Catastrophes, confrontations, and constraints how disasters shape the dynamics of armed conflicts
A ground-breaking study on how natural disasters can escalate or defuse wars, insurgencies, and other strife. Armed conflict and disasters are two key challenges of the twenty-first century. The number of armed conflicts has never been higher since the end of World War II. At the same time, disaster...
Otros Autores: | |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge :
The MIT Press
2023
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Edición: | 1st ed |
Colección: | The MIT Press
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Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009762702206719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Setting the Foundation: Disasters and Conflicts
- Why Study Disasters and Armed Conflicts?
- The Emergence of Disaster-Conflict Research
- State of Knowledge
- Contributions of This Study
- Goal, Definitions, and Plan
- 2. After the Disaster: Motives, Strategies, and Incentives for Conflict (De-)escalation
- Grievances
- Solidarity
- Opportunity
- Constraints
- Costly Signal
- Image Cultivation
- Summary
- 3. Cases, Conditions, and Qualitative Comparative Analysis
- Sample of Cases
- Data Collection and Analysis
- Causal Conditions and Theoretical Expectations
- 4. Disasters and Armed Conflict Dynamics: Evidence from 36 Cases
- Cases of Conflict Escalation after Disasters
- Bangladesh 1991: The Chittagong Hill Conflict after Cyclone Gorky
- Colombia 1999: Shaking Grounds, Shaking the Peace Process?
- Egypt 1994: Floods, Fire, and Fury
- India (Andhra Pradesh and Orissa) 1999: The Cyclone as an Opportunity for Naxalite Insurgents
- India (Assam) 1998: Floods, Recruitment Opportunities, and Conflict Persistence
- Philippines 1990: Earthquake-Related Opportunities for Both Sides
- Sri Lanka 2004: Wave of Violence?
- Tajikistan 1992: Independence, Civil War, and Floods
- Uganda 1999-2001: Drought, Food Insecurity, and Raids
- Cases of Conflict De-escalation after Disasters
- Bangladesh 2007: Cyclone Sidr and the Maoist Insurgency
- Burundi 2005-2006: Drought, Democratization, and the Peace Process
- India (Kashmir) 2005: Cross-Border Constraints in the Face of an Earthquake
- Indonesia 2004: Wave of Peace?
- Myanmar 2008: The Karen Conflict after Cyclone Nargis
- Pakistan 2010: Floods Facilitating Conflict De-escalation
- Somalia 1997: Flood in the Midst of Chaos
- Somalia 2010-2011: Drought and Famine in a Fragile Country.
- Turkey 1999: Öcalan's Capture, the Marmara Earthquake, and the PKK's Cease-Fire
- Cases with No Disaster Impact on Conflict Dynamics
- Afghanistan 1998: Remote Earthquakes Did Not Shape Conflict Dynamics
- Afghanistan 2008: Freezing the Conflict?
- Algeria 2003: Grievances and Opportunities after the Boumerdès Earthquake
- India (Assam) 2007: The ULFA's Inability to Exploit Flood-Related Opportunities
- Indonesia 1992: No Link between the Flores Earthquake and the East Timor Conflict
- Indonesia 2006: Disaster in Yogyarkata, De-escalation in Aceh?
- Iran 1990: The Kurdish Struggle after the Manjil-Rudbar Earthquake
- Iran 1997: The MEK Insurgency and the Qayen Earthquake
- Nepal 1996: Correlation but No Causation between Floods and Armed Conflict Escalation
- Pakistan 2005: Escalation after, but Not Related to the Kashmir Earthquake
- Pakistan 2015: Turning On the Heat, Turning Off the Conflict?
- Peru 2007: High-Intensity Earthquake, Low-Intensity Conflict
- Philippines 1991: Storm, Flood, and Conflict De-escalation
- Philippines 2013: Super Typhoon, but Few Conflict Implications
- Philippines 2012: No Link between Typhoon and Conflict Escalation
- Russia 1995: The Sakhalin Earthquake and the Conflict in Chechnya-Too Far Apart
- Russia 2010: Triple Disaster Not Linked to Conflict De-escalation
- Thailand 2004: Tsunami and Conflict Escalation-Correlation but No Causation
- Summary
- 5. Armed Conflicts in the Aftermath of Disasters: Key Findings
- General Findings and Their Implications
- Armed Conflict Escalation, De-escalation, and Continuation
- Motive
- Strategy
- Communication
- Disaster Types and Conflict Dynamics
- When Do Disasters Have an Impact on Conflict Dynamics?
- Escalation or De-escalation after a Disaster?
- Summary
- 6. Conflict Implications of the COVID-19 Pandemic
- The COVID-19 Disaster.
- The Islamic State Conflict in Iraq
- The Taliban Conflict in Afghanistan
- The Boko Haram Insurgency in Nigeria
- The Conflict between the CPP/NPA and the Philippine Government
- Discussion
- 7. Conclusion
- Key Findings and Their Implications
- Where Is the Future?
- Lessons for Practice and Policy
- Final Considerations
- References
- Index.