Content
January 2022, Volume 59, Issue 1
- 3-11 Disaster diplomacy: The intricate links between disaster and conflict
by Gina Yannitell Reinhardt & Carmela Lutmar - 12-27 Disasters and the dynamics of interstate rivalry
by Bomi K Lee & Sara McLaughlin Mitchell & Cody J Schmidt & Yufan Yang - 28-42 When do natural disasters lead to negotiations in a civil war?
by Stephen Nemeth & Brian Lai - 43-57 Disasters and civilian victimization: Exploring the dynamic effect in Africa, 1997–2017
by Roos Haer & Babak RezaeeDaryakenari - 58-72 Disasters and intergroup peace in sub-Saharan Africa
by Eunbin Chung & Inbok Rhee - 73-89 Windows of repression: Using COVID-19 policies against political dissidents?
by Joan Barceló & Robert Kubinec & Cindy Cheng & Tiril Høye Rahn & Luca Messerschmidt - 90-104 COVID-19, state capacity, and political violence by non-state actors
by Britt Koehnlein & Ore Koren
November 2021, Volume 58, Issue 6
- 1163-1177 Do nonproliferation agreements constrain?
by Bradley C Smith & William Spaniel - 1178-1193 No paradox here? Improving theory and testing of the nuclear stability–instability paradox with synthetic counterfactuals
by Francesco Bailo & Benjamin E Goldsmith - 1194-1206 Who commits the most to NATO? It depends on how we measure commitment
by Scott Cooper & Kendall W Stiles - 1207-1223 Whose trade follows the flag? Institutional constraints and economic responses to bilateral relations
by Qin Chen & Yi Zhou - 1224-1238 Peace agreements and women’s political rights following civil war
by Lindsay Reid - 1239-1255 Ethnic trust, minority status, and public goods in post-conflict societies
by Sam Whitt - 1256-1270 Third-party regime type and civil war duration
by Sara Norrevik & Mehwish Sarwari - 1271-1283 Thinking outside the (temporal) box to explain protracted intrastate conflict
by Joel Blaxland - 1284-1299 Bargaining in intrastate conflicts: The shifting role of ceasefires
by Valerie Sticher & Siniša Vuković - 1300-1310 What are the drivers of diplomacy? Introducing and testing new annual dyadic data measuring diplomatic exchange
by Jonathan D Moyer & Sara D Turner & Collin J Meisel - 1311-1319 Introducing the Military Mutinies and Defections Database (MMDD), 1945–2017
by Jaclyn Johnson
September 2021, Volume 58, Issue 5
- 885-899 The geo-temporal evolution of violence in civil conflicts: A micro analysis of conflict diffusion on a new event data set
by Arzu Kibris - 900-914 Civilian targeting in African conflicts: A poor actor’s game that spreads through space
by Piotr Lis & Michael Spagat & Uih Ran Lee - 915-929 How leaders’ experiences and rebellion shape military recruitment during civil war
by Suparna Chaudhry & Sabrina Karim & Matt K Scroggs - 930-944 Local elites, civil resistance, and the responsiveness of rebel governance in Côte d’Ivoire
by Sebastian van Baalen - 945-961 The politics of nonviolent mobilization: Campaigns, competition, and social movement resources
by Pearce Edwards - 962-972 Reformulating Jan Tinbergen’s normative vision on welfare and security
by S Mansoob Murshed - 973-985 Symbolic victories and strategic risk
by Richard Jordan - 986-1003 Why does ethnic partition foster violence? Unpacking the deep historical roots of civil conflicts
by Gaku Ito - 1004-1017 Economic governance and homicide: Some theory and empirics, 1990–2017
by Indra de Soysa - 1018-1033 Contesting narratives of repression: Experimental evidence from Sisi’s Egypt
by Scott Williamson & Mashail Malik - 1034-1048 Feels like home: Effect of transnational identities on attitudes towards foreign countries
by Efe Tokdemir - 1049-1067 Unilateral secession, international recognition, and great power contestation
by David S Siroky & Milos Popovic & Nikola Mirilovic - 1068-1082 Does the WTO exacerbate international conflict?
