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ID089014
Title ProperDuration of peace and recurring civil wars in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
LanguageENG
AuthorDerouen, Karl ;  Bercovitch, Jacob ;  Wei, Jun
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Civil wars in Southeast Asia and the Pacific are perhaps the most intractable in the world and thus merit special attention. We adopt a regional approach for our analysis of the duration of peace after civil war terminations. Our contribution is three-fold: First, we capture all dyads (rebel versus government) rather than lumping multiple dyads into one war. This is appropriate in a region where there are multiple conflicts in a country at any one time. Second, we test a new conflict termination dataset developed at Uppsala University. These data allow us to offer a fine-grained analysis not normally found in the civil war literature. Third, we employ a method specifically suited to recurring data in a duration setting. The results generally support our hypotheses that wars in the region are intractable in the face of negotiated settlements and longer wars increase the duration of the subsequent peace. Also, there is a tendency for the peace to become longer with each recurrence. The impact of longer wars is obscured unless repeated events are carefully treated as non-independent events.
`In' analytical NoteCivil Wars Vol. 11, No. 2; Jun 2009: p.103 - 120
Journal SourceCivil Wars Vol. 11, No. 2; Jun 2009: p.103 - 120
Key WordsCivil War ;  Southeast Asia ;  Uppsala University


 
 
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