Affiliation:
1. Center for Security Studies, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
2. Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway
3. University of Oslo, Norway; Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway
Abstract
Ceasefires are common in civil conflict. Yet we have surprisingly little comparative analysis of why and under what conditions they occur. A ceasefire provides temporary relief from the costs of conflict, but also generates its own costs. Building on this logic, we argue that conflict parties are more likely to accept the costs associated with a ceasefire when the conflict costs are greater, in particular, when: violence is intense; there are higher levels of ‘collateral damage’; and the parties lack international support. Second, we contend that ceasefires are also more likely in those periods in which the audience costs associated with entering into an arrangement are lower, specifically, when the parties have some form of ‘political cover’, such as during mediation. We find support for both arguments in an analysis of a new dataset capturing all ceasefire in civil conflict from 1989-2020, using a series of dyad fixed effect models.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,General Business, Management and Accounting
Cited by
2 articles.
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