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Transborder Ethnic Kin and Civil War
by
Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede
, Cederman, Lars-Erik
, Wucherpfennig, Julian
, Salehyan, Idean
in
Border conflicts
/ Borders
/ Civil War
/ Conflict
/ Dyads
/ Ethnic Groups
/ Ethnic relations
/ Ethnicity
/ Hypotheses
/ Incumbency
/ Influence
/ International conflicts
/ International relations
/ Minority & ethnic groups
/ Minority & ethnic violence
/ Nationalism
/ Politics
/ Postulates
/ Probability
/ Quantitative analysis
/ Quantitative Methods
/ Risk
/ Russia
/ Russian Federation
/ Studies
/ Transnationalism
/ Violence
/ War
2013
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Transborder Ethnic Kin and Civil War
by
Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede
, Cederman, Lars-Erik
, Wucherpfennig, Julian
, Salehyan, Idean
in
Border conflicts
/ Borders
/ Civil War
/ Conflict
/ Dyads
/ Ethnic Groups
/ Ethnic relations
/ Ethnicity
/ Hypotheses
/ Incumbency
/ Influence
/ International conflicts
/ International relations
/ Minority & ethnic groups
/ Minority & ethnic violence
/ Nationalism
/ Politics
/ Postulates
/ Probability
/ Quantitative analysis
/ Quantitative Methods
/ Risk
/ Russia
/ Russian Federation
/ Studies
/ Transnationalism
/ Violence
/ War
2013
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Do you wish to request the book?
Transborder Ethnic Kin and Civil War
by
Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede
, Cederman, Lars-Erik
, Wucherpfennig, Julian
, Salehyan, Idean
in
Border conflicts
/ Borders
/ Civil War
/ Conflict
/ Dyads
/ Ethnic Groups
/ Ethnic relations
/ Ethnicity
/ Hypotheses
/ Incumbency
/ Influence
/ International conflicts
/ International relations
/ Minority & ethnic groups
/ Minority & ethnic violence
/ Nationalism
/ Politics
/ Postulates
/ Probability
/ Quantitative analysis
/ Quantitative Methods
/ Risk
/ Russia
/ Russian Federation
/ Studies
/ Transnationalism
/ Violence
/ War
2013
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Journal Article
Transborder Ethnic Kin and Civil War
2013
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Overview
A series of studies has shown that civil wars are caused not only by factors inside countries, but also by effects operating across state borders. Whereas a first wave of quantitative studies demonstrated that such effects make the “closed-polity” assumption untenable, more recently researchers have identified particular causal mechanisms driving conflict. Despite these recent advances, a central puzzle remains unresolved, namely why ethnic groups that at least in theory could count on support from large transborder ethnic kin (TEK) groups often have remained surprisingly peaceful, such as the stranded Russian populations in the “near abroad.” We propose a theoretical framework that extends the analysis from the primary dyad between the incumbent and the challenger group by adding a secondary dyad that pits the incumbent against the TEK group. We postulate a curvilinear effect of the TEK group's relative size on conflict onset. Using a new data set on transnational ethnic links, we find that that the risk of conflict increases within the middle range of the size spectrum, consistent with our main hypothesis. This means that large TEK groups have a conflict-dampening effect, provided that they control their own state. Excluded TEK groups, however, are not associated with lower conflict probabilities.
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