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ID142540
Title ProperAlternative international systems? system structure and violent conflict in nineteenth-century West Africa, Southeast Asia, and South Asia
LanguageENG
AuthorBUTCHER, CHARLES
Summary / Abstract (Note)Were precolonial state systems different to the European model? If so, how did these state systems vary, and do variations in system structure influence the frequency of war? In this article we assess the structure off international systems in nineteenth-century West Africa, Southeast Asia, and South Asia using new data on precolonial states that corrects for some of the biases in the existing Correlates of War state system membership data. We develop a framework to capture variation in political order above and below the state, and explore the similarities and differences between these systems and the European system we know and study. We then assess how rates of inter- and intra-state war varied across these systems. Our results suggest: (1) It is the nature of hierarchy (not so much anarchy) that varies across these systems; and (2) inter-state wars are more frequent, but less intense, in systems composed of decentralised states.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 41, No.4; Oct 2015: p.715-737
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol: 41 No 4
Key WordsSouth Asia ;  Southeast Asia ;  West Africa ;  Violent Conflict ;  International Systems ;  System Structure


 
 
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