by J Tyson Chatagnier & Haeyong Lim - 1083-1097 International trade and cyber conflict: Decomposing the effect of trade on state-sponsored cyber attacks
by William Akoto - 1098-1116 The problem of the missing dead
by Sophia Dawkins - 1117-1125 Introducing Native American Conflict History (NACH) data
by Brian R Urlacher - 1126-1136 The diversity of repression: Measuring state repressive repertoires with events data
by Benjamin E Bagozzi & Daniel Berliner & Ryan M Welch - 1137-1148 Introducing the PeaceKeeping Operations Corpus (PKOC)
by Elio Amicarelli & Jessica Di Salvatore - 1149-1160 New Data on UN Mission Mandates 1948–2015: Tasks Assigned to Missions in their Mandates (TAMM)
by Gabriella Lloyd
July 2021, Volume 58, Issue 4
- 623-639 Survey participation effects in conflict research
by Alexander De Juan & Carlo Koos - 640-654 Ambition and ambivalence: Reconsidering positive peace as a trans-scalar peace system
by Gearoid Millar - 655-670 The Humanitarian Turn at the UNSC: Explaining the development of international norms through machine learning algorithms
by Richard Hanania - 671-686 Only as fast as its troop contributors: Incentives, capabilities, and constraints in the UN’s peacekeeping response
by Magnus Lundgren & Kseniya Oksamytna & Katharina P Coleman - 687-701 Impeding fatal violence through third-party diplomacy: The effect of mediation on conflict intensity
by Constantin Ruhe - 702-718 Are stronger states more humane? A re-evaluation of ‘exemplary villains’
by Seung Hoon Chae - 719-733 Biding time versus timely retreat: Asymmetric dependence, issue salience, and conflict duration
by Yuleng Zeng - 734-748 Power-sharing, conflict resolution, and the logic of pre-emptive defection
by Chelsea Johnson - 749-762 Power politics: Armed non-state actors and the capture of public electricity in post-invasion Baghdad
by Christiana Parreira - 763-777 A micro-level analysis of the contagion effect: Evidence from the Kurdish conflict
by Zeki Sarigil - 778-793 Commander–community ties after civil war
by Philip A Martin - 794-808 Arms for education? External support and rebel social services
by Reyko Huang & Patricia L Sullivan - 809-825 Organized violence 1989–2020, with a special emphasis on Syria
by Therése Pettersson & Shawn Davies & Amber Deniz & Garoun Engström & Nanar Hawach & Stina Högbladh & Margareta Sollenberg & Magnus Öberg - 826-838 Introducing the new CPOST dataset on suicide attacks
by Robert A Pape & Alejandro Albanez Rivas & Alexandra C Chinchilla - 839-848 Political life after civil wars: Introducing the Civil War Successor Party dataset
by Sarah Zukerman Daly - 849-858 Frozen conflicts in world politics: A new dataset
by Kamil Christoph Klosek & VojtÄ›ch Bahenský & Michal Smetana & Jan LudvÃk - 859-869 Cooperation under autonomy: Building and analyzing the Informal Intergovernmental Organizations 2.0 dataset
by Felicity Vabulas & Duncan Snidal - 870-880 Purging militaries: Introducing the Military Purges in Dictatorships (MPD) dataset
by Jun Koga Sudduth - 881-881 Erratum: Carrots and sticks: Experimental evidence of vote buying and voter intimidation in Guatemala
by N/A
May 2021, Volume 58, Issue 3
- 329-341 The ethics of ethnographic methods in conflict zones
by Jana Krause - 342-354 Ethics of archival research on political violence
by Jelena Subotić - 355-367 A test of the democratic peacekeeping hypothesis: Coups, democracy, and foreign military deployments
by Jamie Levin & Joseph MacKay & Anne Spencer Jamison & Abouzar Nasirzadeh & Anthony Sealey - 368-383 Peacekeeping and development in fragile states: Micro-level evidence from Liberia
by Eric Mvukiyehe & Cyrus Samii - 384-398 An interactive model of democratic peace
by David Altman & Federico Rojas-de-Galarreta & Francisco Urdinez - 399-416 Mobilizing memories: The social conditions of the long-term impact of victimization
by Francisco Villamil - 417-432 Explaining public support for violence against politicians during conflict: Evidence from a panel study in Israel
by Julia Elad-Strenger & Brian J Hall & Stevan E Hobfoll & Daphna Canetti - 433-448 Gendered preferences: How women’s inclusion in society shapes negotiation occurrence in intrastate conflicts
by Robert Ulrich Nagel - 449-461 Can women benefit from war? Women’s agency in conflict and post-conflict societies
by Punam Yadav - 462-478 United Nations endorsement and support for human rights: An experiment on women’s rights in Pakistan
by Gulnaz Anjum & Adam Chilton & Zahid Usman - 479-493 For better or worse: Shaming, faming, and human rights abuse
by Sara Kahn-Nisser - 494-509 Compliance without coercion: Effects of reporting on international labor rights
