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Predatory Government and the Feasibility of Rebellion: A Micro Logic of the Capitalist Peace

de Soysa, Indra
Chapter
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OHPR_draft1.docx (83.95Kb)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2496493
Date
2016
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  • Institutt for sosiologi og statsvitenskap [3022]
  • Publikasjoner fra CRIStin - NTNU [41955]
Original version
10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.219
Abstract
The idea that civil war has to be feasible to occur, and that feasibility is largely a function of the availability of lootable income has gained wide acceptance in the specialized literature on civil war. A parallel debate exists on whether or not liberal, capitalist economies produce a lower risk of domestic conflict. A micro logic for why capitalist economies are less likely to break down in armed conflict is offered to bridge these two literatures. It argues that autarchic economic policies often associated with predatory states drive investment in the shadows for capturing rents from market-constraining policies. The survivability of groups is based on infrastructures of violence and escape rather than simply the availability of lootable income. Free-market economies are far less likely to generate investment in this form of rebellion-specific capital that ultimately facilitates an open challenge of predatory states. Such a view of conflict is able to reconcile why internal conflicts last long, how narratives of greed and grievance coexist in conflict zones, why dominant state forces fail to stamp out insurgency, and why autarchic states are highly militarized. Any theory focused on grabbing to explain the onset of conflict should endogenize the causes of survivability, which ultimately determines how many battle deaths get generated to meet the threshold for becoming a civil war.
Publisher
Oxford University Press

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