TY - JOUR
T1 - Territorial arrangements and ethnic conflict management: The paradox that isn’t
AU - Neudorfer, Natascha S.
AU - Theuerkauf, Ulrike G.
AU - Wolff, Stefan
N1 - Funding information: Stefan Wolff and Natascha Neudorfer would like to thank the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) for their generous funding.
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - Ethnic civil war, the most common type of war in the 21st century, is one of the biggest challenges for development practitioners and scholars. Like other types of armed conflict, it impedes countries’ economic, social and political development, and there is no consensus on how ‘best’ to solve it. Territorial self-governance has received much attention in efforts to reduce the risk of ethnic civil war, but the academic and policy debates over its effects remain inconclusive. This has reinforced the notion that territorial self-governance is a ‘paradoxical’ institution, which either increases or mitigates the risk of ethnic civil war. In this article, we argue that claims of a ‘paradox’ of territorial self-governance are exaggerated, as they stem from differences in empirical operationalization. We present a systematic overview of the underlying definitions, geographic and temporal scope of quantitative indicators from ten datasets, and compare how they capture aspects of self-rule, shared rule and their legal codification. Using a series of binary time-series-cross-section analyses, we illustrate that different measures of territorial arrangements lead to different results, both regarding the significance and direction of statistical effects. Our findings highlight the need to pay greater attention to the deceptively simple yet empirically fundamental question of which data are being used and why.
AB - Ethnic civil war, the most common type of war in the 21st century, is one of the biggest challenges for development practitioners and scholars. Like other types of armed conflict, it impedes countries’ economic, social and political development, and there is no consensus on how ‘best’ to solve it. Territorial self-governance has received much attention in efforts to reduce the risk of ethnic civil war, but the academic and policy debates over its effects remain inconclusive. This has reinforced the notion that territorial self-governance is a ‘paradoxical’ institution, which either increases or mitigates the risk of ethnic civil war. In this article, we argue that claims of a ‘paradox’ of territorial self-governance are exaggerated, as they stem from differences in empirical operationalization. We present a systematic overview of the underlying definitions, geographic and temporal scope of quantitative indicators from ten datasets, and compare how they capture aspects of self-rule, shared rule and their legal codification. Using a series of binary time-series-cross-section analyses, we illustrate that different measures of territorial arrangements lead to different results, both regarding the significance and direction of statistical effects. Our findings highlight the need to pay greater attention to the deceptively simple yet empirically fundamental question of which data are being used and why.
KW - Decentralisation
KW - Ethnic civil war
KW - Ethnic conflict management
KW - Measurement
KW - Regional authority
KW - Territorial self-governance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85207721856&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.worlddev.2024.106812
DO - 10.1016/j.worlddev.2024.106812
M3 - Article
SN - 0305-750X
VL - 185
JO - World Development
JF - World Development
M1 - 106812
ER -