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Author Rauta, Vladamir, author

Title A theory of distributional violence : an analysis of proxy wars in Africa, 1945-2011 / Vladimir Rauta
Published Nottingham : University of Nottingham, 2017

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  355.02096 Rau/Tod  AVAILABLE
Description 472 pages ; 30 cm
Summary This thesis addresses three questions: What are proxy wars? How are proxy wars waged? Why are proxy wars waged? Each research question addresses a gap, a flaw or a deficiency in the current knowledge of proxy wars. Accordingly, each question is matched with a research aim. The first aim is to establish a conceptual and definitional baseline for proxy wars as a point of inquiry. The second seeks to restrict the empirical domain of proxy wars in an effort to enhance our ability to recognise proxy wars in the contemporary security environment. Lastly, the third objective is an analysis of the normative and causal dynamics underpinning party interaction in proxy wars. Taken together, the three research questions form the focus of my research, namely to understand and explain proxy wars as a self-standing form of political violence. I apply my research questions to Africa on a timeline beginning with 1945 leading up to 2011. I build a qualitative dataset, the Proxy War Dataset, which maps the spread of the phenomena across time, space (regions, countries), and conflict indicators (incompatibility). I use it as a descriptive tool to understand proxy wars, as well as a theory-informing source of data. In answering the causality problem, I put forward a theory of distributional violence focused on strategic interaction which yields four distinct logics of distribution of violence in proxy wars: pre-emptive, managerial, retaliative, and cooperative. I probe the theory with a series of four case studies focused on proxy wars in Ethiopia, the country most affected by the phenomena under observation throughout the 1945-2011 timeline.
Notes Published on demand
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Nottingham , 2017
Subject Proxy war
War and society -- Africa -- History
SUBJECT Africa -- Foreign relations -- History -- 1945-1960
Africa -- Foreign relations -- History -- 1960-
Subject Proxy war -- Africa
Military policy
Genre/Form Academic theses.
Author University of Nottingham, degree granting institution.