Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1386Hits:18773564Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID178667
Title ProperPredicting the End of the Syrian Conflict
Other Title InformationFrom Theory to the Reality of a Civil War
LanguageENG
AuthorSharif, Sally
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Syrian civil war has confounded all predictions on its end date and is still ongoing. Valuable explicative work has been done on civil war duration; however, scholars have failed to reliably predict the end of ongoing conflicts. This article argues that faulty predictions on termination date of the Syrian conflict did not necessarily result from statistical errors in modeling civil wars data and better models might not necessarily mitigate the prediction problem. Rather, three factors contributed to the misperceptions: the conflict’s cartography problem, the splintering of the opposition, and the multi-partner foreign intervention in the conflict. The last two factors can also be held accountable for prolonging the conflict. Incorrect predictions or descriptions in scholarly works on ongoing conflicts can have disastrous implications for the present and future of states and populations beset by protracted conflict. Had it been made clear that neither the insurgents nor the government had the capacity to win the war within the predicted timeframe, the international community may have taken a more decisive role in bringing belligerents to the negotiation table, improving prospects for a peaceful diplomatic settlement.
`In' analytical NoteStudies in Conflict and Terrorism Vol. 44, No.4-6; Apr-Jun 2021: p.326-345
Journal SourceStudies in Conflict and Terrorism Vol: 44 No 4-6
Key WordsSyrian Conflict ;  Civil War ;  Theory to the Reality


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text