Belfer Center Home > Publications > Press Release or Announcement > News > International Security Program "Paths to Violence" Research Workshop

EmailEmail   PrintPrint  

 
International Security Program "Paths to Violence" Research Workshop

Workshop organizers Dr. Adria Lawrence (left), research fellow, International Security/Intrastate Conflict Programs, and Dr. Erica Chenoweth (right), research fellow, International Security Program.

International Security Program "Paths to Violence" Research Workshop

Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 25, 2008

News

April 28, 2008

Belfer Center Programs or Projects: International Security

 

The International Security Program (ISP) at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs hosted a research workshop in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on April 25, 2008. Workshop organizers Erica Chenoweth (ISP) and Adria Lawrence (ISP/Intrastate Conflict Program) brought together leading scholars to explore the conditions under which non-state actors resort to violence and the various strategies state actors use to address aggrieved populations. Workshop participants addressed issues such as why the use of violence varies among non-state actors, how the decision to use violence affects strategic outcomes of internal and international conflicts, and how states arrive at decisions to accommodate, assimilate, or ethnically cleanse minority groups. Participants received feedback on original research papers prepared in advance of the workshop. The final drafts of the papers will be compiled into an edited volume, which will be submitted for review in fall 2008.

The following is an agenda for the workshop:

8:45     Introductions and welcome

9:00     Adria Lawrence, ISP/Intrastate Conflict Program

"Driven to Arms? Escalation and the Eruption of Violence in Nationalist Conflicts" 

Discussant: Kristin Bakke, ISP/Intrastate Conflict Program

9:45     Erica Chenoweth, ISP & Maria J. Stephan, International Center on Nonviolent Conflict

"Nonviolent Resistance and the Four Challenges of Asymmetric Conflict: A Framework for Analysis and Some Unresolved Questions" 

Discussant: H. Zeynep Bulutgil, ISP/Intrastate Conflict Program

10:30   Break  

10:45   Harris Mylonas, Yale University

"Assimilation and its Alternatives: Caveats in the Study of Nation-building Policies"

Discussant: Erica Chenoweth, ISP

11:30   Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, Iowa State University & Emily Beaulieu, University of Kentucky

"Minority Protest Strategies under Conditions of Uncertainty"

Discussant: Alexander Downes, ISP

12:15   Lunch         

13:15   Alexander Downes, ISP

"Killing (Civilians) to Win?  Some Preliminary Evidence on the Military Effectiveness of Civilian Victimization in War"

Discussant: Harris Mylonas, Yale University

14:00   Wendy Pearlman, ISP/Intrastate Conflict Program

"Not Why Violence but How: Towards a Process-based Understanding of Violence and Nonviolence; Insight from the Palestinian Case"

Discussant: Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, Iowa State University

14:45   Break  

15:00   H. Zeynep Bulutgil, ISP/Intrastate Conflict Program

"War, Collaboration, and Endogenous Ethnic Polarization: The Path to Ethnic Cleansing"

Discussant: Adria Lawrence, ISP/Intrastate Conflict Program

15:45   Kristin Bakke, ISP/Intrastate Conflict Program

"The Turn to Violence in Chechnya and Punjab: Separatist Struggles in Decentralized States"

Discussant: Matthew Kocher, Yale University and Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE)

16:30   Meeting Wrap-up        

17:00   Workshop Adjourns  

Additional Participants:
Steven E. Miller, ISP
Sean Lynn-Jones, ISP
Jonathan Caverley, ISP
Ehud Eiran, ISP
Helen Fein, ISP
Matthew Fuhrmann, ISP/Project on Managing the Atom
Susan Lynch, ISP

 

For more information about this publication please contact the ISP Program Coordinator at 617-496-1981.

For Academic Citation:
"International Security Program "Paths to Violence" Research Workshop." Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 25, 2008., April 28, 2008.

<em>International Security</em>

The Winter 2007/08 issue of the quarterly journal International Security is now available. It includes articles by Michael Desch, Richard Samuels, Walter Ladwig, and more.

EMAIL UPDATES

Get the latest research on the most important international topics

Sign up to receive updates of the Belfer Center's work on international security, climate change, nuclear issues, the Middle East, or more. Select the topics of your choice.

Human Rights and Wrongs: Slavery, Terror, Genocide

Human Rights and Wrongs explains the persistence of crimes against humanity since the Holocaust...

Events Calendar

We host a busy schedule of events throughout the fall, winter and spring. Past speakers include: Secretary of Energy Sam Bodman, Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff, and Abdullah S. Jum'ah, president of Saudi Aramco.

Worst of the Worst: Dealing with Repressive and Rogue Nations

"This volume makes an unparalleled contribution to the growing and vital field of measurement and human rights. [The book] offers a useful categorization and assessment of repressive and 'rogue' states, allowing us to measure the extenet of repressive state behavior more accurately. His [Rotberg] work should embolden external critiques and facilitate more transparent and accountable foreign policy."

--Sarah Sewall, Director, Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Harvard University