Varieties of post-civil war violence

Author:

Shaw Daniel Odin1ORCID,Young Enrique Wedgwood1

Affiliation:

1. The University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK

Abstract

Quantitative research on the “durability” of peace following civil wars typically captures the breakdown or survival of “peace” in a binary manner, equating it with the presence or absence of civil war recurrence. In the datasets that underpin such studies, years that do not experience full-scale civil war are implicitly coded as “peaceful.” Yet, post-civil war environments may remain free from war recurrence, while nevertheless experiencing endemic violent crime, state repression, low-intensity political violence, and systematic violence against marginalized groups, all of which are incongruent with the concept of peace. Approaches to assessing post-civil war outcomes which focus exclusively on civil war recurrence risk overestimating the “durability” of peace, implicitly designating as “peaceful” a range of environments which may be anything but. In this article, we discuss the heterogeneity of violent post-civil war outcomes and develop a typology of “varieties of post-civil war violence.” Our typology contributes to the study of post-civil war peace durability, by serving as the basis for an alternative, categorical conceptualization of “peace years” in conflict datasets.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference106 articles.

1. ‘No peace, no war’ proponents? How pro-regime militias affect civil war termination and outcomes

2. Civil war recurrence and postwar violence: Toward an integrated research agenda

3. Belo D, Carment D (2019) Grey-zone conflict: Implications for conflict management. Canadian Global Affairs Institute. Available at: https://www.cgai.ca/grey_zone_conflict_implications_for_conflict_management (accessed on 22 June 2020).

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