Natural resources are often held responsible for intrastate conflicts. As a consequence, both national and international measures to avoid the detrimental impact of resource endowments have increasingly been discussed and implemented in resource‐rich countries. These measures include stabilization funds, subregional development programs, revenue‐sharing regimes, and transparency initiatives. However, comparative empirical studies of the actual impact of these measures, particularly regarding their contribution to conflict prevention, are scarce. This paper contributes to the filling of this gap: combining a medium‐N sample of oildependent countries and three in‐depth case studies (Algeria, Nigeria, and Venezuela), we evaluate different inst...
The Iranian revolution still appears to be a puzzle for theoretical approaches linking political ins...
While in an initial legal and academic anti-corruption wave corruption itself was at the center of a...
This paper explores the use of hydrocarbon revenues in post‐conflict Algeria. While the bloody...
This paper studies the causal factors that make the oil-state Venezuela, which is generally characte...
The literature on institutional determinants of intra‐state violence commonly asserts that the...
South America’s security agenda demands the simultaneous management of domestic crises, interstate c...
Algeria’s intrastate war in the 1990s, during which militant Islamists and the state fought fiercely...
Given the importance of the assertion or prevention of regional leadership for the future global ord...
This paper reviews the effectiveness and efficiency of key policy instruments for MDG (Millennium De...
According to quantitative studies, oil is the only resource that is robustly linked to civil war ons...
Despite a growing interest in African political parties, no comparative analyses of political ideolo...
This paper builds on institutional analysis to generate new conclusions about the economic viability...
This paper studies the oil‐violence link in the Niger Delta, systematically taking into consid...
This paper argues that trade and capital account reforms within autocracies underlie the primacy of ...
How can weaker states influence stronger ones? This article offers a case study of one recent exerci...
The Iranian revolution still appears to be a puzzle for theoretical approaches linking political ins...
While in an initial legal and academic anti-corruption wave corruption itself was at the center of a...
This paper explores the use of hydrocarbon revenues in post‐conflict Algeria. While the bloody...
This paper studies the causal factors that make the oil-state Venezuela, which is generally characte...
The literature on institutional determinants of intra‐state violence commonly asserts that the...
South America’s security agenda demands the simultaneous management of domestic crises, interstate c...
Algeria’s intrastate war in the 1990s, during which militant Islamists and the state fought fiercely...
Given the importance of the assertion or prevention of regional leadership for the future global ord...
This paper reviews the effectiveness and efficiency of key policy instruments for MDG (Millennium De...
According to quantitative studies, oil is the only resource that is robustly linked to civil war ons...
Despite a growing interest in African political parties, no comparative analyses of political ideolo...
This paper builds on institutional analysis to generate new conclusions about the economic viability...
This paper studies the oil‐violence link in the Niger Delta, systematically taking into consid...
This paper argues that trade and capital account reforms within autocracies underlie the primacy of ...
How can weaker states influence stronger ones? This article offers a case study of one recent exerci...
The Iranian revolution still appears to be a puzzle for theoretical approaches linking political ins...
While in an initial legal and academic anti-corruption wave corruption itself was at the center of a...
This paper explores the use of hydrocarbon revenues in post‐conflict Algeria. While the bloody...