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ID180896
Title ProperStrategies to End Violence in Ethnic Conflicts
Other Title InformationWhat is Sufficient? The Case of “Peace” in Chechnya
LanguageENG
AuthorNibali, Samantha
Summary / Abstract (Note)After decades of violent separatist conflict between the Russian Federation and the Chechen Republic, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared the region stabilized and peaceful in 2008. Despite this grand proclamation of peace, Chechnya today operates under an environment of violent repression and the conflict remains un-managed. This article argues that a threshold of sufficiency exists which settlement strategies must pass to achieve peace. While a perceived peace may occur when the armed conflict ends, without sufficient management strategies the identity-based roots of the conflict will manifest in other forms beneath the surface. By examining co-optation, power-sharing, autonomy and reconciliation, this research finds that while Russia’s incomplete conflict management strategy may have ended the violent insurgency within Chechnya, the failure to apply these principles sufficiently has allowed violence to continue. This research hopes to be applicable in informing strategies to resolve conflicts in multi-ethnic states within and beyond the North Caucasus.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Negotiation Vol. 26, No.3; 2021 : p.560–580
Journal SourceInternational Negotiation Vol: 26 No 3
Key WordsConflict Management ;  Reconciliation ;  Ethnic Conflict ;  Autonomy ;  Power-Sharing ;  Co-optation ;  Chechen Republic


 
 
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