Why do ethnic groups adopt violent means? In the 1990's,
ethnicity emerged as the principle source of organized violence
around the world. Ethnic wars were no longer internal conflicts
between substate actors; instead they challenged state sovereignty
and taxed the international community's ability to respond. Efforts
to understand ethnic conflict remain divorced from the study of
systemic change and the declining authority, capacity, and
legitimacy of weak multiethnic states. This work proposes that the
phenomenon of ethnic violence must be understood through a
multilevel approach and that finding a solution to ethnic violence
is possible only if we have a clear understanding of the sources
that spark such violence in the first place.
"The Three Images of Ethnic War " identifies the causes of
ethnic war at three levels of analysis -- the group, the state, and
the international. These are the three images of ethnic war. This
book places the outbreak of violence within context of the state
and the international system in which the violence unfolds. Hanlon
examines three violent ethnic wars in Yugoslavia, Nagorno-Karabakh,
and Iraq. Yugoslavia's violent ethnic wars, the war over
Nagorno-Karabakh, and the violent conflict between Kurds and Arabs
in Iraqi Kurdistan demonstrate that ethnic violence is a complex
and multifaceted occurrence. Hanlon argues that the numerous
reasons why groups adopt violent means can only be understood
through a multilevel framework of the three images of ethnic war
and the interrelationship among them.
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