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BHAVNANI, RAVI (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   064825


Diamonds, blood, and taxes: a revenue-centered framework for explaining political order / Snyder, Richard; Bhavnani, Ravi 2005  Journal Article
Bhavnani, Ravi Journal Article
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Publication Aug 2005.
Key Words Africa  Natural Resource  Dimands  Civil War 
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2
ID:   076105


Ethnic norms and interethnic violence: accounting for mass participation in the Rwansan Genocide / Bhavnani, Ravi   Journal Article
Bhavnani, Ravi Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
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3
ID:   086001


Ethnic Polarization, Ethnic Salience, and Civil War / Bhavnani, Ravi   Journal Article
Bhavnani, Ravi Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This article examines how the relationship between ethnic polarization and civil war could be moderated by different degrees of ethnic salience. Using an agent-based computational model, we analyze the polarization-conflict relationship when ethnic salience is ``fixed''-high for every member of two nominally rival ethnic groups- and ``variable''-permitted to vary across individuals as a function of relative income. We find that (1) when salience is fixed, conflict onset is twice as high at low levels of polarization compared to when salience is permitted to vary, with the difference decreasing at high levels of polarization; (2) the relationship between conflict onset and the range over which we calculate variable salience is positive and robust for low and moderate levels of polarization; (3) the relationship between polarization and conflict onset is robust even under minority domination, if one holds salience fixed; and (4) holding ethnic salience fixed effectively amplifies the negative effect of polarization on economic performance.
Key Words Ethnicity  Polarization  Salience  Agent - Based Model  Civil War 
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4
ID:   017778


Localized ethnic conflict and genocide: accounting for differences in Rwanda and Burundi / Bhavnani, Ravi June 2000  Article
Bhavnani, Ravi Article
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Publication June 2000.
Description 283--306
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5
ID:   106844


Transnational ethnic ties and the incidence of minority rule in / Bhavnani, Ravi; Lavery, Jerry   Journal Article
Bhavnani, Ravi Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This article specifies a novel theoretical framework to explore how rival ethnic groups learn from threats to ethnic kin in a neighboring country and from threats made by nominal rivals at home. We argue that a combination of external and internal threats causes violence domestically. Violence causes casualties, increases interethnic animosity, and generates refugee flows. These outcomes, in turn, contribute to renewed violence, reinforce or undermine disparities in power, and shape patterns of ethnic domination. Among the range of outcomes generated by our framework are those that bear a strong resemblance to the trajectory of ethnic domination in the Rwanda-Burundi dyad. [Supplemental materials are available for this article. Go to the publisher's online edition of Nationalism and Ethnic Politics for the following free supplemental resource: an appendix of the framework's formal aspects and technical details.]
Key Words Minority  Rwanda  Burundi  Ethinic Ties 
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