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Breaking the Conflict Trap: Civil War and Development Policy
Paul Collier,V. L. Elliott,Håvard Hegre,Anke Hoeffler,Marta Reynal-Querol,Nicholas Sambanis +5 more
- 30 May 2003
2.6K
TL;DR: The authors argues that civil war is now an important issue for development and that war retards development, but conversely, development retards war, giving rise to virtuous and vicious circles.
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Abstract: Most wars are now civil wars. Even though international wars attract enormous global attention, they have become infrequent and brief. Civil wars usually attract less attention, but they have become increasingly common and typically go on for years. This report argues that civil war is now an important issue for development. War retards development, but conversely, development retards war. This double causation gives rise to virtuous and vicious circles. Where development succeeds, countries become progressively safer from violent conflict, making subsequent development easier. Where development fails, countries are at high risk of becoming caught in a conflict trap in which war wrecks the economy and increases the risk of further war. The global incidence of civil war is high because the international community has done little to avert it. Inertia is rooted in two beliefs: that we can safely 'let them fight it out among themselves' and that 'nothing can be done' because civil war is driven by ancestral ethnic and religious hatreds. The purpose of this report is to challenge these beliefs.
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Citations
The effect of armed conflict on accumulation of schooling: Results from Tajikistan
TL;DR: The authors used differences in regional and temporal exposure to the 1992-1998 armed conflict in Tajikistan to study the effect of violent conflict on schooling outcomes and found that exposure to violent conflict had a large and statistically significant negative effect on the enrollment of girls.
572
Can War Foster Cooperation
TL;DR: In the past decade, nearly 20 studies have found a strong, persistent pattern in surveys and behavioral experiments from over 40 countries: individual exposure to war violence tends to increase social cooperation at the local level, including community participation and prosocial behavior as mentioned in this paper.
The long-run impact of bombing Vietnam
TL;DR: The authors investigated the impact of U.S. bombing on later economic development in Vietnam and found that even the most intense bombing in human history did not generate local poverty traps in Vietnam.
548
A Diamond Curse? Civil War and a Lootable Resource
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on a new database on diamond deposits and production and analyze the relationship between diamonds and armed conflict incidence, finding evidence that secondary diamonds are positively related to the incidence of civil war, especially in countries divided along ethnic lines.
547
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Peaceland: Conflict Resolution and the Everyday Politics of International Intervention
Severine Autesserre
- 19 May 2014
TL;DR: In this article, a new explanation for why international peace interventions often fail to reach their full potential is presented, based on several years of ethnographic research in conflict zones around the world, which demonstrates that everyday elements -such as the expatriates' social habits and usual approaches to understand their areas of operation - strongly influence international peacebuilding effectiveness.
533
References
The Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups.
Sidney C. Sufrin,Mancur Olson +1 more
Abstract: This book develops an original theory of group and organizational behavior that cuts across disciplinary lines and illustrates the theory with empirical and historical studies of particular organizations. Applying economic analysis to the subjects of the political scientist, sociologist, and economist, Mr. Olson examines the extent to which the individuals that share a common interest find it in their individual interest to bear the costs of the organizational effort. The theory shows that most organizations produce what the economist calls "public goods"--goods or services that are available to every member, whether or not he has borne any of the costs of providing them. Economists have long understood that defense, law and order were public goods that could not be marketed to individuals, and that taxation was necessary. They have not, however, taken account of the fact that private as well as governmental organizations produce public goods. The services the labor union provides for the worker it represents, or the benefits a lobby obtains for the group it represents, are public goods: they automatically go to every individual in the group, whether or not he helped bear the costs. It follows that, just as governments require compulsory taxation, many large private organizations require special (and sometimes coercive) devices to obtain the resources they need. This is not true of smaller organizations for, as this book shows, small and large organizations support themselves in entirely different ways. The theory indicates that, though small groups can act to further their interest much more easily than large ones, they will tend to devote too few resources to thesatisfaction of their common interests, and that there is a surprising tendency for the "lesser" members of the small group to exploit the "greater" members by making them bear a disproportionate share of the burden of any group action. All of the theory in the book is in Chapter 1; the remaining chapters contain empirical and historical evidence of the theory's relevance to labor unions, pressure groups, corporations, and Marxian class action.
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Ethnicity, Insurgency, and Civil War
James D. Fearon,David D. Laitin +1 more
TL;DR: This article showed 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.
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Some Social Requisites of Democracy: Economic Development and Political Legitimacy
Seymour Martin Lipset
- 01 Aug 1993
TL;DR: The conditions associated with the existence and stability of democratic society have been a leading concern of political philosophy as discussed by the authors, and the problem is attacked from a sociological and behavioral standpoint, by presenting a number of hypotheses concerning some social requisites for democracy, and by discussing some of the data available to test these hypotheses.
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SESSION 1A: RACIAL INEQUALITY AND ECONOMIC PROGRESS: The Colonial Origins of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide both a theory of why different countries have different institutions and a way of measuring this, which does not suffer from endogeneity, and they focus on differences in state institutions that depended crucially on settlement patterns.