Citation:
Ravi Bhavnani, Miodownik, Dan , and Riolo, Rick . 2010.
“Groups And Violence”. In Estimating Impact: A Handbook Of Computational Methods And Models For Anticipating Economic, Social, Political And Security Effects In International Interventions, Pp. 205-237. doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-6235-5_7.
Abstract:
Violence can take place along a multitude of cleavages, e.g., (1) between political groups like the Kach Movement, pitting West Bank settlers against Israeli governments supporting the land-for-peace agenda; (2) between religious groups, such as Christians and Muslims in the Nigerian cities of Jos and Kaduna; (3) along class lines, as in India between Dalits and members of the Brahminical upper castes, upwardly mobile intermediate castes, and even other backward castes such as the Thevars; and (4) between ethnic groups such as the Hutu and Tutsi, both within and across state boundaries in Rwanda and neighboring Burundi. © 2010 Springer Science + Business Media, LLC.Notes:
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