民族内战中的身份让步:何时给予?和平的结果如何?

IF 3.4 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Journal of Peace Research Pub Date : 2024-12-31 DOI:10.1177/00223433241289813
Lesley-Ann Daniels
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引用次数: 0

摘要

创造稳定的和平现在是解决结束内战的关键难题。迄今为止,研究主要集中在和平协议中包含的“硬”政治和军事改革,而“软”让步的影响,如语言权利、文化权利或宗教权利,在很大程度上被忽视了。国家什么时候做出这些让步,它们对和平结果有影响吗?这篇文章认为,国家给予这些让步是为了淡化少数民族的不满和容纳少数民族,绕过了政治要求,但在战略上给予了政治上弱势的少数民族。让步通过对接受群体的表达性、划界性和关系性影响产生影响。这篇文章使用了身份让步的原始数据来比较1989年至2013年以和平协议结束的种族冲突。调查结果显示,缺乏政治权力的较大民族群体得到了让步。如果得到批准,身份上的让步只会使和平在得到充分实施时更加持久。因此,这篇文章对不满情绪在内战中的作用和解决国内冲突作出了新的贡献。
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Identity concessions in ethnic civil wars: When are they given and with what outcomes for peace?
Creating a stable peace is now the key puzzle to resolve in ending civil wars. To date, research has focused on ‘hard’ political and military reforms included in peace agreements, and the impact of ‘soft’ concessions such as language rights, cultural rights or the right to religion have been largely ignored. When do states give these concessions and do they make a difference to peace outcomes? The article argues that the state grants these concessions to dilute ethnic grievances and accommodate the group, bypassing political demands, but gives them strategically to ethnic groups that are politically weak. The concessions have effects through the expressive, demarcating and relational impacts on the receiving group. The article uses original data on identity concessions in a comparison of conflicts with ethnic aims that ended in a peace agreement from 1989 to 2013. The findings show that concessions are given to larger ethnic groups that lack political power. If granted, identity concessions only make peace more durable when fully implemented. The article thus brings a novel contribution to the role of grievances in civil wars and to the settlement of civil conflicts.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
5.60%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: Journal of Peace Research is an interdisciplinary and international peer reviewed bimonthly journal of scholarly work in peace research. Edited at the International Peace Research Institute, Oslo (PRIO), by an international editorial committee, Journal of Peace Research strives for a global focus on conflict and peacemaking. From its establishment in 1964, authors from over 50 countries have published in JPR. The Journal encourages a wide conception of peace, but focuses on the causes of violence and conflict resolution. Without sacrificing the requirements for theoretical rigour and methodological sophistication, articles directed towards ways and means of peace are favoured.
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