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Understanding Intrastate Wars: Causes, Types, and Differences from Interstate Conflicts

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This analysis explores the complexities of intrastate wars, examining their causes, types, and distinctions from interstate conflicts. It highlights various forms of internal conflict, such as civil wars, revolutions, and genocides, while discussing the motivations and support systems behind these wars. The study considers both traditional and contemporary intrastate conflicts, addressing factors like socio-economic grievances, ethnocultural identities, geographic influences, and the role of elites. The implications for state stability and democratization efforts are also discussed, along with international contexts affecting intrastate wars.

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Understanding Intrastate Wars: Causes, Types, and Differences from Interstate Conflicts

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  1. GV 506-week 7 Types of intrastate wars Causes of intrastate wars Are intrastate wars fundamentally different from interstate wars?

  2. Types of Intrastate Conflict • Internal Conflict • Revolutions • Civil War • Ethnic/Religious • Genocides • Regime Transitions • Are any differences between old and new intrastate wars? • Position 1: differences in motivation, support, goals • old wars: ideological (high-minded patriots), mass support, controlled violence and collective grievances • new wars: criminal (private loot), no popular support, extreme violence • Position 2: no qualitatively difference • Locally based cleavages and networks, motivation at the group level (camaraderie, following leaders) • Levels of violence have not changed; violence strategic and controlled

  3. Causes of Intrastate Conflicts (1) • Internal processes: modernization, development • Collective disadvantages (grievances) • Salience of ethnocultural identity—collective fear • Weak states • Viability of rebel organizations • The impact of geography and history (poverty trap) • Rough terrain • Large populations-territorial concentration • Pre-existing organizations • Ethnic composition: Conditions under which it matters.

  4. Factors that contribute to failed states • Quasi states—failed states • Transfer of military technology • Groups with access to local provisions/resources • Single commodity economy • Long-term power struggles among political factions • **Low levels of development and low state capacity** • Is democratization the solution to the problem? If yes under what conditions?

  5. International context of intrastate wars (2) • Diffusion effects from neighboring countries • Bad neighborhoods • Bad neighbors • Diasporas

  6. Elites and Leaders • The role of elites • Ideological conflicts • Power Struggles—opportunistic behavior • Criminal Activities

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