PRIO Network

Book Chapter
Towards a Democratic Civil Peace
Hegre, Håvard;Gates, Scott;Ellingsen, Tanja; & Gleditsch, Nils Petter(2005) Towards a Democratic Civil Peace War. Library of International Relations. : (165–193).

Coherent democracies and harshly authoritarian states have few civil wars, and intermediate regimes are the most conflict-prone. Domestic violence also seems to be associated with political change,whether toward greater democracy or greater autocracy. Is the greater violence of intermediate regimes equivalent to the finding that states in political transition experience more violence? If both level of democracy and political change are relevant, to what extent is civil violence related to each? Based on an analysis of the period 1816–1992, we conclude that intermediate regimes are most prone to civil war, even when they have had time to stabilize from a regime change. In the long run, since intermediate regimes are less stable than autocracies, which in turn are less stable than democracies, durable democracy is the most probable end-point of the democratization process. The democratic civil peace is not only more just than the autocratic peace but also more stable.

Tanja Ellingsen

Associate Professor of Political Science, NTNU

22547700
tanja.ellingsen@svt.ntnu.no

Scott Gates

Scott Gates

Research Professor / Director, Centre for the Study of Civil War

+4722 54 77 32
scott@prio.no

Nils Petter Gleditsch

Nils Petter Gleditsch

Research Professor, CSCW; Associate editor, Journal of Peace Research; Professor of Political Science, NTNU

(+47) 22 54 77 21
nilspg@prio.no

Håvard Hegre

Håvard Hegre

Research Professor at PRIO, Working Group Leader CSCW

48 09 53 21
Hhegre@prio.no