Decentralization and the Gamble for Unity
- Creators
- Gibilisco, Michael
Abstract
I reconcile competing accounts of decentralization and its effect on secessionist mobilization by endogenizing the regional minority's grievance level in a dynamic framework. I demonstrate that decentralized institutions may have higher rates of minority unrest than their more centralized counterparts, and vice versa. Federations with moderate levels of power-sharing arrangements are particularly prone to secessionist violence. Even optimally chosen levels of decentralization can be followed by outbursts of minority protest or rebellion as the government subsequently refrains from repression in order to generate enough good will for a lasting peace. More broadly, grievances have a non-monotonic relationship with the onset and duration of secessionist conflict, which is one explanation for their elusive relationship in the greed versus grievance debate.
Attached Files
Submitted - grievanceGibilisco.pdf
Supplemental Material - grievanceAppendix.pdf
Files
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 84341
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20180116-103533715
- Created
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2018-01-17Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-08-21Created from EPrint's last_modified field