Authors
Frederic S Pearson, Marie Olson Lounsbery, Scott Walker, Sonja Mann
Publication date
2006/7/1
Journal
International Interactions
Volume
32
Issue
2
Pages
109-128
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Description
The current study is a replication and expansion of an earlier piece by exploring civil war settlement characteristics and stability. Their research focused on the importance of territorial autonomy provisions and the role of third party guarantors in predicting settlement success and stability. They employed a model that controlled for such conflict characteristics as international system structure, nature of the previous regime, conflict duration, conflict issue, and conflict intensity. Our study replicates Hartzell et al. using the civil war dataset, employing a broader definition of conflict and a more stringent definition of when a conflict has ended. The results presented here differ from the previous study to have find that the importance of territorial autonomy provisions as a predictor of settlement stability is greatly diluted when one examines only those conflict settlements that have lasted for six months or longer without …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
FS Pearson, M Olson Lounsbery, S Walker, S Mann - International Interactions, 2006