302 research outputs found
Replication Data for: Marianne Dahl & Kristian Skrede Gleditsch "Clouds with Silver Linings: How Mobilization Shapes the Impact of Coups on Democratization", European Journal of International Relations
This provides data and code to reproduce the results reported in for: Marianne Dahl & Kristian Skrede Gleditsch "Clouds with Silver Linings: How Mobilization Shapes the Impact of Coups on Democratization", European Journal of International Relations, accepted (as of 15 November 2022
Replication Data for: Kern, F. G., Gleditsch, K. S., & Cordell, R. (2023). Judiciary institutions and violent crime in American Indian nations. Governance, 1–23. https://doi.org/10.1111/gove.12756
This # This file contains replication material for
# Kern, F. G., Gleditsch, K. S., & Cordell, R. (2023).
# Judiciary institutions and violent crime in American Indian nations.
# Governance, 1–23. https://doi.org/10.1111/gove.1275
"Oil above water" : economic interdependence and third-party intervention
We explore economic incentives for third parties to intervene in ongoing internal wars. We develop a three-party model of the decision to intervene in conflict that highlights the role of the economic benefits accruing from the intervention and the potential costs. We present novel empirical results on the role of oil in motivating third-party military intervention. We find that the likelihood of a third-party intervention increases when (a) the country at war has large reserves of oil, (b) the relative competition in the sector is limited, and (c) the potential intervener has a higher demand for oil
2010 Lewis Fry Richardson Lifetime Achievement Award: Ron P. Smith and the Economics of War and Peace
Ron P. Smith is the winner of the 2010 Lewis Fry Richardson Lifetime Achievement Award, which honours exemplary scholarly contributions to the scientific study of militarized conflict by researchers based in Europe for most of their career. This essay summarizes Smith’s scholarly achievements. Smith’s research shows how economic analysis can be helpful to analyse peace and security issues, very much in the spirit of Richardson’s efforts to use scientific methods to study war and peace.</jats:p
Retool AI to forecast and limit wars
Using artificial intelligence to predict outbursts of violence and probe their causes could save lives, argue Weisi Guo, Kristian Gleditsch and Alan Wilson
Replication data for: Spatial Regression Models
This archive contains R code and replication data for examples in Michael Ward and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch. 2008. Spatial Regression Models. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Replication data for: Spatial Regression Models
This archive contains R code and replication data for examples in Michael Ward and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch. 2008. Spatial Regression Models. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
sj-pdf-1-ejt-10.1177_13540661221143213 – Supplemental material for Clouds with silver linings: how mobilization shapes the impact of coups on democratization
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-ejt-10.1177_13540661221143213 for Clouds with silver linings: how mobilization shapes the impact of coups on democratization by Marianne Dahl and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch in European Journal of International Relations</p
The Geography of the International System: The CShapes Dataset
Replication data for Weidmann, Nils B., Doreen Kuse and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch (2010) The Geography of the International System: The CShapes Dataset. International Interactions 36 (1)
Blame the victims? Refugees, state capacity, and non-state actor violence
Existing research argues that refugee inflows may increase the risk of domestic conflict, particularly civil war that, by definition, involves the state as an actor. However, many of the postulated mechanisms linking refugees to a higher risk of such conflict pertain to tensions with locals, which do not necessarily involve any grievances against government authorities. We contend that it is more likely to identify an association between refugees and non-state actor violence, i.e., armed violence between organized non-state groups, neither of which pertains to the state. We also claim that the extent to which refugees are associated with a higher likelihood of non-state conflict depends on the capacity of governments to manage and mitigate risks. We report evidence that refugee populations can be linked to an increased risk of non-state conflict, as well as for a mitigating effect of state capacity on the risk of non-state conflicts in the presence of refugees. We do not find a clear effect of refugee populations on civil war, suggesting that the link depends on existing conflict cleavages relevant to mobilizing refugees or locals. Our research helps to shed light on the relevant security consequences of managing refugee populations. Despite the common arguments portraying refugees as security risks in developed countries, the risk of non-state conflict applies primarily to weak states that have been forced to shoulder a disproportionate burden in hosting refugees
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