Journal of Conflict Resolution
1957 - 2025
From Peace Science Society (International) Bibliographic data for series maintained by SAGE Publications (). Access Statistics for this journal.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
Volume 63, issue 10, 2019
- Bruce Russett Award for Article of the Year in JCR for 2018 pp. 2235-2235

- N/a
- Food Resources and Strategic Conflict pp. 2236-2261

- Ore Koren
- Fighting from the Pulpit: Religious Leaders and Violent Conflict in Israel pp. 2262-2288

- Michael Freedman
- When Civilians Are Attacked: Gender Equality and Terrorist Targeting pp. 2289-2318

- Laura Huber
- Managing Insurgency pp. 2319-2353

- Peter Schram
- Why Democracy Protests Do Not Diffuse pp. 2354-2389

- Dawn Brancati and Adrián Lucardi
- Why Some Democracy Protests Do Diffuse pp. 2390-2401

- Kurt Weyland
- How Should We Now Conceptualize Protest, Diffusion, and Regime Change? pp. 2402-2415

- Henry E. Hale
- Findings in Search of a Controversy and in Need of More Data pp. 2416-2420

- Valerie Bunce and Sharon L. Wolchik
- The Two-step Model of Clustered Democratization pp. 2421-2437

- Christian Houle and Mark A. Kayser
- What We (Do Not) Know about the Diffusion of Democracy Protests pp. 2438-2449

- Dawn Brancati and Adrián Lucardi
Volume 63, issue 9, 2019
- The Silent Victims of Sexual Violence during War: Evidence from a List Experiment in Sri Lanka pp. 2015-2042

- Richard Traunmüller, Sara Kijewski and Markus Freitag
- Does Peacekeeping Really Bring Peace? Peacekeepers and Combatant-perpetrated Sexual Violence in Civil Wars pp. 2043-2070

- Shanna Kirschner and Adam Miller
- Networks of Cooperation: Rebel Alliances in Fragmented Civil Wars pp. 2071-2097

- Emily Kalah Gade, Michael Gabbay, Mohammed M. Hafez and Zane Kelly
- Fraud Is What People Make of It: Election Fraud, Perceived Fraud, and Protesting in Nigeria pp. 2098-2127

- Ursula Daxecker, Jessica Di Salvatore and Andrea Ruggeri
- Redistributive Preferences and Protests in Latin America pp. 2128-2154

- Patricia Justino and Bruno Martorano
- What Matters Is Who Supports You: Diaspora and Foreign States as External Supporters and Militants’ Adoption of Nonviolence pp. 2155-2179

- Marina G. Petrova
- Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations pp. 2180-2206

- Yoram Z. Haftel and Stephanie C. Hofmann
- Strategies and Tactics in Armed Conflict: How Governments and Foreign Interveners Respond to Insurgent Threats pp. 2207-2232

- Patricia Lynne Sullivan and Johannes Karreth
Volume 63, issue 8, 2019
- Call for New Editor, Editors or Editorial Collective: Conflict Management and Peace Science pp. 1795-1796

- N/a
- Trends in African Migration to Europe: Drivers Beyond Economic Motivations pp. 1797-1831

- José-Manuel Giménez-Gómez, Yabibal Walle and Yitagesu Zewdu Zergawu
- Talking to the Shameless?: Sexual Violence and Mediation in Intrastate Conflicts pp. 1832-1859

- Robert Ulrich Nagel
- Do Binding Beat Nonbinding Agreements? Regulating International Water Quality pp. 1860-1888

- Martin Köppel and Detlef F. Sprinz
- The Devil’s Haircut: Investor–State Disputes over Debt Restructuring pp. 1889-1922

- Matthew DiGiuseppe and Patrick E. Shea
- More Is Not Always Better: The Case of Counterterrorism Security pp. 1923-1938

- Pritha Dev and Konrad Grabiszewski
- A Question of Costliness: Time Horizons and Interstate Signaling pp. 1939-1964

- Kyle Haynes
- Can Hierarchy Dodge Bullets? Examining Blame Attribution in Military Contracting pp. 1965-1985

- Austin P. Johnson, Nehemia Geva and Kenneth J. Meier
- The Private Security Events Database pp. 1986-2006

- Deborah Avant and Kara Kingma Neu
- Corrigendum pp. 2007-2009

- N/a
Volume 63, issue 7, 2019
- Advancing the Frontier of Peacekeeping Research pp. 1595-1600

- Theodora-Ismene Gizelis and Michelle Benson
- Cut Short? United Nations Peacekeeping and Civil War Duration to Negotiated Settlements pp. 1601-1629

- Jacob Kathman and Michelle Benson
- Peacekeeping Effectiveness and Blue Helmets’ Distance from Locals pp. 1630-1655

- Vincenzo Bove and Andrea Ruggeri
- UN Peacekeeping and Protection from Sexual Violence pp. 1656-1681

