Resolving Civil Wars Before they Start: The United Nations Security Council and Conflict Prevention
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Beardsley, Kyle; David Cunningham & Peter B. White (2017) Resolving Civil Wars Before they Start: The United Nations Security Council and Conflict Prevention, British Journal of Political Science 47(3): 675–697.
A large literature has demonstrated that international action can
promote the resolution of civil wars. However, international actors do
not wait until violence starts to seek to manage conflicts. This article
considers the ways in which the United Nations Security Council (UNSC)
reduces the propensity for self-determination movements to escalate to
civil war, through actions that directly pertain to the disputing actors
or that indirectly shape actor incentives. It examines the relationship
between the content of UNSC resolutions in all self-determination
disputes from 1960 to 2005 and the onset of armed conflict in the
disputes. The study finds that diplomatic actions that directly address
disputes reduce the likelihood of armed conflict, and that military
force and sanctions have more indirect preventive effects.
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Authors
Assistant Professor of Political Science at Emory University