Guerrilla Government
Guerrilla warfare is a type of warfare where a small band of fighters (whether professional, militia, or civilian) adopt the tactics of stealth soldiers, using sabotage, ambushes, hit-and-run strategies, etc., in order to exploit their most powerful tools -- mobility and the ability to fly under the radar undetected in order to score direct hits against the opposition, undermine the opposition's infrastructure, and bring down the opposition's system of support; in other words, it is irregular warfare conducted by an independent unit (O'Leary, 2014, p. 4). Guerrilla warfare has been conducted in asymmetric warfare for ages, going back to the Civil War days, when guerrilla combatants waged war against opposing forces. In countries where insurrections and revolutions have occurred, such as in South and Central America, guerrilla warfare has been part of the strategy of combatants. It is essentially used by weaker/smaller but less easily identifiable/located forces against larger/slower, more encumbered forces (O'Leary, 2014).
As Terry L. Cooper (2012) notes, "nonviolent guerrilla warfare" is also a strategy employed within organizations by groups attempting to circumvent organizational obstacles or overcome oppositional forces (p. 227). It is a feature of "organizational delimitation" where the concept of the "para-economy...
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