How do wartime legacies affect repression after the conflict ends? Irregular forces support the government in many civil wars. We argue that if this link continues after the war, respect for human rights declines. As "tried and tested" agents they are less likely to shirk when given the order to repress. Governments might also keep the militias as a "fall-back option", which results in more repression. Analyzing data from 1981 to 2014 shows that pro-government militias that were inherited from the previous conflict are consistently associated with worse repression, but newly created ones are not. Wartime pro-government militias target a broader spectrum of the population and are linked to worse state violence. New militias usually supplemen...
How does the withdrawal of troops after a military intervention supporting the government affect the...
Scholars have in the recent decades actively been searching for answers for why actors of war someti...
This article analyses the determinants of state repression in post-war periods. Its main argument is...
New data show that between 1982 and 2007, in over 60 countries governments were linked to and cooper...
This dissertation examines the long-term consequences of wartime violence against civilians on polit...
The central goal of this project is to better understand the relationship between civil war and repr...
This paper develops a theory which explains how wartime processes and relationships result in positi...
Many ceasefire and peace agreements stipulate the disarmament and demobilization of pro-state armed ...
Many armed groups create informal institutions to maintain social order during conflict. The remnant...
Recent research has focused on the legacies of civil war violence on political preferences, finding ...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2015. Major: Political Science. Advisor: Ronald K...
This article introduces the global Pro-Government Militias Database (PGMD). Despite the devastating ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2011.Cataloged f...
The research to date on pro-governm`ent militias demonstrates that numerous pro-regime militia group...
Societies coming out of civil wars find themselves in a "conflict trap" as they are left with a stri...
How does the withdrawal of troops after a military intervention supporting the government affect the...
Scholars have in the recent decades actively been searching for answers for why actors of war someti...
This article analyses the determinants of state repression in post-war periods. Its main argument is...
New data show that between 1982 and 2007, in over 60 countries governments were linked to and cooper...
This dissertation examines the long-term consequences of wartime violence against civilians on polit...
The central goal of this project is to better understand the relationship between civil war and repr...
This paper develops a theory which explains how wartime processes and relationships result in positi...
Many ceasefire and peace agreements stipulate the disarmament and demobilization of pro-state armed ...
Many armed groups create informal institutions to maintain social order during conflict. The remnant...
Recent research has focused on the legacies of civil war violence on political preferences, finding ...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2015. Major: Political Science. Advisor: Ronald K...
This article introduces the global Pro-Government Militias Database (PGMD). Despite the devastating ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2011.Cataloged f...
The research to date on pro-governm`ent militias demonstrates that numerous pro-regime militia group...
Societies coming out of civil wars find themselves in a "conflict trap" as they are left with a stri...
How does the withdrawal of troops after a military intervention supporting the government affect the...
Scholars have in the recent decades actively been searching for answers for why actors of war someti...
This article analyses the determinants of state repression in post-war periods. Its main argument is...