Dominant Forms of Conflict in Changing Political Systems

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Abstract

Our article analyzes how transitioning political institutions create incentives and disincentives for opposition groups to incite different forms of political violence. We argue that variation on two specific parameters of governance-checks and balances and political participation-compels states toward one of the three forms of conflict, including civil wars, political militia, and riots. Using disaggregated data on different types of political violence across Africa from 1997 to 2012, we analyzed two parameters of governance in both count and change models. We also identified high-risk conflict periods. Typical regime types (democracy, autocracy, anocracy) cannot explain manifestations of conflict, as violence occurs in regimes with varying levels of political openness and competition. Opposition groups actively respond to regime transitions, as changes in institutional parameters correlate with shifts into alternative forms of violence within states.

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Choi, H. J., & Raleigh, C. (2015). Dominant Forms of Conflict in Changing Political Systems. International Studies Quarterly, 59(1), 158–171. https://doi.org/10.1111/isqu.12157

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