We assess risk factors affecting the severity and dynamics of civil wars, departing from analyses focused primarily on static models of the effect of income on the extensive margin of conflict. Civil conflicts are shown to be persistent, but rarely do they become more severe in response to past fighting. Substantial heterogeneity in the speed of mean reversion is documented: severe fighting lasts longest in poor countries and ethnically fractionalized countries
Common political economy models point to rationalist motives for engaging in conflict but say little...
Does it matter whether a civil war is fought as a conventional, irregular, or symmetric non-conventi...
Civil war is highly concentrated in poor countries. Nearly all recent quantitative studies find a st...
We assess risk factors affecting the severity and dynamics of civil wars, departing from analyses fo...
This article revisits the relationship between income per capita and civil conflict. We begin by doc...
Economists and political scientists have argued that differences in the risk of civil conflict acros...
The duration of large-scale, violent civil conflict increases substantially if the society is compos...
One of the most robust findings in the literature on civil conflicts is that high income levels are ...
This paper considers the determinants of civil conflict, using a zero-inflated modelling approach th...
International audienceThere is a consensus that civil wars entail enormous economic costs, but there...
The authors investigate whether civil wars have economic causes. The model is based on utility theor...
Abstract: There is a consensus that civil wars entail enormous economic costs, but we lack reliable ...
Civil wars are intricate social, political and psychological phenomena. However, economics can offer...
We investigate whether civil wars have economic causes. The model is based on utility theory, rebels...
Somehow paradoxically, it is common for research on the determinants of civil wars to conclude that ...
Common political economy models point to rationalist motives for engaging in conflict but say little...
Does it matter whether a civil war is fought as a conventional, irregular, or symmetric non-conventi...
Civil war is highly concentrated in poor countries. Nearly all recent quantitative studies find a st...
We assess risk factors affecting the severity and dynamics of civil wars, departing from analyses fo...
This article revisits the relationship between income per capita and civil conflict. We begin by doc...
Economists and political scientists have argued that differences in the risk of civil conflict acros...
The duration of large-scale, violent civil conflict increases substantially if the society is compos...
One of the most robust findings in the literature on civil conflicts is that high income levels are ...
This paper considers the determinants of civil conflict, using a zero-inflated modelling approach th...
International audienceThere is a consensus that civil wars entail enormous economic costs, but there...
The authors investigate whether civil wars have economic causes. The model is based on utility theor...
Abstract: There is a consensus that civil wars entail enormous economic costs, but we lack reliable ...
Civil wars are intricate social, political and psychological phenomena. However, economics can offer...
We investigate whether civil wars have economic causes. The model is based on utility theory, rebels...
Somehow paradoxically, it is common for research on the determinants of civil wars to conclude that ...
Common political economy models point to rationalist motives for engaging in conflict but say little...
Does it matter whether a civil war is fought as a conventional, irregular, or symmetric non-conventi...
Civil war is highly concentrated in poor countries. Nearly all recent quantitative studies find a st...