The Liberal Peace Argument in the Middle East - Ali in Wonderland or Crude (Oil) Reality?
Conference Paper
Sørli, Mirjam E. (2001) The Liberal Peace Argument in the Middle East - Ali in Wonderland or Crude (Oil) Reality?, presented at ECPR's Standing Group on International Relations fourth pan-European conference, Canterbury, U.K., 1 September.
The liberal peace argument makes a strong case for its theoretical argument and empirical findings
that democracy and economic development are conducive to peace. However, little attention has been paid to
Middle East peace and conflict from this perspective. Based on theory and empirical studies from the liberal
peace tradition, this study looks into the correlates of conflict in the Middle East and compares them to their
global counterparts. Research on resource dependent states show that oil has been more a curse than a blessing,
both when it comes to economic development and democratization. Has this exceptional blend of circumstances
also created a unique Middle Eastern recipe for conflict? Using international and domestic conflict as the
independent variable, simple bivariate and logistic regression analysis is used to examine the correlation
between interstate and intrastate armed conflict and the independent variables regimetype, economic
development, trade, oil export, military expenditures and religion. Due to the study's limited time-period and
number of observations, the findings were few. However, economic development recurred as a strong and
consistent variable positively related to peace. Countries with a high level of oil-export were at a higher risk of
being involved in conflict. More accountable and liberal Middle Eastern regimes would be of central importance
to the region’s stability. Nevertheless, the emergence of a Middle Eastern liberal peace, on both dyadic, national
and interstate levels, belongs to the realm of the optimistic future.
Authors
CSCW Assistant / Researcher