Published 2005
Journal article Open

Proximate causes of conflict in Nepal

Creators

Description

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute has made the entry of Nepal as a country razed by violent domestic conflict for the first time in its annual report SIPRI 2003. This is a loud expression of internal conflicts expanding to hitherto untouched territories, and interests generated by such conflicts for scholarship to focus on understanding domestic political violence that previously was simply dismissed as an affliction of the weak states. Despite a considerable decline in such episodes in 2003 from its peak period between 1989 and 1996, this global trend however, is reversed in the case of Nepal where violence exploded in 1996 as "People's War" for the seizure of state power and continued as a protracted or persistent conflict. This deadly conflict is neither near to seize state power, nor militarily defeated, nor had achieved mass support. But the Maoists have vigorously pursued their agenda for establishing a Republican state by dethroning monarchy even when negotiating with different governments in the past. The government, on the other hand, has mobilised its security forces under a unified military command to crush the Maoists' uprising. Nepal, therefore, indicates a case of the spread of internal conflict along with the process of globalisation.

Files

6692.pdf

Files (715.7 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:b7930a96e354f48dc82336a58a4b9995
715.7 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Publishing information

Title
Contributions to Nepalese Studies, Centre for Nepal and Asian Studies (CNAS), Tribhuvan University (TU), Kathmandu, Nepal. Volume 32, Number 1, January 2005: http://himalaya.socanth.cam.ac.uk/collections/journals/contributions/pdf/CNAS_32_01_02.pdf. Digital Himalaya: http://www.digitalhimalaya.com/collections/journals/contributions/index.php?selection=32_0

Regional member countries

RMC
Nepal

Others

Special note
MFOLL

Legacy Data

Legacy numeric recid
11848