Data: Capitalist Development and Civil War
| dc.contributor.author | Mousseau, Michael | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2025-10-24T10:49:31Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2018-01-01 | |
| dc.description.abstract | Capitalism has emerged as a force for peace in studies of interstate conflict. Is capitalism also a force for peace within nations? This article shows how a market-capitalist economy—one where most citizens normally obtain their livelihoods contracting in the market—creates citizen-wide preferences for universal freedom, peace, and the democratic rule of law. Prior research has corroborated the theory's predictions linking market-capitalism with liberal preferences, human rights, and peace among nations. Here, Granger tests of causality show that market-capitalism causes higher income, but higher income does not cause market-capitalism, and from 1961 to 2001 not a single civil war, insurgency, or rebellion occurred in any nation with a market-capitalist economy. Market-capitalism is the strongest variable in the civil conflict literature, and many of the most robust relationships in this literature are spurious—including income, state capacity, and oil-export dependency. | |
| dc.description.uri | https://dx.doi.org/10.7910/dvn/gfxli7 | |
| dc.identifier.doi | 10.7910/dvn/gfxli7 | |
| dc.identifier.openaire | doi_________::d0fea872190f2e1b25c901e81b29570b | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/31089 | |
| dc.publisher | Harvard Dataverse | |
| dc.rights | OPEN | |
| dc.subject | Social Sciences | |
| dc.subject | ISQ 2012, Volume 56, Issue 3 | |
| dc.title | Capitalist Development and Civil War | |
| dc.type | Dataset | |
| dspace.entity.type | Data | |
| local.import.source | OpenAire |
