2010
DOI: 10.1177/0022343310362293
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Political opportunity structures, democracy, and civil war

Abstract: Theories of mobilization suggest that groups are more likely to resort to violence in the presence of political opportunity structures that afford greater prospects for extracting concessions from the government or better opportunities to topple ruling governments. However, existing efforts to consider the possible influences of political opportunity structures on incentives for violence and civil war empirically have almost invariably relied upon measures of democracy to proxy for the hypothesized mechanisms,… Show more

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Cited by 158 publications
(91 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(46 reference statements)
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“…Similar to other findings, it is then not the case that PGMs are only a security type that can be found in autocratic regimes, but exist across all different forms of government (Carey, Colaresi and Mitchell, 2015; Vreeland, 2008). Similarly, Gleditsch and Ruggeri (2010) outline a number of problems with measures of democracy as proxies for political opportunity structures (see also Hegre, 2014), and Bell (2016) andHill Jr (2016) show that focusing on disaggregated, sub-components of democracy may reveal new findings in the context of coups and human rights, respectively.…”
supporting
confidence: 63%
“…Similar to other findings, it is then not the case that PGMs are only a security type that can be found in autocratic regimes, but exist across all different forms of government (Carey, Colaresi and Mitchell, 2015; Vreeland, 2008). Similarly, Gleditsch and Ruggeri (2010) outline a number of problems with measures of democracy as proxies for political opportunity structures (see also Hegre, 2014), and Bell (2016) andHill Jr (2016) show that focusing on disaggregated, sub-components of democracy may reveal new findings in the context of coups and human rights, respectively.…”
supporting
confidence: 63%
“…Fearon & Laitin (2003: 85) interpret the inverted-U finding for internal conflicts as due not to the institutional characteristics themselves, but to an underlying conflict over the setup of the system: '''anocracies'' are weak regimes, lacking the resources to be successful autocrats or containing an unstable mix of political forces that makes them unable to move to crush nascent rebel groups'. This interpretation is supported by Gleditsch & Ruggeri (2010). Their proxy of instability (a variable recording recent irregular transitions of power) is associated with a high risk of conflict onset.…”
Section: What Drives Democratization and Peace?mentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Our measures are generally similar to those used by Buhaug et al, but we recollect a new data 8 See, e.g., Gleditsch & Ruggeri (2010) on opportunity structures and civil war onset.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%