ABSTRACT

Sixteen million people have died in civil wars in the past 50 years. In view of that, civil wars may be the single most destabilizing force in world politics today. The only greater killer is the suffering that pushes individuals into them. Civil wars create regional and global instability that threatens economic initiatives and political continuity. Preventing civil wars is a challenge that the policy community is ill-equipped to handle. Rwanda is an example-a tragedy that the world did nothing to stop. Iraq and Afghanistan are tragedies the world did much to inflame. This book uses argument, evidence, and intuition born of experience to provide an account of civil wars and the steps we can take to reduce them.

chapter |11 pages

Sixteen Million

part |63 pages

Causes

chapter |11 pages

Discontent

chapter |14 pages

Forewarnings

chapter |10 pages

Houses Built on Sand

chapter |16 pages

Tipping Point

chapter |9 pages

Perfect Storm

part |54 pages

Who Fights?

chapter |16 pages

Exclusion and Solidarity

chapter |12 pages

Bloody Favoritism

chapter |12 pages

Scylla and Charybdis

part |72 pages

World Stage

chapter |16 pages

Lawyers, Guns, and Money

chapter |14 pages

Persuasion

chapter |20 pages

The Road to Damascus

chapter |5 pages

Postscript