- Karin Johansson and Lisa Hultman
- Mediation, Peacekeeping, and the Severity of Civil War pp. 1682-1709

- Kyle Beardsley, David E. Cunningham and Peter B. White
- Carrots, Sticks, and Insurgent Targeting of Civilians pp. 1710-1735

- Victor Asal, Brian J. Phillips, R. Karl Rethemeyer, Corina Simonelli and Joseph K. Young
- Network Interdependencies and the Evolution of the International Arms Trade pp. 1736-1764

- Paul W. Thurner, Christian S. Schmid, Skyler J. Cranmer and Göran Kauermann
- The “War on Drugs†in Mexico: (Official) Database of Events between December 2006 and November 2011 pp. 1765-1789

- Laura H. Atuesta, Oscar S. Siordia and Alejandro Madrazo Lajous
- Corrigendum pp. 1790-1790

- N/a
Volume 63, issue 6, 2019
- Recipient of the 2019 Peace Science Society Will H. Moore III Prize pp. 1367-1367

- N/a
- Producing Goods and Projecting Power: How What You Make Influences What You Take pp. 1368-1402

- Jonathan Markowitz, Christopher Fariss and R. Blake McMahon
- Are Liberal Governments More Cooperative? Voting Trends at the UN in Five Anglophone Democracies pp. 1403-1432

- Richard Hanania
- Public Attitudes toward Private Military Companies: Insights from Principal–agent Theory pp. 1433-1459

- Mark D. Ramirez and Reed M. Wood
- What Shapes Civilian Beliefs about Violent Events? Experimental Evidence from Pakistan pp. 1460-1487

- Daniel Silverman
- Why Do Autocrats Disclose? Economic Transparency and Inter-elite Politics in the Shadow of Mass Unrest pp. 1488-1516

- James R. Hollyer, B. Rosendorff and James Vreeland
- Unraveling Secessions pp. 1517-1541

- Friedhelm Hentschel
- Sovereignty Rupture as a Central Concept in Quantitative Measures of Civil War pp. 1542-1578

- Nicholas Sambanis and Jonah Schulhofer-Wohl
- NewGene: An Introduction for Users pp. 1579-1592

- D. Scott Bennett, Paul Poast and Allan Stam
Volume 63, issue 5, 2019
- Pitfalls of Professionalism? Military Academies and Coup Risk pp. 1111-1139

- Tobias Böhmelt, Abel Escribà -Folch and Ulrich Pilster
- A Clash of Norms? How Reciprocity and International Humanitarian Law affect American Opinion on the Treatment of POWs pp. 1140-1164

- Jonathan A. Chu
- Politics of Pursuing Justice in the Aftermath of Civil Conflict pp. 1165-1192

- Nam Kyu Kim and Mi Hwa Hong
- Guns Yield Butter? An Exploration of Defense Spending Preferences pp. 1193-1221

- Laron K. Williams
- Militarized Disputes, Uncertainty, and Leader Tenure pp. 1222-1252

- Bradley C. Smith and William Spaniel
- Protecting Workers Abroad and Industries at Home: Rights-based Conditionality in Trade Preference Programs pp. 1253-1282

- Emilie M. Hafner-Burton, Layna Mosley and Robert Galantucci
- Intragenerational Cultural Evolution and Ethnocentrism pp. 1283-1309

- David Hales and Bruce Edmonds
- Does Violent Secessionism Work? pp. 1310-1336

- Ryan D. Griffiths and Louis M. Wasser
- Integrating Conflict Event Data pp. 1337-1364

- Karsten Donnay, Eric T. Dunford, Erin C. McGrath, David Backer and David E. Cunningham
Volume 63, issue 4, 2019
- A Vote for Freedom? The Effects of Partisan Electoral Interventions on Regime Type pp. 839-868

- Dov H. Levin
- Flying to Fail: Costly Signals and Air Power in Crisis Bargaining pp. 869-895

- Abigail Post
- War, Rebellion, and Intervention under Hierarchy: Vietnam–China Relations, 1365 to 1841 pp. 896-922

- David C. Kang, Dat X. Nguyen, Ronan Tse-min Fu and Meredith Shaw
- Hedging for Better Bets: Power Shifts, Credible Signals, and Preventive Conflict pp. 923-949

- Brandon K. Yoder
- Is There a War Party? Party Change, the Left–Right Divide, and International Conflict pp. 950-975

- Andrew Bertoli, Allan Dafoe and Robert F. Trager
- Emotions, Terrorist Threat, and Drones: Anger Drives Support for Drone Strikes pp. 976-1000

- Kerstin Fisk, Jennifer L. Merolla and Jennifer M. Ramos
- How to Sell a Coup: Elections as Coup Legitimation pp. 1001-1031

- Sharan Grewal and Yasser Kureshi
- Focal Points, Dissident Calendars, and Preemptive Repression pp. 1032-1052

