Territorial autonomy and self-determination conflicts: opportunity and willingness cases from Bolivia, Niger, and Thailand


Autoria(s): Suso, Roger
Contribuinte(s)

Institut Català Internacional per la Pau

Data(s)

25/11/2010

Resumo

The paradox of autonomy is about whether self-rule accommodates or exacerbates armed conflict. This study attempts to unpack the puzzle examining the effectiveness of territorial autonomy as a state response to self-determination conflicts throughout the world. It challenges the conflict-inducing features of autonomy arguing that territorial autonomy can mitigate armed conflict by channeling group grievances into peaceful forms of protest. Thus, this study aims at arriving at a comprehensive theory that identifies which factors are responsible for violent escalation of conflicts grounded in self-determination demands. By using the concepts of opportunity structures and willingness dimension, this study shows that conflict escalation only takes place when minorities with greater bargaining power vis-à-vis the center, in contexts of high levels of economic inequality within dyad, are mobilized around autonomy and separatist demands.

Formato

69 p.

508515 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/2072/96890

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

ICIP working papers;2010/01

Palavras-Chave #Autonomia i moviments independentistes #Autonomy and independence movements. #Autonomía #Independencia #Conflictes armats #Conflictos armados #Conflict, Armed (War) #Gestió de conflictes #Conflict management #Conflictos, Gestión de #Bolivia #Bolívia #Niger #Níger #Thailand #Tailàndia #Tailandia #35 - Administració pública. Govern. Assumptes militars
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper