articleAnnual Review of Political ScienceDec 23, 2014GREEN OA

What Have We Learned about the Resource Curse?

University of California, Los Angeles

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Since 2001, hundreds of academic studies have examined the “political resource curse,” meaning the claim that natural resource wealth tends to adversely affect a country's governance. There is now robust evidence that one type of mineral wealth, petroleum, has at least three harmful effects: It tends to make authoritarian regimes more durable, to increase certain types of corruption, and to help trigger violent conflict in low- and middle-income countries. Scholars have also made progress toward understanding the mechanisms that lead to these outcomes and the conditions that make them more likely. This essay reviews the evidence behind these claims, the debates over their validity, and some of the unresolved…

Citation impact

1,095
total citations
FWCI
69.70
Percentile
100%
References
190
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Resource curse
  • Authoritarianism
  • Curse
  • Natural resource
  • Corporate governance
  • Politics
  • Language change
  • Positive economics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
No related works found for this paper.