02501nam a2200361Ia 4500001001100000005001700011008004100028020001500069020003500084020002800119020001800147020003800165020003100203050002100234245009600255246002400351260005300375300002900428500005300457500002400510504006500534505072000599520057401319650003301893650001801926650002701944650004101971650003402012650002302046650002002069650002602089650002402115000000423720251012174250.0 991217s2000 coub b 001 0 eng a0889369151 a1555878687 (pbk. : alk. paper) a155587892X (alk. paper) a9780889369153 a9781555878689 (pbk. : alk. paper) a9781555878924 (alk. paper)00aHB195b.G72 200000aGreed & grievancebeconomic agendas in civil warscedited by Mats Berdal, David M. Malone. 14aGreed and grievance aBoulder, Colo.bLynne Rienner Publishersc2000.  avii, 251 p.bmapc24 cm. a"A project of the International Peace Academy."  aConference papers.  aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 235-238) and index. 0 aIncentives and disincentives for violence / David Keen -- Shadow states and the political economy of civil wars / William Reno -- Globalization, transborder trade, and war economies / Mark Duffield -- Doing well out of war: an economic perspective / P aul Collier -- The resource curse: are civil wars driven by rapacity or paucity? / Indra de Soysa -- The view from below / Musifiky Mwanasali -- Arms, elites, and resources in the Angolan civil war / Virginia Gamba and Richard Cornwell -- Targeted financial sanctions / Samuel D. Porteous -- Aiding or abetting? Humanitarian aid and its economic role in civil war / David Shearer -- Shaping agendas in civil wars: can international criminal law help? / Tom Farer.1 a"This volume identifies the economic and social factors underlying the perpetuation of civil wars, exploring as well the economic incentives and disincentives available to international actors seeking to restore peace to war-torn societies." "The auth ors consider the economic rationality of conflict for belligerents, the economic strategies that elites use to sustain their positions, and in what situations elites find war to be more profitable than peace. They strive consistently for policy relevance in both their analysis and their prescriptions."--BOOK JACKET. 0aCivil warxEconomic aspects. 0aProfiteering. 0aWarxEconomic aspects. 6aGuerre civilexAspect âeconomique. 6aGuerrexAspect âeconomique. 6aProfits illicites.04aBurgeroorlogen.04aEconomische aspecten.04aSociale conflicten.