Civil war and natural resources: a quantitative approach

Date

2009-01-12T21:06:43Z

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

This study is an effort to shed some light on the causes of civil war. The literature on civil war onset has been framed under three main perspectives: cultural, political and economic approaches. Recent studies, however, tend to narrow the debate and posit explanations for civil war as either greed-motivated or grievance-motivated. This study replicates one of the most prominent econometric models on civil war, the Collier and Hoeffler model (CH), and further validated their economic interpretation of civil war as greed-motivated. Their argument is that greed-led behavior is motivated by an abundance of valuable resources. However, Collier and Hoeffler overlooked one critical element: scarce resources also contribute to discontent and violent protests. This study suggests that the CH model should include resource scarcity to avoid omitting variable bias.

Description

Keywords

civil war, natural resources, collier-hoeffler model, resource abundance, resource scarcity

Graduation Month

May

Degree

Master of Arts

Department

Department of Political Science

Major Professor

Emizet F. Kisangani

Date

2009

Type

Thesis

Citation