民主、独裁和资源储备:内战中第三方国家军事干预的时间序列分析

Jonathan Andrew Stewart Honig
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引用次数: 2

摘要

随着全球内战的增加,了解谁卷入了这些冲突及其原因是很重要的。考虑是否干预外部内战的第三方国家可能会根据对可能在受内战影响的国家中发现的宝贵自然资源的自私自利作出行动决定。我假设,当一个潜在的干涉主义第三方国家决定对外部内战进行军事干预时,其国内政权的类型将会受到影响。我的分析考察了自然资源(特别是石油和钶钽铁矿)对哪种类型的政权将进行干预的影响,假设这些资源位于经历内战的国家。根据我的三个假设,我发现民主国家会更容易干预石油生产国和正在经历内战的国家,独裁国家会更容易干预已知石油储备的国家(但不一定是石油生产的国家),同样,与对国内民众更为敏感的民主国家相比,独裁国家更有可能干预拥有钶钽铁矿的国家,以期控制这种有价值(且容易开采)的矿产。然而,就实质内容而言,分析的结果有些不足。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Of Democracies, Dictatorships, and Resource Deposits: A Time-Series Analysis of Third-Party State Military Interventions in Civil Wars
With the increasing proclivity of civil wars around the globe, it is important to know who gets involved in these conflicts and why. Third-party states considering whether to intervene in an outside civil war may make the decision to act based on perceived self-interest in the valuable natural resources which may be found in a civil war-afflicted state. I hypothesize that the type of domestic regime in a potentially interventionist thirdparty nation will affect when that country decides to militarily intervene in an external civil war. My analysis examines the effect of natural resources (specifically petroleum and coltan) on which type of regime will intervene, given those resources are located in the state experiencing the civil war. In line with my three hypotheses, I find that democracies will intervene more readily in countries which are oil producers and are experiencing a civil war, autocracies will intervene more readily in countries with known oil reserves (but not necessarily homes to oil production), and similarly autocracies are more likely to intervene in coltanpossessing countries in the hope of gaining control over this valuable (and easy to extract) mineral when compared to their more domestic audience-sensitive democratic counterparts. However, the results of the analysis are somewhat modest in terms of substance.
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