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This book has taken rather longer than I optimistically had expected, and during research and writing I have incurred innumerable debts. Colleagues, friends, and interlocutors made time for me in India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Burma/Myanmar, and Singapore over the last dozen years as I tried to understand complicated, often confusing patterns of cooperation and conflict between governments and armed groups. I owe particular thanks to Mirza Zulfiqur Rahman, David Mathieson, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, and Terence Lee for providing exceptional help in facilitating this research, and the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi and ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore for institutional bases.
Two recurring workshop series have been valuable in helping me develop the ideas in this manuscript. First, the Program on International Security Policy and its successor, the Workshop on International Politics, at the University of Chicago has long been a place to hear incredibly smart people play with ideas; it has also helped me hone my own thinking. John Mearsheimer, Bob Pape, Bobby Gulotty, Rochelle Terman, Austin Carson, and Paul Poast have built an exceptional workshop culture. All of them have also provided incisive feedback on this project. Second, the annual India Security Studies workshop, hosted first by the Center for the Advanced Study of India at the University of Pennsylvania, and now by the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, has been a unique home for rigorous but policy-engaged work on India. I thank Devesh Kapur for his years of leadership.
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