by Faradj Koliev & Thomas Sommerer & Jonas Tallberg - 510-522 Simulation analysis on the effectiveness of missile defense
by Jaehak Kim & Woosang Kim - 523-538 The impact of terrorism on international mergers and acquisitions: Evidence from firm-level decisions
by Babet Hogetoorn & Michiel Gerritse - 539-553 What’s going on next door? Irregular leader change in neighboring countries, uncertainty, and civil war
by Casper Sakstrup - 554-567 Making disorder more manageable: The short-term effectiveness of local mediation in Darfur
by Allard Duursma - 568-582 Pathways to water conflict during drought in the MENA region
by Tobias Ide & Miguel Rodriguez Lopez & Christiane Fröhlich & Jürgen Scheffran - 583-598 Determinants of political purges in autocracies: Evidence from ancient Chinese dynasties
by Stan Hok-Wui Wong & Kelvin Chun-Man Chan - 599-611 ViEWS2020: Revising and evaluating the ViEWS political Violence Early-Warning System
by Håvard Hegre & Curtis Bell & Michael Colaresi & Mihai Croicu & Frederick Hoyles & Remco Jansen & Maxine Ria Leis & Angelica Lindqvist-McGowan & David Randahl & Espen Geelmuyden Rød & Paola Vesco - 612-620 How very massive atrocities end: A dataset and typology
by Bridget Conley & Chad Hazlett
March 2021, Volume 58, Issue 2
- 197-197 The Nils Petter Gleditsch JPR article of the Year Award, 2020, goes to Jana Krause
by N/A - 198-198 The JPR Best Visualization Award 2020 goes to Therese Anders
by N/A - 199-214 Riots and resources: How food access affects collective violence
by Alison Heslin - 215-230 Food price increase and urban unrest: The role of societal organizations
by Ida Rudolfsen - 231-247 Talks before the talks: Effects of pre-negotiation on reaching peace agreements in intrastate armed conflicts, 2005–15
by Lindsey Doyle & Lukas Hegele - 248-262 Why share? An analysis of the sources of post-conflict power-sharing
by William G Nomikos - 263-278 A security dividend: Peacekeeping and maternal health outcomes and access
by Theodora-Ismene Gizelis & Xun Cao - 279-293 Parties to an alliance: Ideology and the domestic politics of international institutionalization
by Aaron Rapport & Brian Rathbun - 294-303 Interstate War Battle dataset (1823–2003)
by Eric Min - 304-314 The Peaceful Resolution of Territorial Disputes dataset, 1945–2015
by Krista E Wiegand & Emilia Justyna Powell & Steven McDowell - 315-325 Mapping coercive institutions: The State Security Forces dataset, 1960–2010
by Erica De Bruin
January 2021, Volume 58, Issue 1
- 3-17 Security implications of climate change: A decade of scientific progress
by Nina von Uexkull & Halvard Buhaug - 18-32 Environmental migrants and social-movement participation
by Vally Koubi & Quynh Nguyen & Gabriele Spilker & Tobias Böhmelt - 33-49 Natural hazards, internal migration and protests in Bangladesh
by Kristina Petrova - 50-66 Human security of urban migrant populations affected by length of residence and environmental hazards
by W Neil Adger & Ricardo Safra de Campos & Tasneem Siddiqui & Maria Franco Gavonel & Lucy Szaboova & Mahmudol Hassan Rocky & Mohammad Rashed Alam Bhuiyan & Tamim Billah - 67-82 Food and water insecurity as causes of social unrest: Evidence from geolocated Twitter data
by Ore Koren & Benjamin E Bagozzi & Thomas S Benson - 83-97 First comes the river, then comes the conflict? A qualitative comparative analysis of flood-related political unrest
by Tobias Ide & Anders Kristensen & Henrikas BartuseviÄ ius - 98-113 Climate variability, crop and conflict: Exploring the impacts of spatial concentration in agricultural production
by Paola Vesco & Matija Kovacic & Malcolm Mistry & Mihai Croicu - 114-131 Weather, wheat, and war: Security implications of climate variability for conflict in Syria
by Andrew M Linke & Brett Ruether - 132-150 Climate bones of contention: How climate variability influences territorial, maritime, and river interstate conflicts
by Cody J Schmidt & Bomi K Lee & Sara McLaughlin Mitchell - 151-167 Climate and cohesion: The effects of droughts on intra-ethnic and inter-ethnic trust
by Alexander De Juan & Niklas Hänze - 168-176 Science–policy dimensions of research on climate change and conflict
by Katharine J Mach & Caroline M Kraan - 177-185 This time is different! Or is it? NeoMalthusians and environmental optimists in the age of climate change
by Nils Petter Gleditsch - 186-194 Beyond internal conflict: The emergent practice of climate security
by Joshua W Busby
November 2020, Volume 57, Issue 6
- 669-678 Innovations in concepts and measurement for the study of peace and conflict
