Globalisering

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Jan 1999 - Aug 2002
The project aims to study the interaction between globalization and violent political conflict. More precisely, it aims to see how increased interaction between countries directly and indirectly affects the conditions for the initiation of group conflict and of interstate conflict. Theoretically, the projects contrasts rational-choice/micro-economic models from the liberal tradition with theories and models that stress structural constraints and processes, at the systemic level as well as at the domestic level. For internal conflict, the project sees the following variables in relation to conflict: trade and investment, economic development and income inequality, and political system. For interstate conflict, interstate trade, economic development, political system, and inequality of development are the relevant variables. Empirically, the study will make use of multi-equation models to analyze time-series for a wide range of countries.

Members

Publications

Peer-reviewed Journal Article

Hegre, Håvard (2000) Development and the Liberal Peace. What Does It Take to be a Trading State?, Journal of Peace Research 37(1): 5–30.

PhD Thesis

Hegre, Håvard (1999) The Limits of the Liberal Peace. PhD thesis, Oslo.

Conference Paper

Hegre, Håvard (2001) Trade, Size Asymmetry, and Militarized Conflict, presented at The 97th Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Fransisco, CA, 30 August.
Hegre, Håvard (2001) Trade as a War Deterrent, presented at 9th National Conference in Political Science, Klekken, 12 January.