Civil war is the dominant form of armed conflict in the contemporary international system, and most severe lethal armed conflicts in the post-Cold War era have been civil rather than interstate. Still, it would misleading to see these conflicts as purely domestic, as many contemporary civil wars such as Syria display clear transnational characteristics, including inspirations from events in other countries, links to actors in other countries, as well as often international interventions. Moreover, civil wars often have important implications for other states, including security concerns and economic impacts. This chapter reviews the growth and core findings in the literature focusing on the transnational dimensions of civil war. I focus in ...
The spread of civil war poses serious risks and costs. We argue that conflict environments, which va...
The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqw031Why do most c...
We introduce the contributions to this special issue on “Disaggregating Civil War.” We review the p...
Existing research has related civil war primarily to country-specific factors or processes that tak...
The conventional wisdom: Civil wars as domestic conflict The conventional wisdom treats civil wars a...
Although research on conflict has tended to separately study interstate conflict and civil war, sta...
Civil wars are by definition violent conflicts between a state and some form of non-state actors (Sa...
Previous research has looked for factors explaining intrastate conflict within the country ex-perien...
This theory explains why the patterns and character of civil war have systematically changed over th...
Why do some civil wars become interstate wars while others do not? In this dissertation I develop a ...
Previous work has suggested that civil wars can increase the risk of militarized interstate conflict...
Previous work has suggested that civil wars can increase the risk of militarized interstate conflict...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
This Ph.D. thesis is about the pathways through which civil war actors find a peaceful solution to t...
Civil War is a term often used to classify a type of conflict which arises within states. This being...
The spread of civil war poses serious risks and costs. We argue that conflict environments, which va...
The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqw031Why do most c...
We introduce the contributions to this special issue on “Disaggregating Civil War.” We review the p...
Existing research has related civil war primarily to country-specific factors or processes that tak...
The conventional wisdom: Civil wars as domestic conflict The conventional wisdom treats civil wars a...
Although research on conflict has tended to separately study interstate conflict and civil war, sta...
Civil wars are by definition violent conflicts between a state and some form of non-state actors (Sa...
Previous research has looked for factors explaining intrastate conflict within the country ex-perien...
This theory explains why the patterns and character of civil war have systematically changed over th...
Why do some civil wars become interstate wars while others do not? In this dissertation I develop a ...
Previous work has suggested that civil wars can increase the risk of militarized interstate conflict...
Previous work has suggested that civil wars can increase the risk of militarized interstate conflict...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
This Ph.D. thesis is about the pathways through which civil war actors find a peaceful solution to t...
Civil War is a term often used to classify a type of conflict which arises within states. This being...
The spread of civil war poses serious risks and costs. We argue that conflict environments, which va...
The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqw031Why do most c...
We introduce the contributions to this special issue on “Disaggregating Civil War.” We review the p...