Idean Salehyan
Assistant Professor of Political Science
University of North Texas

 

Idean Salehyan, PhD
University of North Texas
Department of Political Science

Wooten Hall 147
P.O. Box 305340
Denton, TX 76203-5340

Idean Salehyan's Home page
Replication data for: Refugees and the Spread of Civil War
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Citation Information
How to Cite
Idean Salehyan; Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, 2007, "Replication data for: Refugees and the Spread of Civil War", hdl:1902.1/10217 UNF:3:TshX34o8W7jOH0lE7DRhfw== Idean Salehyan [Distributor]
Study Global Idhdl:1902.1/10217
AuthorsIdean Salehyan (University of North Texas); Kristian Skrede Gleditsch (University of Essex)
Production Date2006
DistributorIdean Salehyan
Distributor Contactidean@unt.edu
Distribution Date2007
Deposit Date2007
Replication ForIdean Salehyan and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch. 2006. "Refugees and the Spread of Civil War." International Organization, 60(2): 335-366. doi:10.1017/S0020818306060103 article available here
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Abstract and Scope
Abstract

Certain regions of the world experience more conflict than others. Previous analyses have shown that a civil war in one country significantly increases the likelihood that neighboring states will experience conflict. This finding, however, still remains largely unexplained. We argue that population movements are an important mechanism by which conflict spreads across regions. Refugee flows are not only the consequence of political turmoil—the presence of refugees and displaced populations can also increase the risk of subsequent conflict in host and origin countries. Refugees expand rebel social networks and constitute a negative externality of civil war. Although the vast majority of refugees never directly engage in violence, refugee flows may facilitate the transnational spread of arms, combatants, and ideologies conducive to conflict; they alter the ethnic composition of the state; and they can exacerbate economic competition. We conduct an empirical analysis of the link between refugees and civil conflict since the mid-twentieth century, and we find that the presence of refugees from neighboring countries leads to an increased probability of violence, suggesting that refugees are one important source of conflict diffusion.

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