Affiliation:
1. Department of International Affairs The University of
Georgia Athens, Georgia, USA,
Abstract
A rarely explored subset of territorial disputes is that of domestic-level territorial disputes. In such a dispute, a substate group disagrees with the country's central government over whether the government should have sovereign control over the entire territory of the state; that is, the dissatisfied group is demanding independence. If the independence-minded group prevails, new boundaries and states are created through a territorial change known as secession. This study explores secession's track record (i.e., how often secessions have been successful in resolving the underlying territorial disputes) and reasons why some secessions are followed by militarized conflict over the new boundary. The results—based on an examination of the aftermath of all twentieth century secessions and the application of more sensitive criteria than those used in prior research—reveal that while most secessions leave unresolved territorial disputes in their wake, these disputes are not particularly prone to escalate into militarized confrontations. Moreover, intangibly (i.e., ethnically) based disagreements over the new boundary play a much greater role in militarized conflict onset than do tangibly (i.e., economically or strategically) based territorial disputes. Finally, contrary to expectations from the ethnic secession literature, peaceful secessions significantly decrease the likelihood that the new boundary will be contested militarily.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Economics and Econometrics
Cited by
10 articles.
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1. The Russian Minorities in the Former Soviet Republics;ROUTL CONTEMP RUSS E;2021-11-26
2. Introduction;The Russian Minorities in the Former Soviet Republics;2021-11-26
3. Bringing land-for-peace in the study of de facto states;De Facto States and Land-for-Peace Agreements;2021-11-15
4. Territorial aspects of conflict settlements and the recognition conundrum;De Facto States and Land-for-Peace Agreements;2021-11-15
5. Unraveling Secessions;Journal of Conflict Resolution;2018-09-04