Reed M. Wood is associate professor in the School of Politics and Global Studies at Arizona State University.
Recommended. * Choice * Wood's work is clear and persuasive-an excellent model for students, scholars, and policymakers of how to apply the scientific method to a subject where data is hard to find, verify, and assemble -- Alisa Stack, Independent Scholar, Worcester, MA, USA * Terrorism and Political Violence * In this important book, Reed M. Wood builds on feminist scholarship to explain why some rebel groups recruit female fighters while others do not. He finds that secular armed groups overlook traditional gender norms and recruit a higher number of women for combat roles when they face sudden resource constraints. Such decisions often have strategic benefits for rebel groups, yielding greater recruitment overall and eliciting higher levels of support from abroad. Wood shores up an impressive amount of theoretical and empirical evidence to support this argument. An impressive, persuasive read. -- Erica Chenoweth, coauthor of <i>Why Civil Resistance Works: The Strategic Logic of Nonviolent Conflict</i> Wood provides a definitive account of the inclusion of women in armed rebellion. Building on Wood's work with Jakana Thomas, this book looks at the adoption of women into rebel forces, the various ways rebel elites have done this, and the motivation to include or exclude women. The analysis is rich in its establishment of clear yet novel expectations based on firm theoretical foundations. -- Kyle Beardsley, coauthor of <i>Equal Opportunity Peacekeeping: Women, Peace, and Security in Post-Conflict States</i> Why do some rebel leaders actively recruit women to serve in combat roles? In this engaging study, Wood argues that the recruitment of women serves both strategic and ideological purposes for the armed group. Using an impressive range of data and methods-from cross-national analyses to case studies and survey experiments-Wood highlights the consequences of recruiting female fighters, including mobilizing domestic and international support and increased legitimacy for the group. This is a welcome addition to the growing literature on female combatants, and a must-read analysis for scholars interested in rebel organizations, political violence, and gender. -- Dara Kay Cohen, author of <i>Rape During Civil War</i> In a field too often seen through gender stereotypes, Reed M. Wood's thorough empirical analysis grounds us in reality. Female Fighters offers a convincing account of the important roles of women fighters in rebel ranks worldwide. -- Joshua Goldstein, author of <i>War and Gender: How Gender Shapes the War System and Vice Versa</i>