Please Help Us (or Don’t): External Interventions and Negotiated Settlements in Civil Conflicts

Author:

McKibben Heather Elko1ORCID,Skoll Amy1

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Davis, CA, USA

Abstract

How do different types of external intervention affect the likelihood of a negotiated settlement in civil conflicts? Drawing on the negotiation literature, which shows that the nature of the parties’ “best alternative to a negotiated agreement (BATNA)” influences the bargaining process between them, we argue different types of intervention affect governments’ and rebel groups’ BATNAs in different ways. This, in turn, affects the likelihood of a negotiated settlement. To test this argument, we address the fact that interventions are nonrandom, and that characteristics of civil conflicts that lead to different types of intervention also influence the likelihood of a negotiated settlement. We therefore use a two-stage statistical model. The first stage predicts the likelihood of different types of intervention, and drawing on those results, the second stage analyzes the likelihood of a negotiated settlement. The results provide insights into how different types of intervention affect civil conflict outcomes.

Funder

university of california

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,General Business, Management and Accounting

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3. Turning the Tables: Military Intervention and the Onset of Negotiations in Civil War;Journal of Conflict Resolution;2023-07-26

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