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Centre for the Study of African Economies Development and Security Anke Hoeffler Centre for the Study of African Economies Department of Economics, University of Oxford
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Conflicts: Global Prevalence
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Conflicts: Global Prevalence
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Conflict and War: Global Prevalence
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Civil War Research OnsetDurationPost-War
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Collier-Hoeffler Model of Civil War Aim: model and estimate what factors make a country more prone to large scale violent internal conflict Method: regression analysis Collier and Hoeffler, 2004
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Explanations of Civil War Onset Economics Political Science Sociology History Geography Demography risk = f(history, economy, sociology...)
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Conclusions Little evidence for grievances as a sufficient determinant of conflict Economic factors are important (level, growth and structure of income, sources of finance) Past conflict makes a country more conflict prone
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Natural Resources and the Risk of Civil War C&H: Countries with natural resources are more conflict prone risk natural resources
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Interpretation: Civil war? – recruit and maintain private army Finance? - natural resources Examples: drugs, diamonds, timber
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Measurement of Natural Resources Natural resource exports as a % of GDP Point/diffuse natural resources Dummy variable (e.g. oil exporter) Natural resource rents (price-cost) Stock of natural resources
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Where is the Wealth of Nations? Data source: World Bank (2006) and own calculations Region Subsoil assets/km2 (in USD) World105,000 Africa23,000 South Asia53,000 LAC95,000 MENA361,000 East Asia&Pacific77,000 ECA93,000 OECD114,000
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Possible Interpretations: Finance Lujala et al Honey Pot Humphreys 2005, Neumeyer&de Soysa Weak state capacity Fearon&Laitin 2003, Sachs&Warner 2007, Collier&Hoeffler 2009
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Summary of the Evidence: Evidence that natural resource rich countries are conflict prone Measurement issues Results difficult to interpret, endogeneity and simultaneity problems Transmission channels from natural resources to civil war risk are diverse
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Ecoviolence? Does natural resource scarcity cause violence? No current evidence for ‘ecowars’ Gleditsch, 1989; de Soysa, 2002 Little evidence that climate change will cause more wars Hendrix&Glaser, 2007
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Duration of War Duration is not determined by the same variables as the initiation An increase in natural resource prices tends to increase the duration of war
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Post-Conflict Challenges Economic Recovery Risk Reduction
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Economic Recovery Is there a peace dividend? Does aid increase growth post-conflict? Does policy improve growth post-conflict?
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Empirical Analysis of Post-Conflict Societies Peace dividend, about 1.1% extra growth 3-7 years during post conflict aid increases growth Traditionally this is not what donors have done Particularly sensitive to improvements in social policies
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Post Conflict Risks 68 post-conflict episodes 46% of cases recurrence of war 40% of cases recurrence within a decade
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Statistical Results There is no safe period during the decade Growth is important, stagnant economies 42% risk,10% income growth 26.9% risk Elections shift the risk, lower in election year, higher after, subsequent elections don’t have a different effect to first elections PK force absolute not relative size matters (deterrence) Doubling expenditure reduces risk from 40% to 31%
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Concluding Comments Correlation/causation? Evidence that countries rich in natural resources are at higher risk of war Finance, honey pot, weak state capacity Kimberley Process Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Resource Charter
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Centre for the Study of African Economies International Initiatives EITI http://eitransparency.org/ Kimberley Process http://www.kimberleyprocess.com/ The Natural Resource Charter http://www.naturalresourcecharter.org/
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Bibliography Civil War Collier, Paul and Anke Hoeffler. 2004. Greed and grievance in civil wars, Oxford Economic Papers 56:663–595. Collier, Paul, Anke Hoeffler and Dominic Rohner. 2009. Beyond Greed and Grievance: Feasibility and Civil War. Oxford Economic Papers 61: 1-27. Collier, Paul, Hoeffler, Anke and Måns Söderbom. 2004. On the Duration of Civil War. Journal of Peace Research 41(3): 253-273. Collier, Paul, Lance Elliot, Håvard Hegre, Anke Hoeffler, Marta Reynal-Querol and Nicholas Sambanis. 2003. Breaking the Conflict Trap: Civil War and Development Policy, World Bank Policy Research Report. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Fearon, James and David Laitin. 2003. Ethnicity, insurgency, and civil war, American Political Science Review 97:75– 90. Hegre, Hårvard, Tanja Ellingsen, Scott Gates and Nils Petter Gleditsch. 2001. Towards a democratic civil peace? American Political Science Review 95:33–48. Miguel, E., S. Satyanath and E. Sergenti (2004), Economic shocks and civil conflict: An instrumental variables approach, Journal of Political Economy 112:725–753. Natural Resources and Development Auty, Richard. 2001. Resource abundance and economic development. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Collier, Paul. 2008. The Bottom Billion: Why the poorest countries are failing and what can be done about it. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Isham, Jonathan, Woolcock, Michael, Pritchett, Lant and Gwen Busby. 2005. The Varieties of Resource Experience: Natural Resource Export Structures and the Political Economy of Economic Growth. World Bank Economic Review 19(2): 141-174. Sachs, Jeffrey and Andrew M. Warner. 2000. ‘Natural Resource Abundance and Economic Growth’. In Leading Issues in Economic Development, 7 th ed. G.M. Meier and J.E. Rauch, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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Centre for the Study of African Economies Bibliography continued Civil War and Natural Resources le Billon, Philippe. 2001. The political ecology of war: natural resources and armed conflicts. Political Geography 20: 561–584. Collier, Paul and Anke Hoeffler. 2005. Resource Rents, Governance, and Conflict, Journal of Conflict Resolution 49: 625 - 633. Dube, Oeindrila and Juan F. Vargas. 2006. Are All Resources Cursed? Coffee, Oil, and Armed Conflict in Colombia. Weatherhead Center of International Affairs, Harvard University, Working Paper 07-01. Fearon, James. 2005. Primary commodities exports and civil war. Journal of Conflict Resolution 49 (4): 483-507. Gleditsch, Nils Petter. 1998. Armed conflict and the environment: a critique of the literature. Journal of Peace Research 35(5): 381-400. Hendrix, Cullen and Sarah M. Glaser. 2007. Trends and triggers: Climate, climate change and civil conflict in Sub- Saharan Africa. Political Geography 26: 695-715. Homer-Dixon, Thomas. 1999. Environment, scarcity, and violence. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Humphreys, Macartan. 2005. Natural resources, conflict, and conflict resolution: Uncovering the mechanisms. Journal of Conflict Resolution 49 (4): 508-37. Lujala, Paivi, Nils Petter Gleditsch and Elizabeth Gilmore. 2005. A diamond curse? Civil war and a lootable resource. Journal of Conflict Resolution 49:538–562. Oyefusi, Aderoju. 2008. Oil and the Probability of Rebel Participation among Youths in the Niger Delta of Nigeria. Journal of Peace Research 45(4):539-555. Ross, Michael L. 2004. What Do We Know about Natural Resources and Civil War? Journal of Peace Research 41: 337-56. de Soysa, Indra. 2002. Ecoviolence: shrinking pie, or honey pot? Global Environmental Politics 2(4): 1-34. de Soysa, Indra and Eric Neumayer. 2007. Natural Resource Wealth and the Risk of Civil War Onset: Results from a new dataset of natural resource rents 1970-1999.Conflict Management and Peace Science 24: 201-218. Weinstein, Jeremy M. 2005. Resources and the Information Problem in Rebel Recruitment. Journal of Conflict Resolution 49: 598-624.
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