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DOMESTIC PEACE (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   133574


Challenges in Afghanistan: the post Bonn era / Bagai, Mithila   Journal Article
Bagai, Mithila Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Mithila Bagai analyses the situation in Afghanistan post-2001 and states that progress has been achieved in many areas despite the turmoil of the past decade. If neighbouring countries cooperate and help Afghanistan rebuild and restore domestic peace, it might reach stability and prosperity, although the Taliban will have to be included in any nationwide settlement.
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2
ID:   097767


Is the hidden hand an iron fist? capitalism and civil peace, 19 / Soysa, Indra de; Fjelde, Hanne   Journal Article
Soysa, Indra de Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract There is surprisingly little empirical scholarship on the spread of capitalistic economic policies under the rubric of 'globalization' and domestic peace. While the classical liberals saw free markets leading to social harmony because of self-interest of individuals, who cooperate for profit, Marxists and others viewed markets as anarchical, requiring state intervention for obtaining justice and peace. The authors argue from an opportunity-cost perspective that the payoffs to rebellion are structured by how an economy is governed. Closed economies are likelier than more open ones to accumulate 'rebellion specific capital' because of high payoffs to organization in the shadows. Using an index of economic freedom that measures how free people are to transact in an economy, the authors find that countries more favorable to free enterprise have a reduced risk of civil war onsets, a result that is robust to the inclusion of institutional quality, per capita wealth, and sundry controls. The results hold up despite a battery of specification changes, alternative data, and testing methods. The findings do not suggest that states under conditions of capitalism lose their autonomy to provide the public good of peace, as skeptics of globalization claim. Peacemakers will do well to build institutions that reward productive investment over rent-seeking, alongside democratic institutions that ultimately gain their legitimacy on the back of good economic performance and well-functioning markets.
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3
ID:   061756


Leadership style, regime type, and foreign policy crisis behavi: a contingent monadic peace? / Keller, Jonathan W Jun 2005  Journal Article
Keller, Jonathan W Journal Article
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Publication Jun 2005.
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4
ID:   065804


Time to fight: government type and conflict initiation in parliamentary systems / Ireland, Michael J; Gartner, Scott Sigmund   Article
Ireland, Michael J Article
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Publication 2001.
Key Words Conflict  Domestic Peace 
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