Associate Professor
Department of Social Sciences
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
francisco.villamil@uc3m.es
Lars-Erik Cederman
Simon Hug
Livia Schubiger
Francisco Villamil
Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2020
Citation:
Cederman, Lars-Erik, Simon Hug, Livia Schubiger, and Francisco Villamil (2020) Civilian victimization and ethnic civil war. Journal of Conflict Resolution 64(7-8): 1199-1225.
Abstract:
While many studies provide insights into the causes of wartime civilian victimization, we know little about how the targeting of particular segments of the civilian population affects the onset and escalation of armed conflict. Previous research on conflict onset has been largely limited to structural variables, both theoretically and empirically. Moving beyond these static approaches, this paper assesses how the state-led targeting of specific ethnic groups affects the likelihood of ethnic conflict onset, and the evolution of conflicts once they break out. Relying on a new dataset with global coverage that captures the ethnic identity of civilian victims of targeted violence, we find evidence that the state-led civilian victimization of particular ethnic groups increases the likelihood that the latter become involved in ethnic civil war. We also find tentative, yet more nuanced, evidence that ethnic targeting by state forces affects the escalation of ongoing conflicts.