Abstract
Capitalism has emerged as a force for peace in studies of interstate conflict. Is capitalism also a force for peace within nations? This article shows how a market-capitalist economy-one where most citizens normally obtain their livelihoods contracting in the market-creates citizen-wide preferences for universal freedom, peace, and the democratic rule of law. Prior research has corroborated the theory's predictions linking market-capitalism with liberal preferences, human rights, and peace among nations. Here, Granger tests of causality show that market-capitalism causes higher income, but higher income does not cause market-capitalism, and from 1961 to 2001 not a single civil war, insurgency, or rebellion occurred in any nation with a market-capitalist economy. Market-capitalism is the strongest variable in the civil conflict literature, and many of the most robust relationships in this literature are spurious-including income, state capacity, and oil-export dependency. © 2012 International Studies Association.
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CITATION STYLE
Mousseau, M. (2012). Capitalist Development and Civil War. International Studies Quarterly, 56(3), 470–483. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2478.2012.00734.x
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