Relative Capability and Rebel Objective in Civil War
- 1 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Peace Research
- Vol. 43 (6) , 691-708
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343306069255
Abstract
When all else fails, aggrieved groups of society often resort to violence to redress their grievance - either by seeking to overthrow the ruling government or by attempting to secede. The strength of the rebel group relative to the state determines what direction the conflict will take. In institutionally and economically capable countries, any opposition group is likely to be inferior to the government. These groups will see secession as the most viable strategy to improve living conditions. Inconsistent, poor, and resource-dependent regimes are typically quite unstable and should therefore be more likely to attract coups and revolutions. In addition, large and ethnically diverse countries contain a higher number of peripheral and possibly marginalized groups, as well as remote and inaccessible terrain, both of which are expected to favor secessionist insurgency. Smaller countries, in contrast, offer few opportunities for separatist claims but, in such countries, capturing the state might also be a more realistic objective. This article provides a first test of these presumptions by estimating the effect of several popular explanatory factors separately on the risk of territorial and governmental conflict, 1946-99. The analysis offers considerable support and demonstrates that territorial and governmental conflicts are shaped, in large part, by different causal mechanisms. The reputed parabolic relationship between democracy and risk of civil war only pertains to state-centered conflicts, whereas democracy has a positive and near-linear effect on the risk of territorial rebellion. Moreover, the analysis strongly suggests that the puzzling no-finding of ethnicity in several prominent studies is affected by their inability to account for rebel objective in civil war.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Local determinants of African civil wars, 1970–2001Political Geography, 2006
- Primary Commodity Exports and Civil WarJournal of Conflict Resolution, 2005
- Ethnicity, Insurgency, and Civil WarAmerican Political Science Review, 2003
- Armed Conflict 1946-2001: A New DatasetJournal of Peace Research, 2002
- TOWARD A NEW POLITICAL METHODOLOGY: Microfoundations and ARTAnnual Review of Political Science, 2002
- Recruitment and AllegianceJournal of Conflict Resolution, 2002
- International Peacebuilding: A Theoretical and Quantitative AnalysisAmerican Political Science Review, 2000
- Conflict and DistributionJournal of Economic Theory, 1999
- Africa's Growth Tragedy: Policies and Ethnic DivisionsThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1997
- War and the Survival of Political Leaders: A Comparative Study of Regime Types and Political AccountabilityAmerican Political Science Review, 1995