Assessing authoritarian conflict management in the Middle East and Central Asia

IF 1.1 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Conflict Security & Development Pub Date : 2021-05-04 DOI:10.1080/14678802.2021.1940011
M. Keen
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT Authoritarian conflict management (ACM), conceptualised by Lewis et al. (2018), is an analytical framework aimed at understanding how authoritarian regimes respond to violent domestic challenges in ways that reject liberal conflict resolution practices that have emerged since the 1990s. Operationally, the authors define ACM as having three pillars: discursive control, spatial control and authoritarian political economic practices. Quantitative methods have not yet been broadly applied to ACM. This study quantitatively examines violent intrastate conflict in the Middle East and Central Asia to test several assumptions undergirding ACM, namely ACM’s prevalence over time and impact on governments’ ability to garner external support in domestic conflicts. I find that regimes in these regions deployed full ACM in fewer than half of cases, and the prevalence of ACM has not increased over time. Discursive and spatial control practices were employed more frequently than authoritarian political economic interventions. Finally, regimes that deployed full ACM were more likely than regimes that did not to have received external authoritarian support; no such difference was observed vis-à-vis support from external non-authoritarian countries.
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评估中东和中亚的威权冲突管理
由Lewis等人(2018)提出的威权冲突管理(ACM)是一个分析框架,旨在理解威权政权如何以拒绝自20世纪90年代以来出现的自由冲突解决实践的方式应对国内暴力挑战。在操作上,作者将ACM定义为有三个支柱:话语控制,空间控制和专制的政治经济实践。定量方法尚未广泛应用于ACM。本研究定量考察了中东和中亚的国内暴力冲突,以检验支撑ACM的几个假设,即ACM随时间的普遍性以及对政府在国内冲突中获得外部支持的能力的影响。我发现这些地区的制度在不到一半的病例中部署了完整的ACM,并且ACM的流行并没有随着时间的推移而增加。话语和空间控制实践比专制的政治经济干预更频繁地被采用。最后,与没有得到外部威权主义支持的政权相比,部署了全面ACM的政权更有可能获得外部威权主义支持;对于外部非威权国家-à-vis的支持,没有观察到这种差异。
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来源期刊
Conflict Security & Development
Conflict Security & Development INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
7.70%
发文量
22
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