“…Cross-national quantitative studies have examined factors affecting military integration's inclusion in peace agreements (Hartzell 2014;Hartzell and Hoddie 2007, ch.2); impacts of integration on the likelihood of peace agreement signing and/or implementation to end a civil war (Glassmyer and Sambanis 2008;Hartzell and Hoddie 2007, ch.3;Joshi and Quinn 2017); and whether partially or fully implemented agreements produce sustained peace or conflict recurrence (Berg 2020;Derouen, Lea, and Wallensteen 2009;Hartzell and Hoddie 2007, ch.4;Hoddie and Hartzell 2003;Jarstad and Nilsson 2008;Joshi and Quinn 2017;Mattes and Savun 2009;Ottmann and Vüllers 2015;Quinn, Joshi, and Melander 2019;Toft 2009). Military integration is suggested to be especially helpful as a strategy in civil wars in which a government is facing multiple rebel groups, since ending conflict in one dyad can allow a government to concentrate on combatting remaining rebels (Brandt 2020;Quinn, Joshi, and Melander 2019), now with increased forces, 3 though the peace process itself may lead the integrated group to splinter, with some members joining the state security forces and others returning to the field as insurgents in a fragment of the original group or by joining with other rebel organizations (Johnson 2020(Johnson , 2021Quinn, Joshi, and Melander 2019;Reiter 2016;Stedman 1997).…”