ID | 107883 |
Title Proper | Economic grievance and the severity of civil war |
Language | ENG |
Author | Lu, Lingyu ; Thies, Cameron G |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article examines the relationship between economic grievance and the severity of civil war. Theoretically, we create a testable micro-foundation for the association between economic grievance and conflict intensity. We argue that grievance does not lessen after the onset of civil war. Rather, pent-up grievance aggravates violence during the war. The more relative deprivation there is prior to the conflict, the more deadly and violently participants are expected to behave on the battlefield. This proposition is tested in a statistical analysis using the Armed Conflict Dataset (1960-92). Empirically, we demonstrate that economic grievance makes civil war more deadly. This effect is independent of the effect of ethnic grievance. |
`In' analytical Note | Civil Wars Vol. 13, No. 3; Sep 2011: p.215-231 |
Journal Source | Civil Wars Vol. 13, No. 3; Sep 2011: p.215-231 |
Key Words | Economic Grievance ; Severity of Civil War ; Civil War ; Ethnic Grievance ; Violence |