by Christopher J Fariss & James Lo - 679-691 What states want: Estimating ideal points from international investment treaty content
by Florencia Montal & Carly Potz-Nielsen & Jane Lawrence Sumner - 692-700 How and how much does expert error matter? Implications for quantitative peace research
by Kyle L Marquardt - 701-714 Territorial control in civil wars: Theory and measurement using machine learning
by Therese Anders - 715-727 Using practitioner surveys to measure human rights: The Human Rights Measurement Initiative’s civil and political rights metrics
by K Chad Clay & Ryan Bakker & Anne-Marie Brook & Daniel W Hill Jr & Amanda Murdie - 728-739 A latent variable approach to measuring wartime sexual violence
by Jule Krüger & Ragnhild Nordås - 740-751 Is the NPT unraveling? Evidence from text analysis of review conference statements
by Miriam Barnum & James Lo - 752-763 Terrorism and internet censorship
by Stephen A Meserve & Daniel Pemstein - 764-776 Hot under the collar: A latent measure of interstate hostility
by Zhanna Terechshenko - 777-788 Measuring institutional variation across American Indian constitutions using automated content analysis
by Rebecca Cordell & Kristian Skrede Gleditsch & Florian G Kern & Laura Saavedra-Lux - 789-800 Continuous recognition: A latent variable approach to measuring international sovereignty of self-determination movements
by R Joseph Huddleston - 801-814 Estimating one-sided-killings from a robust measurement model of human rights
by Christopher J Fariss & Michael R Kenwick & Kevin Reuning
September 2020, Volume 57, Issue 5
- 617-631 Peace for our time? Examining the effect of power-sharing on postwar rebellions
by Martin Ottmann - 632-647 International support networks and the calculus of uprising
by Jaime A Jackson & Belgin San-Akca & Zeev Maoz - 648-657 Overlapping international human rights institutions: Introducing the Women’s Rights Recommendations Digital Database (WR2D2)
by Jillienne Haglund & Courtney Hillebrecht - 658-665 Action or inaction: United Nations Security Council activity, 1994–2013
by Susan Hannah Allen & Amy T Yuen
July 2020, Volume 57, Issue 4
- 507-520 Some left to tell the tale: Finding perpetrators and understanding violence in Rwanda
by Cyanne E Loyle & Christian Davenport - 521-535 Trust in the aftermath of genocide: Insights from Rwandan life histories
by Bert Ingelaere & Marijke Verpoorten - 536-550 Wartime ties and the social logic of crime
by Sarah Zukerman Daly & Laura Paler & Cyrus Samii - 551-563 Bargaining under polarization: The case of the Colombian armed conflict
by Sigifredo Laengle & Gino Loyola & David Tobón-Orozco - 564-580 Transnational terrorism and restrictive immigration policies
by Marc Helbling & Daniel Meierrieks - 581-596 Defending core values: Human rights and the extradition of fugitives
by Asif Efrat & Abraham L Newman - 597-613 Organized violence, 1989–2019
by Therése Pettersson & Magnus Öberg
May 2020, Volume 57, Issue 3
- 377-390 Rainfall shocks and intimate partner violence in sub-Saharan Africa
by Sara Cools & Martin Flatø & Andreas Kotsadam - 391-405 Mobilizing civilians into high-risk forms of violent collective action
by Vera Mironova & Sam Whitt - 406-421 Territorial disputes and individual willingness to fight
by Nam Kyu Kim - 422-436 The conditional effect of audiences on credibility
by Matthew Hauenstein - 437-451 The logic of transnational outbidding: Pledging allegiance and the escalation of violence
by Megan Farrell - 452-465 To condone, condemn, or ‘no comment’? Explaining a patron’s reaction to a client’s unilateral provocations
by Jeehye Kim & Jiyoung Ko - 466-481 Negotiating justice: Ceasefires, peace agreements, and post-conflict justice
by Joseph M Cox - 482-491 Introducing the Strategies of Resistance Data Project
by Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham & Marianne Dahl & Anne Frugé - 492-503 Tracking organizations in the world: The Correlates of War IGO Version 3.0 datasets
by Jon CW Pevehouse & Timothy Nordstrom & Roseanne W McManus & Anne Spencer Jamison
March 2020, Volume 57, Issue 2
- 219-219 The Nils Petter Gleditsch JPR Article of the Year Award, 2019, goes to Emily Kalah Gade, Mohammed M Hafez & Michael Gabbay
by N/A - 220-220 The JPR Best Visualization Award 2019 goes to Stijn van Weezel
by N/A - 221-234 Statistical sightings of better angels: Analysing the distribution of battle-deaths in interstate conflict over time
by Céline Cunen & Nils Lid Hjort & Håvard Mokleiv Nygård - 235-250 The quality of terrorist violence: Explaining the logic of terrorist target choice
by Sara MT Polo - 251-264 Does cultural proximity contain terrorism diffusion?
