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Containing Ethnic Conflict: Repression, Cooptation, and Identity Politics

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Why do states target some civilians with collective punishment while coopting others with material goods during an ethnic civil war? This article examines how the Turkish government calibrated its repression and cooptation policies towards the Kurdish population during the counterinsurgency of the 1990s. In contrast to the situational conflict dynamics emphasized by the civil war literature, we explain the distribution of cooptation and repression with the state's identity policy: government policies were more punitive in areas that displayed strong Kurdish linguistic/political identity, or high tribal concentration, while they were more cooptative where the government had fostered a Sunni-Muslim Kurdish identity. The study is based on a novel dataset that includes information about displacement, tribal concentration, and violent events from archival sources.

Keywords: CIVILIAN VICTIMIZATION; COUNTERINSURGENCY; DISPLACEMENT; ETHNIC CONFLICT; IDENTITY; KURDISH POLITICS; PRO-GOVERNMENT MILITIAS; TRIBES

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 July 2022

This article was made available online on 17 December 2021 as a Fast Track article with title: "Containing Ethnic Conflict: Repression, Cooptation, and Identity Politics".

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  • Comparative Politics is an international journal that publishes scholarly articles devoted to the comparative analysis of political institutions and behavior. It was founded in 1968 to further the development of comparative political theory and the application of comparative theoretical analysis to the empirical investigation of political issues. Comparative Politics communicates new ideas and research findings to social scientists, scholars, and students, and is valued by experts in research organizations, foundations, and consulates throughout the world.
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