From: derek gatherer (dgatherer2002@yahoo.co.uk)
Date: Mon 28 Jul 2003 - 15:40:56 GMT
Resource Scarcity and Conflict in Developing Countries
Journal of Peace Research, May 2000, vol. 37, no.
3, pp. 301-322(22)
Maxwell J.W.[1]; Reuveny R.[2]
[1] Kelley School of Business, Indiana University [2]
School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana
University
Abstract:
As time passes, renewable resource scarcities are
becoming more common. There is increasing evidence
that these scarcities are a causal factor in political
conflict, especially in developing countries. We
present a simple dynamic model of renewable resource
and population interaction featuring the possibility
of conflict triggered by per capita resource scarcity.
In the model, conflict diverts resources away from
resource harvesting, increases the death rate, and
damages the resource. The two former effects may speed
the return to a peaceful steady state. If conflict
results in resource destruction, however, it may
destabilize the system, leading it towards collapse.
Conflict due to renewable resource scarcity could be
cyclical, implying recurring phases of conflict.
However, such conflict cannot last for ever. We use
the model to examine various policy scenarios
concerning population control and technical
innovations in harvesting and natural resource growth.
A key insight of the model is the importance of the
bidirectional interplay between conflict and resource
scarcity, as opposed to the unidirectional notion that
resource scarcity leads to conflict. As such, the
model points to the need for the use of simultaneous
equation econometric models in empirical
investigations of resource scarcity and conflict.
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