by Tobias Böhmelt & Vincenzo Bove - 265-280 Temperatures, food riots, and adaptation: A long-term historical analysis of England
by Alexander De Juan & Tim Wegenast - 281-296 The hunger games: Food prices, ethnic cleavages and nonviolent unrest in Africa
by Luke Abbs - 297-311 Negotiating peacekeeping consent: Information and peace outcomes
by Amy Yuen - 312-328 Buying blue helmets: The role of foreign aid in the construction of UN peacekeeping missions
by Andrew Boutton & Vito D’Orazio - 329-343 Police integration and support for anti-government violence in divided societies: Evidence from Iraq
by Matthew Nanes - 344-359 Crimea come what may: Do economic sanctions backfire politically?
by Mikhail A Alexseev & Henry E Hale - 360-370 Mapping blue helmets: Introducing the Geocoded Peacekeeping Operations (Geo-PKO) dataset
by Deniz Cil & Hanne Fjelde & Lisa Hultman & Desirée Nilsson - 371-373 2019 Reviewers
by N/A
January 2020, Volume 57, Issue 1
- 3-14 Electoral violence: An introduction
by Sarah Birch & Ursula Daxecker & Kristine Höglund - 15-29 Dangerously informed: Voter information and pre-electoral violence in Africa
by Inken von Borzyskowski & Patrick M Kuhn - 30-45 Raising the stakes: Land titling and electoral stability in Kenya
by Kathleen Klaus - 46-61 Carrots and sticks: Experimental evidence of vote-buying and voter intimidation in Guatemala
by Ezequiel Gonzalez-Ocantos & Chad Kiewiet de Jonge & Carlos Meléndez & David Nickerson & Javier Osorio - 62-76 Who dissents? Self-efficacy and opposition action after state-sponsored election violence
by Lauren E Young - 77-92 Does electoral violence affect vote choice and willingness to vote? Conjoint analysis of a vignette experiment
by Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero & Adrienne LeBas - 93-110 Pre-election violence and territorial control: Political dominance and subnational election violence in polarized African electoral systems
by Michael Wahman & Edward Goldring - 111-125 Electoral violence and the legacy of authoritarian rule in Kenya and Zambia
by Johan Brosché & Hanne Fjelde & Kristine Höglund - 126-139 The effect of alternation in power on electoral intimidation in democratizing regimes
by Rubén Ruiz-Rufino & Sarah Birch - 140-155 Political party strength and electoral violence
by Hanne Fjelde - 156-170 Unequal votes, unequal violence: Malapportionment and election violence in India
by Ursula Daxecker - 171-184 Patterned pogroms: Patronage networks as infrastructure for electoral violence in India and Indonesia
by Ward Berenschot - 185-198 Restrained or constrained? Elections, communal conflicts, and variation in sexual violence
by Jana Krause - 199-216 Mitigating election violence locally: UN peacekeepers’ election-education campaigns in Côte d’Ivoire
by Hannah Smidt
November 2019, Volume 56, Issue 6
- 737-752 Framing and fighting: The impact of conflict frames on political attitudes
by Daphna Canetti & Ibrahim Khatib & Aviad Rubin & Carly Wayne - 753-766 Who follows whom? A coincidence analysis of military action, public opinion and threats
by Tim Haesebrouck - 767-782 Risk tolerance during conflict: Evidence from Aleppo, Syria
by Vera Mironova & Loubna Mrie & Sam Whitt - 783-796 Time is of the essence: The causal effect of duration on support for war
by Ali Sanaei - 797-811 Will there be blood? Explaining violence during coups d’état
by Erica De Bruin - 812-826 International politics by other means: External sources of civil war
by Mark Toukan - 827-844 Peace agreement design and public support for peace: Evidence from Colombia
