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Armed intervention and civilian victimization in intrastate conflicts
by
Kathman, Jacob D
, Wood, Reed M
, Gent, Stephen E
in
Armed conflict
/ Balance of Power
/ Benefits
/ Casualties
/ Civil war
/ Civil wars
/ Civilians
/ Conflict
/ Deterrence
/ Extraction
/ Government
/ Government intervention
/ Guerrilla warfare
/ Incentive plans
/ Incentives
/ Insurgency
/ Intervention
/ Intrastate conflict
/ Law enforcement
/ Military Intervention
/ Military personnel
/ Military strategy
/ National security
/ Political conflict
/ Political violence
/ Population
/ Population growth
/ Power
/ Tactics
/ Threats
/ Victimization
/ Victims of crime
/ Violence
/ Violence against civilians
/ War
/ War conflict
2012
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Armed intervention and civilian victimization in intrastate conflicts
by
Kathman, Jacob D
, Wood, Reed M
, Gent, Stephen E
in
Armed conflict
/ Balance of Power
/ Benefits
/ Casualties
/ Civil war
/ Civil wars
/ Civilians
/ Conflict
/ Deterrence
/ Extraction
/ Government
/ Government intervention
/ Guerrilla warfare
/ Incentive plans
/ Incentives
/ Insurgency
/ Intervention
/ Intrastate conflict
/ Law enforcement
/ Military Intervention
/ Military personnel
/ Military strategy
/ National security
/ Political conflict
/ Political violence
/ Population
/ Population growth
/ Power
/ Tactics
/ Threats
/ Victimization
/ Victims of crime
/ Violence
/ Violence against civilians
/ War
/ War conflict
2012
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Do you wish to request the book?
Armed intervention and civilian victimization in intrastate conflicts
by
Kathman, Jacob D
, Wood, Reed M
, Gent, Stephen E
in
Armed conflict
/ Balance of Power
/ Benefits
/ Casualties
/ Civil war
/ Civil wars
/ Civilians
/ Conflict
/ Deterrence
/ Extraction
/ Government
/ Government intervention
/ Guerrilla warfare
/ Incentive plans
/ Incentives
/ Insurgency
/ Intervention
/ Intrastate conflict
/ Law enforcement
/ Military Intervention
/ Military personnel
/ Military strategy
/ National security
/ Political conflict
/ Political violence
/ Population
/ Population growth
/ Power
/ Tactics
/ Threats
/ Victimization
/ Victims of crime
/ Violence
/ Violence against civilians
/ War
/ War conflict
2012
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Armed intervention and civilian victimization in intrastate conflicts
Journal Article
Armed intervention and civilian victimization in intrastate conflicts
2012
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Overview
Research has begun to examine the relationship between changes in the conflict environment and levels of civilian victimization. We extend this work by examining the effect of external armed intervention on the decisions of governments and insurgent organizations to victimize civilians during civil wars. We theorize that changes in the balance of power in an intrastate conflict influence combatant strategies of violence. As a conflict actor weakens relative to its adversary, it employs increasingly violent tactics toward the civilian population as a means of reshaping the strategic landscape to its benefit. The reason for this is twofold. First, declining capabilities increase resource needs at the moment that extractive capacity is in decline. Second, declining capabilities inhibit control and policing, making less violent means of defection deterrence more difficult. As both resource extraction difficulties and internal threats increase, actors' incentives for violence against the population increase. To the extent that biased military interventions shift the balance of power between conflict actors, we argue that they alter actor incentives to victimize civilians. Specifically, intervention should reduce the level of violence employed by the supported faction and increase the level employed by the opposed faction. We test these arguments using data on civilian casualties and armed intervention in intrastate conflicts from 1989 to 2005. Our results support our expectations, suggesting that interventions shift the power balance and affect the levels of violence employed by combatants.
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