- Rory Truex
- Worlds Apart: Conflict Exposure and Preferences for Peace pp. 1053-1076

- Juan Fernando Tellez
- Oil Wealth, Winning Coalitions, and Duration of Civil Wars pp. 1077-1105

- Krista Wiegand and Eric Keels
Volume 63, issue 3, 2019
- Rebel Natural Resource Exploitation and Conflict Duration pp. 591-616

- Justin M. Conrad, Kevin T. Greene, James Igoe Walsh and Beth Elise Whitaker
- Killing for God? Factional Violence on the Transnational Stage pp. 617-643

- Jori Breslawski and Brandon Ives
- Emergency Powers in Democracies and International Conflict pp. 644-671

- Bryan Rooney
- External Supporters and Negotiated Settlement: Political Bargaining in Solving Governmental Incompatibility pp. 672-699

- Wakako Maekawa
- Sticks, Stones, and Broken Bones: Protest Violence and the State pp. 700-726

- Heather Sullivan
- The Fate of Former Authoritarian Elites Under Democracy pp. 727-759

- Michael Albertus
- Postdisaster Reconstruction as a Cause of Intrastate Violence: An Instrumental Variable Analysis with Application to the 2004 Tsunami in Sri Lanka pp. 760-785

- Kyosuke Kikuta
- Rational Overreaction to Terrorism pp. 786-810

- William Spaniel
- The Dyadic Militarized Interstate Disputes (MIDs) Dataset Version 3.0: Logic, Characteristics, and Comparisons to Alternative Datasets pp. 811-835

- Zeev Maoz, Paul L. Johnson, Jasper Kaplan, Fiona Ogunkoya and Aaron P. Shreve
Volume 63, issue 2, 2019
- Justice Matters: Peace Negotiations, Stable Agreements, and Durable Peace pp. 287-316

- Daniel Druckman and Lynn Wagner
- Invisible Digital Front: Can Cyber Attacks Shape Battlefield Events? pp. 317-347

- Nadiya Kostyuk and Yuri M. Zhukov
- The Burden of Bearing Witness: The Impact of Testifying at War Crimes Tribunals pp. 348-372

- Kimi King and James Meernik
- Conflicted Capital: The Effect of Civil Conflict on Patterns of BIT Signing pp. 373-404

- Trey Billing and Andrew D. Lugg
- State Control and the Effects of Foreign Relations on Bilateral Trade pp. 405-438

- Christina L. Davis, Andreas Fuchs and Kristina Johnson
- Domestic Terrorism in Democratic States: Understanding and Addressing Minority Grievances pp. 439-467

- Sambuddha Ghatak, Aaron Gold and Brandon C. Prins
- Concessions or Crackdown: How Regime Stability Shapes Democratic Responses to Hostage taking Terrorism pp. 468-501

- Aslihan Saygili
- Preemptive Repression: Deterrence, Backfiring, Iron Fists, and Velvet Gloves pp. 502-527

- Kris De Jaegher and Britta Hoyer
- Choosing Whom to Target: Horizontal Inequality and the Risk of Civil and Communal Violence pp. 528-554

- Solveig Hillesund
- Foreign Rebel Sponsorship: A Patron–Client Analysis of Party Viability in Elections Following Negotiated Settlements pp. 555-584

- Michael C. Marshall
- Corrigendum pp. 585-586

- N/a
Volume 63, issue 1, 2019
- Educating Demonstrators: Education and Mass Protest in Africa pp. 3-30

- Sirianne Dahlum and Tore Wig
- Social Inequality, State-centered Grievances, and Protest: Evidence from South Africa pp. 31-58

- Alexander De Juan and Eva Wegner
- Ethnic Cleansing and the Politics of Restraint: Violence and Coexistence in the Lebanese Civil War pp. 59-84

- Nils Hägerdal
- Social Mobility and Political Instability pp. 85-111

- Christian Houle
- Taming the Gods: How Religious Conflict Shapes State Repression pp. 112-138

- Peter S. Henne and Jason Klocek
- Democracy Aid and Electoral Accountability pp. 139-166

- Tobias Heinrich and Matt W. Loftis
- Join the Chorus, Avoid the Spotlight: The Effect of Neighborhood and Social Dynamics on Human Rights Organization Shaming pp. 167-193

- Sam R. Bell, K. Chad Clay and Amanda Murdie
- Domestic Institutional Constraints, Veto Players, and Sanction Effectiveness pp. 194-217

- Jin Mun Jeong and Dursun Peksen
- The Unforeseen Consequences of Extended Deterrence: Moral Hazard in a Nuclear Client State pp. 218-250

- Neil Narang and Rupal N. Mehta
- Civilian Casualties and Public Support for Military Action: Experimental Evidence pp. 251-281

- Robert Johns and Graeme A. M. Davies
| |