Combining Civil and Interstate Wars
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Cunningham, David & Douglas Lemke (2013) Combining Civil and Interstate Wars, International Organization 67(3): 609–627.
Download Reviewed, pre-typeset version
.pdf
This is the Reviewed, pre-typeset version of the article. The final, definitive version can be found at the journal’s website. This publication may be subject to copyright: please visit the publisher’s website for details. All rights reserved.
Quantitative studies of conflict analyze either civil or interstate war. While there may be observable differences between civil and interstate wars, theories of conflict focus on phenomena—such as information asymmetries, commitment problems, and issue divisibility—that should explain both conflicts within and between states. In analyses of conflict onset, duration, and outcome combining civil and interstate wars, we find most variables have similar effects on both “types” of war. We thus question whether there is any justification for separate study of war types.
Read the article here