Alexandra Rachel Phelan is a lecturer in politics and international relations in the School of Social Sciences at Monash University. She is also the editor of Terrorism, Gender and Women: Toward an Integrated Research Agenda (2021).
This book is a welcomed addition to the growing literature on Colombia’s turbulent history and civil wars. Alexandra Phelan skillfully delves into the struggle for political power and legitimacy between the state and its main contender, the armed Marxist rebels of the FARC. -- Nazih Richani, author of <i>Systems of Violence: The Political Economy of War and Peace in Colombia</i> The Combination of All Forms of Struggle is an important contribution to the literature on how terrorist and insurgency campaigns end. Using Colombia as a case study, Phelan's incisive analysis, based on extensive and meticulous fieldwork, provides fresh insights into how nonstate actors build legitimacy through a combined strategy of violence and negotiation. -- Bruce Hoffman, Georgetown University Alexandra Phelan's book is a conceptual and descriptive synthesis of Colombian governments from 1982 to 2016 to find a way out of the last, longest and most complex armed conflict on the continent. Based on an impressive mass of documents and field interviews, Phelan illuminates this trajectory of the Colombian armed conflict from a creative combination of the Gramscian approach to coercion and legitimacy, with the Weberian approach on sources and structures of local or national power. But unlike the many studies on the recent peace process, Phelan here carefully explores the history of the subject of negotiation and antagonism, in its demands, its changing ways of relating to the civilian population and with the State. And, above all, how after a long pendulum movement of war and negotiation, the convergent conditions occur that lead the insurgency to sit at the table with the Santos government in 2013 and not get up from it until signing the Havana Accords in 2016. It is a negotiation process that has been nourished by numerous international experiences, and at the same time stands as a model for future processes in the way of building an agenda, of processing differences, and institutionalizing a type of transitional justice agreed upon between the parties. An essential text for students, academics, and experts in negotiations and theories of armed conflict resolution. -- Gonzalo Sánchez-Gómez, emeritus professor at the National University of Colombia and former director of Colombia's National Centre for Historical Memory Phelan's use of unique primary sources, fieldwork, and expert analysis provides a magisterial understanding of the incredible story of how the FARC and the Colombia government negotiated an end to a decades-long conflict. Her convincing presentation of the FARC's drive for legitimacy makes this a must-read for anyone interested in insurgency and civil war. -- Craig Whiteside, U.S. Naval War College at the Naval Postgraduate School