La “Gran Guerra” en Liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en África.

Armed conflicts in less developed countries are often very persistent although one could expect the opposite due to lacking financial and material capacity in those areas. How can violent actors and warlords manage to continue warfare lastingly? The article presents, in its theory section, several a...

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Main Author: Johannes Muntschick.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de los Andes 2008-06-01
Series:Colombia Internacional
Subjects:
Online Access:http://colombiainternacional.uniandes.edu.co/view.php/306/1.php
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spelling doaj-d3a0754a9c264076b95d643856b12aa52020-11-24T21:35:41ZengUniversidad de los AndesColombia Internacional0121-56121960-60042008-06-01673859La “Gran Guerra” en Liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en África.Johannes Muntschick.Armed conflicts in less developed countries are often very persistent although one could expect the opposite due to lacking financial and material capacity in those areas. How can violent actors and warlords manage to continue warfare lastingly? The article presents, in its theory section, several assumptions regarding the longevity of these armed conflicts from the perspective of fragile statehood, collapse of neo-patrimonial networks, conflict-resources, social grievances and ethnicity. Additionally, the character of the “new” wars and particularly the design and functional logic of a typical war-economy is analyzed as the latter is assumed to fuel armed conflict significantly. The “Great War” (1989-2003) in Liberia is a classic example for persistent armed conflicts in connection with war-economies in Africa and thus suits well as empirical illustration to employ the preceding assumptions on. http://colombiainternacional.uniandes.edu.co/view.php/306/1.phpAfricaLiberiacivil wararmed conflictwar-economy“new wars”natural resourcesstate failureethnicitygrievancesources of financing.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johannes Muntschick.
spellingShingle Johannes Muntschick.
La “Gran Guerra” en Liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en África.
Colombia Internacional
Africa
Liberia
civil war
armed conflict
war-economy
“new wars”
natural resources
state failure
ethnicity
grievance
sources of financing.
author_facet Johannes Muntschick.
author_sort Johannes Muntschick.
title La “Gran Guerra” en Liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en África.
title_short La “Gran Guerra” en Liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en África.
title_full La “Gran Guerra” en Liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en África.
title_fullStr La “Gran Guerra” en Liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en África.
title_full_unstemmed La “Gran Guerra” en Liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en África.
title_sort la “gran guerra” en liberia como ejemplo clásico de conflicto armado persistente y economías de guerra en áfrica.
publisher Universidad de los Andes
series Colombia Internacional
issn 0121-5612
1960-6004
publishDate 2008-06-01
description Armed conflicts in less developed countries are often very persistent although one could expect the opposite due to lacking financial and material capacity in those areas. How can violent actors and warlords manage to continue warfare lastingly? The article presents, in its theory section, several assumptions regarding the longevity of these armed conflicts from the perspective of fragile statehood, collapse of neo-patrimonial networks, conflict-resources, social grievances and ethnicity. Additionally, the character of the “new” wars and particularly the design and functional logic of a typical war-economy is analyzed as the latter is assumed to fuel armed conflict significantly. The “Great War” (1989-2003) in Liberia is a classic example for persistent armed conflicts in connection with war-economies in Africa and thus suits well as empirical illustration to employ the preceding assumptions on.
topic Africa
Liberia
civil war
armed conflict
war-economy
“new wars”
natural resources
state failure
ethnicity
grievance
sources of financing.
url http://colombiainternacional.uniandes.edu.co/view.php/306/1.php
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