Sabancı University
Faculty of Arts
and Social Sciences
Conflict
Resolution and Political Science Seminar
SORTING OUT THE EFFECTS OF DOMESTIC FACTORSby
Nil S. Şatana, Ph.D.
Bilkent University
Tuesday,
March 27, 2007
10:30 am-12:30
pm, FASS 2034
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Abstract Why has the international community
refrained from intervention in the Turkish-Kurdish conflict that has lasted for
two decades and several interventions took place in the Iraqi-Kurdish conflict?
The conflict literature has not found
an adequate answer to this question, mostly, I argue, due to the lack of
domestic variables in intra-state conflict theories and data.
This project builds on the selectorate theory (Bueno de Mesquita
et al. 2003) to construct a formal model that derives testable
hypotheses from
the interactions between the rebels, the target government and the
potential
interveners in a civil conflict. Regime
type of both the target and the intervener shapes the preferences of
all actors
that may or may not lead to an intervention decision. The
conflict, on the other hand, is shaped by the lack of formal
recognition of the minority identity and/or political access to the
government. An existing data set is improved through the
concept of “politically relevant potential interveners.” The
objective is to show that domestic
politics not only affect the civil war onset in the country, but also
impinge
on the decision of third party interveners. The quantitative
analysis tests six hypotheses on regime type
derived from four games in the model. The qualitative analysis
provides supporting evidence for the
argument through the comparative case studies of the Kurds in Iraq and
Turkey. The basis of this section is field research
in both countries. Finally, policy
implications of the findings and the need of further scholarship on the
effect
of domestic factors in civil conflict onset and on intervention
decisions in
civil conflicts are discussed.