by Juan Fernando Tellez - 845-859 Moving forward? How war experiences, interethnic attitudes, and intergroup forgiveness affect the prospects for political tolerance in postwar Sri Lanka
by Sara Kijewski & Carolin Rapp - 860-875 Long-lasting consequences of war on disability
by Michael Palmer & Cuong Viet Nguyen & Sophie Mitra & Daniel Mont & Nora Ellen Groce
January 2019, Volume 56, Issue 1
- 3-3 The Nils Petter Gleditsch JPR Article of the Year Award, 2018, goes to Daniel Karell and Sebastian Schutte
by N/A - 4-4 The JPR Best Visualization Award 2018 goes to Carl Müller-Crepon and Philipp Hunziker
by N/A - 5-11 Refugees, forced migration, and conflict: Introduction to the special issue
by Alex Braithwaite & Idean Salehyan & Burcu Savun - 12-27 Motivation and opportunity for conflict-induced migration: An analysis of Syrian migration timing
by Justin Schon - 28-41 Civilian resettlement patterns in civil war
by Abbey Steele - 42-57 Refugees, ethnic power relations, and civil conflict in the country of asylum
by Seraina Rüegger - 58-72 Camp settlement and communal conflict in sub-Saharan Africa
by Kerstin Fisk - 73-87 Blame the victims? Refugees, state capacity, and non-state actor violence
by Tobias Böhmelt & Vincenzo Bove & Kristian Skrede Gleditsch - 88-102 From protection to persecution: Threat environment and refugee scapegoating
by Burcu Savun & Christian Gineste - 103-117 A persuasive peace: Syrian refugees’ attitudes towards compromise and civil war termination
by Kristin Fabbe & Chad Hazlett & Tolga Sınmazdemir - 118-133 Violence, displacement, contact, and attitudes toward hosting refugees
by Faten Ghosn & Alex Braithwaite & Tiffany S Chu - 134-145 Introducing POSVAR: A dataset on refugee-related violence
by Christian Gineste & Burcu Savun - 146-151 Conclusion: What academia can contribute to refugee policy
by Idean Salehyan
November 2018, Volume 55, Issue 6
- 711-725 Aid, exclusion, and the local dynamics of insurgency in Afghanistan
by Daniel Karell & Sebastian Schutte - 726-741 Peacekeeping for profit? The scope and limits of ‘mercenary’ UN peacekeeping
by Katharina P Coleman & Benjamin Nyblade - 742-758 Better peacekeepers, better protection? Troop quality of United Nations peace operations and violence against civilians
by Felix Haass & Nadine Ansorg - 759-773 Fighting the Hydra
by Mitchell Radtke & Hyeran Jo - 774-786 The case for courts
by Jacqueline M Sievert - 787-809 Breaking state impunity in post-authoritarian regimes
by Guillermo Trejo & Juan AlbarracÃn & LucÃa Tiscornia - 810-824 IDP resettlement and collective targeting during civil wars
by Abbey Steele
September 2018, Volume 55, Issue 5
- 551-565 The rise of rebel contenders
by Hanne Fjelde & Desirée Nilsson - 566-581 Organized criminal violence and territorial control
by Louis-Alexandre Berg & Marlon Carranza - 582-595 Repressing for reputation
by Amanda A Licht & Susan Hannah Allen - 596-608 Leader survival and purges after a failed coup d’état
by Malcolm R Easton & Randolph M Siverson - 609-624 Trust in the executive
by Thomas Clark Durant & Michael Weintraub & Daniel Houser & Shuwen Li - 625-640 Revisiting democratic civil peace
by Henrikas BartuseviÄ ius & Svend-Erik Skaaning - 641-655 Going underground
by Margherita Belgioioso - 656-670 Trade and terrorism
by Subhayu Bandyopadhyay & Todd Sandler & Javed Younas - 671-686 Reputation, concessions, and territorial civil war
by Nils-Christian Bormann & Burcu Savun - 687-698 New spatial data on ethnicity
by Carl Müller-Crepon & Philipp Hunziker