as a last resort use moderate repression, combined with the quick establishment of effective institutions for peaceful conflict settlement.
Jrg Helbling is Senior Professor for Economic and Political Anthropology at the Sociology Department of the University of Lucerne.
Tobias Schwoerer is Lecturer at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology of the University of Lucerne.
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First published 2021
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Natalie Ammann studied social anthropology and Eastern European history at the University of Zurich. She has conducted fieldwork in Albania on the topic of blood vengeance.
Matthias Hussler studied history, philosophy and sociology at the Universities of Giessen, Frankfurt and Lucerne. He has worked at the University of Siegen and the Hamburg Institute of Social Research on war and genocide in German South West Africa and has published a book and numerous articles on the topic.
Jrg Helbling was Professor for Social Anthropology at the University of Zrich and Lucerne. Currently he is Senior Professor for Economic and Political Anthropology at the Sociology Department of the University of Lucerne. He has conducted fieldwork in the Philippines and has published on war and conflict.
Tobias Schwoerer is Lecturer at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology of the University of Lucerne. He has conducted fieldwork in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea on the topic of pacification and has published on conflicts, sorcery and unofficial village courts.
Ruth Werner studied social anthropology, political sciences and international law at the University of Zurich. She finished her studies with an ethno-historical thesis on the Naga in North-East India.
This book was more than 20 years in the making. The initial idea came during a seminar organized by Jrg Helbling and Danilo Geiger at the University of Zurich in 1999 on processes of pacification. With Danilo Geiger and students of the University of Zurich, we worked on detailed case studies in a series of research seminars in the years 20002002. We would like to acknowledge the work of all of these students that has found its way into the analysis, and which has laid the foundation for some of the case studies. At the University of Lucerne, students of another research seminar in 2010 helped in reducing some of the case studies to their most distinguishing characteristics and researching additional case studies. We would like to acknowledge the work of all of the many participants in this seminar. Versions and chapters of the manuscript have benefited from comments by Danilo Geiger, Jrgen Osterhammel, Ian Rodger, Paul Jim Roscoe, Aram Mattioli, and Trutz von Trotha. And lastly, we would like to thank Ulla Wingenfelder from the University of Zurich who has drawn the maps accompanying the case studies, and the Research Commission of the University of Lucerne which has generously supported us with funds for this task.
Jrg Helbling and Tobias Schwoerer
Pacification is a process through which a population is coerced, induced, or persuaded by a state to give up all forms of collective violence, or as the Oxford Learners Dictionary puts it simply the act of bringing peace to an area where there is fighting or war. Pacifications have been occurring for thousands of years1 and all over the world in the interactions between state and non-state societies, including in the modern era. Almost by definition, pacification brings about fundamental transformations in the social and political life of a population and, therefore, are a rich area for intensive study.
We should discriminate between two pacification scenarios. Most often today, the term is used to designate the suppression of armed resistance against a colonial or imperial state through counter insurgency operations, as among many examples the French army in Algeria (Evans 2012) or the American army in Vietnam (Hunt 1997). In these cases, pacification is a process in which a state seeks to suppress popular uprisings and armed resistance that have been aimed directly and on a large scale against the state. A second pacification scenario describes a states attempt at ending wars between tribal groups, neither of which is fighting against the state although, at some point, tribal groups may get involved in armed conflicts with state actors in the process of imposing a monopoly of force. The states main aim here is to end wars between villages or village coalitions in a tribal population. Hence, pacification designates a process in which a state imposes or re-imposes control over its territory by bringing tribal warfare to an end. It is this second form of pacification that we will focus on in this book, presenting seven case studies of such interactions between indigenous groups and expanding colonial and post-colonial states from the 19th to the 21st century.