Fostering Peace After Civil War: Commitment Problems and Agreement Design

Lasting peace after civil war is difficult to establish. One promising way to ensure durable peace is by carefully designing civil war settlements. We use a single theoretical model to integrate existing work on civil war agreement design and to identify additional agreement provisions that should be particularly successful at bringing about enduring peace. We make use of the bargaining model of war which points to commitment problems as a central explanation for civil war. We argue that two types of provisions should mitigate commitment problems: fear-reducing and cost-increasing provisions. Fear-reducing provisions such as third-party guarantees and power-sharing alleviate the belligerents’ concerns about opportunism by the other side. Provisions such as the separation of forces make the resumption of hostilities undesirable by increasing the costs of further fighting. Using newly expanded data on civil war agreements between 1945 and 2005, we demonstrate that cost-increasing provisions indeed reduce the chance of civil war recurrence. We also identify political power-sharing as the most promising fear-reducing provision.

[1]  Virginia Page Fortna,et al.  Peace Time: Cease-Fire Agreements and the Durability of Peace , 2004 .

[2]  P. Collier,et al.  Greed and Grievance in Civil War , 1999 .

[3]  F. Fukuyama,et al.  Power sharing and international mediation in ethnic conflicts , 1996 .

[4]  Peter Wallensteen,et al.  Armed Conflict 1946-2001: A New Dataset , 2002 .

[5]  P. Pochet A Quantitative Analysis , 2006 .

[6]  J. David Singer,et al.  Resort to Arms: International and Civil Wars, 1816-1980 , 1982 .

[7]  Donald Rothchild,et al.  Stabilizing the Peace After Civil War: An Investigation of Some Key Variables , 2001, International Organization.

[8]  R. Licklider The Consequences of Negotiated Settlements in Civil Wars, 1945–1993 , 1995, American Political Science Review.

[9]  V. P. Fortna Does Peacekeeping Keep Peace? International Intervention and the Duration of Peace After Civil War , 2004 .

[10]  Barbara F. Walter Information, Uncertainty, and the Decision to Secede , 2006, International Organization.

[11]  C. Hartzell,et al.  Crafting Peace: Power-Sharing Institutions and the Negotiated Settlement of Civil Wars , 2007 .

[12]  Dan Reiter,et al.  Ensuring Peace: Foreign-Imposed Regime Change and Postwar Peace Duration, 1914–2001 , 2008, International Organization.

[13]  Robert Powell,et al.  The Inefficient Use of Power: Costly Conflict with Complete Information , 2004, American Political Science Review.

[14]  Barbara F. Walter Committing to Peace: The Successful Settlement of Civil Wars , 2002 .

[15]  Chaim Kaufmann,et al.  Possible and Impossible Solutions to Ethnic Civil Wars , 1996, International Security.

[16]  J. Fearon Rationalist explanations for war , 1995, International Organization.

[17]  Idean Salehyan,et al.  Transnational Rebels: Neighboring States as Sanctuary for Rebel Groups , 2007 .

[18]  J. Fearon Commitment Problems and the Spread of Ethnic Conflict , 2006 .

[19]  Arend Lijphart,et al.  Democracy in Plural Societies: A Comparative Exploration , 1979 .

[20]  J. Fearon,et al.  Ethnicity, Insurgency, and Civil War , 2003, American Political Science Review.

[21]  M. Sarkees,et al.  The Correlates of War Data On War: an Update To 1997 , 2000 .

[22]  R. Michael Alvarez,et al.  Event History Modeling: A Guide for Social Scientists , 2004 .

[23]  Virginia Page Fortna,et al.  Does Peacekeeping Work? , 2008 .

[24]  Rupen Cetinyan Ethnic Bargaining in the Shadow of Third-Party Intervention , 2002, International Organization.

[25]  Barbara F. Walter The Critical Barrier to Civil War Settlement , 1997, International Organization.

[26]  Matthew Hoddie,et al.  Institutionalizing Peace: Power Sharing and Post-Civil War Conflict Management , 2003 .

[27]  Arend Lijphart Patterns of democracy : government forms and performance in thirty-six countries , 2000 .

[28]  F. Reyntjens Briefing: Burundi: A Peaceful Transition After a Decade Of War? , 2006 .

[29]  T. Lyons Demilitarizing Politics: Elections on the Uncertain Road to Peace , 2005 .

[30]  David A. Lake International Relations Theory and Internal Conflict: Insights from the Interstices , 2003 .

[31]  V. P. Fortna Scraps of Paper? Agreements and the Durability of Peace , 2003, International Organization.

[32]  Nicholas Sambanis,et al.  International Peacebuilding: A Theoretical and Quantitative Analysis , 2000, American Political Science Review.

[33]  P. Wallensteen,et al.  Armed Conflict and Peace Agreements , 2006 .