Recent research has increasingly questioned the link between natural resources and violent conflict while stressing the importance of resource-specific context conditions under which internal conflicts become more likely. This paper engages in a systematic analysis of six of these resource-specific conditions comparing 15 African oil and diamond producing countries. Employing a Boolean logic, the results of our analysis indicate that, typically, a conflict-ridden diamond or oil producer is highly dependent on resources, its revenues are hardly spent on distributional policies and the security apparatus and, moreover, it suffers from intercommunal problems in the producing regions. Little income from resources per capita and substantial prod...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
Previous studies on natural resources and civil wars find that the presence of natural resources inc...
This paper presents first a theoretical model of conflict between two agents characterized by a two-...
Recent research has increasingly questioned the link between natural resources and violent conflict ...
Natural resources in sub-Saharan Africa suffer from a bad reputation. Oil and diamonds, particularly...
Summary Three attempts to cooperate between the fighting groups in Angola have proven unsuccessful, ...
The study of the link between natural resources and conflict results from the fact that many countri...
Sierra Leone and Liberia have exported rough diamonds since the discovery of diamonds in the Mano Ri...
Natural resource extraction in Africa has been characterised by conflicts between large scale and sm...
The presence of natural resources makes civil conflicts more likely to erupt, last longer, and more ...
This paper investigates whether an increase in the international price of diamonds impacts violent a...
The empirical relationship between natural resources and conflict in Africa is not very well underst...
The empirical relationship between natural resources and conflict in Africa is not very well understo...
This article looks at the issue of resources-based conflicts in the Horn of Africa region, examining...
Abstract: The paper critically examines the nature of conflicts in Africa which implicitly or explic...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
Previous studies on natural resources and civil wars find that the presence of natural resources inc...
This paper presents first a theoretical model of conflict between two agents characterized by a two-...
Recent research has increasingly questioned the link between natural resources and violent conflict ...
Natural resources in sub-Saharan Africa suffer from a bad reputation. Oil and diamonds, particularly...
Summary Three attempts to cooperate between the fighting groups in Angola have proven unsuccessful, ...
The study of the link between natural resources and conflict results from the fact that many countri...
Sierra Leone and Liberia have exported rough diamonds since the discovery of diamonds in the Mano Ri...
Natural resource extraction in Africa has been characterised by conflicts between large scale and sm...
The presence of natural resources makes civil conflicts more likely to erupt, last longer, and more ...
This paper investigates whether an increase in the international price of diamonds impacts violent a...
The empirical relationship between natural resources and conflict in Africa is not very well underst...
The empirical relationship between natural resources and conflict in Africa is not very well understo...
This article looks at the issue of resources-based conflicts in the Horn of Africa region, examining...
Abstract: The paper critically examines the nature of conflicts in Africa which implicitly or explic...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
Previous studies on natural resources and civil wars find that the presence of natural resources inc...
This paper presents first a theoretical model of conflict between two agents characterized by a two-...