Abstract:
This thesis is investigating both in theoretical and empirical terms the relationship
between the features of ethnic distribution and the probability of con ict. The thesis
is composed of four chapters. The rst chapter is the introduction to the thesis in
which I brie y summarize the main problems related to the existing literature on
ethnic diversity and con ict and I present an overview of the measures of ethnic
diversity commonly used in the literature.
In the second chapter I propose a theoretical model that speci es the potential
of con ict in a society as a function of the population distribution across ethnic
groups. I axiomatically derive a general parametric class of indices of con ict potential
that combines the groups' e ective power and the between-groups interaction. The
e ective power of a group is a function of a group's relative size but it also depends on
the relative sizes of all the other groups in the population. The interaction component,
on the other hand, is given by the probability of interaction between the members
of one group with those of other groups. I show that for certain parameter values
the index reduces to the existing indices of ethnic diversity, while in general the
indices combine in a non-linear way three di erent aspects of ethnic diversity, namely
the fractionalization, the polarization and the ethnic dominance. The results of the
model share some common features with the literature on con icts in contests and
the literature on voting power indices. In particular, the power component of the
extreme element of the class of indices is intuitively related to the de nition of voting
power in a simple majority game. In that particular case, the value of the e ective
power is given by the relative Penrose-Banzhaf index of voting power calculated over
the shares of populations associated to each ethnic group. In the third chapter I investigate empirically the role of ethnic diversity in the
explanation of the ethnic con ict outbreak. The empirical performance of the indices
of con ict potential developed in the second chapter is tested against the existing
distributional indices of ethnic diversity within the context of the commonly used
logistic model that focuses on the onset of ethnic con icts in a time range from 1946 to
2005. Together with the set of the explanatory variables for structural conditions and
country characteristics, I take advantage of the recent "Ethnic Power Relations" data
set which includes additional information on the political exclusion and competition
along ethnic lines and it o ers the best coding for ethnic wars. The results obtained
suggest that the indices of con ict potential outperform the existing indices of ethnic
diversity in the explanation of ethnic con ict onset. This evidence is robust to the
inclusion of a larger set of regressors, time and regional controls as well as to several
other estimation techniques.
The fourth chapter explores empirically the determinants of con ict duration with
a particular attention to the potential role of ethnic diversity together with ethnic
politics and competition dynamics. The rst part of the chapter presents an overview
of the existing literature on con ict duration, the main data cources and the related
econometric issues. The second part of the chapter consists in a non-parametric and
a parametric survival analysis of the duration of ethnic con ict where we address
in detail the issues of non-proportionality of the hazard function, the unmeasured
heterogeneity and the presence of "repeated events". The results suggest that there
is a statistically signi cant and robust association between ethnic distribution and
con ict duration, together with other commonly used explanatory variables in the
literature on con ict duration.