AbstractThe historical literature on statebuilding in Europe has often portrayed a positive relationship between war, state making and long-term democratisation. Similarly, a number of large-n quantitative studies have concluded that war promotes democracy – even in cases of civil war. Against this, a growing area studies literature has argued that violent conflict in developing countries is unlikely to drive either statebuilding or democratisation. However, this literature has rarely sought to systematically set out the mechanisms through which war undermines democracy. Contrasting three ‘high conflict’ cases (Burundi, Rwanda and Uganda) with two ‘low conflict’ cases (Kenya and Tanzania) in East Africa, we trace the way in which domestic c...
External actors have long shaped the trajectory of democracy in Africa. During the Cold War, rival s...
Over the past decade, a third wave of autocratisation has stormed the world, hitting democracies and...
History has proven time and time again that conflict is an inevitable aspect of any given society. T...
AbstractThe historical literature on statebuilding in Europe has often portrayed a positive relation...
This paper explores the connections between democracy, peace and development in three cases of recen...
This paper analyses the effect of the Congo war on state power in Rwanda and Uganda. Drawing on theo...
Dominant narratives and theories developed at the turn of the 21st century to account for the links ...
Governance and conflict are two phenomena, which have been reflective and reminiscent of human socie...
This thesis examines more closely the mechanisms that lie behind the causal relationship between ele...
The conclusion of the Cold War has had contradictory effects on on-going conflicts in the former sup...
Why have there been no successful military interventions or civil wars in Tanzania’s nearly 60 years...
Ethiopia, situated at the heart of the volatile Horn of Africa, has long found itself in various con...
Civil wars do not only destroy existing political orders. They contribute to shaping new ones, and t...
Work in progress, please do not quote. Comments very welcome! Post-war literature often assumes that...
This paper contributes to explaining variation in violence in post-independence East Africa. By focu...
External actors have long shaped the trajectory of democracy in Africa. During the Cold War, rival s...
Over the past decade, a third wave of autocratisation has stormed the world, hitting democracies and...
History has proven time and time again that conflict is an inevitable aspect of any given society. T...
AbstractThe historical literature on statebuilding in Europe has often portrayed a positive relation...
This paper explores the connections between democracy, peace and development in three cases of recen...
This paper analyses the effect of the Congo war on state power in Rwanda and Uganda. Drawing on theo...
Dominant narratives and theories developed at the turn of the 21st century to account for the links ...
Governance and conflict are two phenomena, which have been reflective and reminiscent of human socie...
This thesis examines more closely the mechanisms that lie behind the causal relationship between ele...
The conclusion of the Cold War has had contradictory effects on on-going conflicts in the former sup...
Why have there been no successful military interventions or civil wars in Tanzania’s nearly 60 years...
Ethiopia, situated at the heart of the volatile Horn of Africa, has long found itself in various con...
Civil wars do not only destroy existing political orders. They contribute to shaping new ones, and t...
Work in progress, please do not quote. Comments very welcome! Post-war literature often assumes that...
This paper contributes to explaining variation in violence in post-independence East Africa. By focu...
External actors have long shaped the trajectory of democracy in Africa. During the Cold War, rival s...
Over the past decade, a third wave of autocratisation has stormed the world, hitting democracies and...
History has proven time and time again that conflict is an inevitable aspect of any given society. T...