Crossing the Rubicon? The Dynamics of Restraint in Civil War
Details
- Period: 2021-01-01 – 2026-12-31
- Budget: 4,494,000 SEK
- Funder: Swedish Research Council
- Type of funding: Project grant
Crossing the Rubicon? The Dynamics of Restraint in Civil War
Project description
In recent times, more than half of all people killed in civil wars died in Afghanistan or Syria. This raises a question to which we have surprisingly few answers so far: Why do some civil wars become so much more severe than others?
This project has set out to find answers to this important question, with a focus on the sources of restraint in civil war. Deepening knowledge on restraint in war is crucial for building resilient societies and contain existing civil wars.
We depart from previous research in two important ways. First, previous research has primarily focused on factors that drive the death toll upwards, while our understanding of the factors that restrain escalation and depress the body count remains narrow. We emphasize both causes of escalation and restraint and explore how actor characteristics, institutions, and norms restrain actors’ use of violence.
Second, earlier scholarship tends to compare the most severe civil wars to all others. In contrast, we break new ground by identifying civil wars that saw low severity despite a high risk of escalation. Comparing these cases to more severe civil wars will yield new insights on the sources of restraint in civil war.
We employ multiple approaches to find answers to the question of why some civil wars become much more deadly than others. This includes field research in Darfur (Sudan) and Côte d’Ivoire; a comparison of these cases; a Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) of a set of cases considered to be at a high risk for conflict escalation, as well as global statistical analyses of civil war severity.
Project members
Publications
A New Era: Power in Partnership Peacekeeping
Part of International Studies Quarterly, 2023
Civilian Protest in Civil War: Insights from Côte d’Ivoire
Part of American Political Science Review, p. 815-830, 2024
- DOI for Civilian Protest in Civil War: Insights from Côte d’Ivoire
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Governing the Shadows: Territorial Control and State Making in Civil War
Part of Comparative Political Studies, 2024
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Keeping communal peace in the shadow of civil war: A natural experiment from Côte d’Ivoire
Part of World Development, 2024
- DOI for Keeping communal peace in the shadow of civil war: A natural experiment from Côte d’Ivoire
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To Buy a War but Sell the Peace?: Mercenaries and Post-Civil War Stability
Part of Security Studies, p. 417-445, 2022
What They Are Fighting For: Introducing the UCDP Conflict Issues Dataset
Part of Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2023
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