We build a theoretical framework that allows for endogenous conflict behaviour (i.e., fighting efforts) and for endogenous natural resource exploitation (i.e., speed, ownership, and investments). While depletion is spread in a balanced Hotelling fashion during peace, the presence of conflict creates incentives for rapacious extraction, as this lowers the stakes of future contest. This voracious extraction depresses total oil revenue, especially if world oil demand is relatively elastic and the government's weapon advantage is weak. Some of these political distortions can be overcome by bribing rebels or by government investment in weapons. The shadow of conflict can also make less efficient nationalized oil extraction more attractive than p...
Oil and natural gas are highly valuable natural resources, but many countries with large untapped re...
Resource wealth induces predation incentives but also conflict-deterring third-party involvement. As...
In this paper we examine the claim that natural resources invite civil conflict, and challenge the m...
Oil and natural gas are highly valuable natural resources, but many countries with large untapped re...
According to conventional wisdom, strategic natural resources like oil are harmful to international ...
This paper explores the conditions under which public spending could minimize violent conflict relat...
Oil and natural gas are highly valuable natural resources, but many countries with large untapped re...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
Natural resources have always played a key role in the conflicts and wars that already took place an...
Why is armed civil conflict more common in resource-dependent countries than in others? Several stud...
Despite repeated attempts to model conflict as contests over rent, few researchers have found a pers...
The future international security environment will experience a rise in competition over vital energ...
Why is armed civil conflict more common in resource-dependent countries than in others? Several stud...
The study of the link between natural resources and conflict results from the fact that many countri...
The relationship between natural resources and conflict has been extensively scrutinised in the fiel...
Oil and natural gas are highly valuable natural resources, but many countries with large untapped re...
Resource wealth induces predation incentives but also conflict-deterring third-party involvement. As...
In this paper we examine the claim that natural resources invite civil conflict, and challenge the m...
Oil and natural gas are highly valuable natural resources, but many countries with large untapped re...
According to conventional wisdom, strategic natural resources like oil are harmful to international ...
This paper explores the conditions under which public spending could minimize violent conflict relat...
Oil and natural gas are highly valuable natural resources, but many countries with large untapped re...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
Natural resources have always played a key role in the conflicts and wars that already took place an...
Why is armed civil conflict more common in resource-dependent countries than in others? Several stud...
Despite repeated attempts to model conflict as contests over rent, few researchers have found a pers...
The future international security environment will experience a rise in competition over vital energ...
Why is armed civil conflict more common in resource-dependent countries than in others? Several stud...
The study of the link between natural resources and conflict results from the fact that many countri...
The relationship between natural resources and conflict has been extensively scrutinised in the fiel...
Oil and natural gas are highly valuable natural resources, but many countries with large untapped re...
Resource wealth induces predation incentives but also conflict-deterring third-party involvement. As...
In this paper we examine the claim that natural resources invite civil conflict, and challenge the m...