Ethnicity, Insurgency, and Civil War
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Abstract
An influential conventional wisdom holds that civil wars proliferated rapidly with the end of the Cold War and that the root cause of many or most of these has been ethnic and religious antagonisms. We show that the current prevalence of internal war is mainly the result of a steady accumulation of protracted conflicts since the 1950s and 1960s rather than a sudden change associated with a new, post-Cold War international system. We also find that after controlling for per capita income, more ethnically or religiously diverse countries have been no more likely to experience significant civil violence in this period. We argue for understanding civil war in this period in terms of insurgency or rural guerrilla…
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6,044
total citations
- FWCI
- 337.54
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Insurgency
- Ethnic group
- Spanish Civil War
- Politics
- Political science
- Guerrilla warfare
- Development economics
- Dictatorship
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- No poverty
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