articleAmerican Journal of Political ScienceMar 3, 2004Closed access

Oil Wealth and Regime Survival in the Developing World, 1960–1999

Harvard University Press

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Abstract

This article examines contrasting claims made by scholars of oil and politics that oil wealth either tends (1) to undermine regime durability or (2) to enhance it. Using cross‐sectional time‐series data from 107 developing states between 1960 and 1999, I test the effects of oil wealth on regime failure, political protests, and civil war. I find that oil wealth is robustly associated with increased regime durability, even when controlling for repression, and with lower likelihoods of civil war and antistate protest. I also find that neither the boom nor bust periods exerted any significant effect on regime durability in the states most dependent on exports, even while those states saw more protests during the…

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656
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Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Bust
  • Boom
  • Durability
  • Politics
  • Spanish Civil War
  • Economics
  • Political science
  • Development economics
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