The Securitization of Child Soldiers by Burmese Insurgent Groups:Preliminary Research from the Field

Authors

  • Will Plowright University of British Columbia

Abstract

This paper argues that a process of securitization is occurring between international society and insurgent groups. It seeks to address the puzzle that some insurgent groups are reducing their reliance on child soldiers, even though it is not in their immediate strategic interest to do so. Even though insurgent groups are experiencing a relative decline in power in regards to the state, they are reducing their numbers of recruits while continuing to wage insurgency. In order to establish and demonstrate how the hypothesized process of securitization emerges, a plausibility probe will be used. This will be done in order to demonstrate how the process occurs in the cases of two insurgent groups. Specifically, the two groups here analyzed are the Karenni National Progressive Party and the Kachin Independence Army.

Author Biography

Will Plowright, University of British Columbia

Will Plowright is currently completing a PhD in Political Science at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Vancouver. He is also a Liu scholar at the Liu Institute for Global Affairs at UBC, and a Consultant with the Child Soldiers Initiative. Will's area of speciality is the politics of insurgency and the negotiation of humanitarian access in on-going conflict zones, with a secondary specialization on the use of child soldiers and other aspects of international humanitarian law. He has completed research with armed groups in a number of ongoing conflict zones, including work and interviews in Uganda with the Lord's Resistance Army; in Syria with the Islamic State of Iraq, al Qaeda, and the Free Syrian Army; as well as others in Palestine, Haiti, South Sudan, and Myanmar. Additionally, Will has 8 years of experience in various aspects of humanitarian delivery in conflict and disaster zones across Asia, Africa, and the Americas, in areas including human resource management and civil-military liaison.

 

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Published

2013-08-12

Issue

Section

Annual National Student Award Competition