Repository logo
  • Log In
    New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
University College Dublin
    Colleges & Schools
    Statistics
    All of DSpace
  • Log In
    New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. College of Social Sciences and Law
  3. School of Politics and International Relations
  4. Politics and International Relations Research Collection
  5. Group Grievances, Opportunity, and the Onset of Civil War: Some Theory and Tests of Competing Mechanisms, 1990–2017
 
  • Details
Options

Group Grievances, Opportunity, and the Onset of Civil War: Some Theory and Tests of Competing Mechanisms, 1990–2017

Alternative Title
Group Grievances & Civil War: Some Theory and Empirics on Competing Mechanisms, 1990-2017
Author(s)
de Soysa, Indra  
Finseraas, Henning  
Vadlamannati, Krishna Chaitanya  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/26513
Date Issued
2024-04-01
Date Available
2024-08-12T14:56:11Z
Abstract
Recent scholarship claims that group grievances due to political exclusion and discrimination drive civil wars. The grievance perspective suggests that socio-psychological factors allow groups to overcome collective action problems. We argue that the grievance perspective (over)focuses on the <jats:italic>ends</jats:italic> and not <jats:italic>means</jats:italic>, which are critical to explain how groups survive state sanction, allowing contention to escalate to civil war. We suggest that inclusive economic governance reduces investment in state-evading infrastructures for quotidian economic reasons, leading to the buildup of rebellion-specific capital. Physical and human infrastructures of state evasion form the logistical bases for survival against state sanction. Our analyses show that group-grievance-generating political factors are poorer predictors of civil war compared with economic freedoms measured as free-market friendly policies and the private ownership of economies, which should reduce economic rents accruing to state-evading shadow markets. Our results are robust to several alternative models, data, and estimating method. Theory that ignores the <jats:italic>means</jats:italic> explain the main causes of costly violence only partially, or mistake symptom for cause. Freedom and inclusiveness, which should reduce grievances, are intrinsically valuable, but they are hard to obtain when violence is waged successfully for more narrower ends.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter
Journal
Peace Economics, Peace Science and Public Policy
Volume
30
Issue
2
Start Page
171
End Page
205
Subjects

Civil War

Grievances

Opportunity

Economic freedom

Parralel markets

DOI
10.1515/peps-2023-0053
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1079-2457
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name

ISA2021_desoysa etal.pdf

Size

695.41 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

18a1e7bdcb6f156f37afbd2d66a6504d

Owning collection
Politics and International Relations Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

Built with DSpace-CRIS software - Extension maintained and optimized by 4Science

  • Cookie settings
  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement