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Capitalist development and civil war

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Mousseau, Michael. (2012) Capitalist Development and Civil War. International Studies Quarterly, doi: 10.1111/j.1468-2478.2012.00734.x ?(c) 2012 International Studies Association 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 economyone where most citizens normally obtain their livelihoods contracting in the marketcreates citizen-wide preferences for universal freedom, peace, and the democratic rule of law. Prior research has corroborated the theorys 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 spuriousincluding income, state capacity, and oil-export dependency.

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Wiley-Blackwell

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International relations, Political science

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International Studies Quarterly

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10.1111/j.1468-2478.2012.00734.x

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Eradicating poverty is not a task of charity, it’s an act of justice and the key to unlocking an enormous human potential. Still, nearly half of the world’s population lives in poverty, and lack of food and clean water is killing thousands every single day of the year. Together, we can feed the hungry, wipe out disease and give everyone in the world a chance to prosper and live a productive and rich life.
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