Konflikt og økonomi
Økonomiske forhold og væbnede konflikter hænger sammen. Internationale organisationer betragter vækst som en måde at begrænse rekrutteringen til radikale og væbnede grupper, og handel som et middel til fredeligt samkvem. Men hvad sker der egentlig? Hvem kontrollerer handel, transport og produktion i konfliktområder? Og hvordan virker økonomiske sanktioner på politiske og væbnede konflikter?
Forskning og aktiviteter
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Rapport2022Somali diaspora practices and their effectsNauja Kleist & Masud Abdi
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DIIS Working Paper2022An overview and lessons learntMarie Ladekjær Gravesen & Mikkel Funder
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Photo/illustration by Lennart Larsen via Wiki Commons copyright licenseTidsskriftsartikel2022The possibility for collective action against China’s economic coercion seems more likely than ever.Luke Patey
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Bog2022the Origins of Violence in Central AfricaPeer Schouten
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Rapport2021The political economy of checkpoints in South Sudan, ten years after independencePeer Schouten, Ken Matthysen & Thomas Muller
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Tidsskriftsartikel2021Ambiguous rural infrastructure and slippery stabilization in eastern DR CongoPeer Schouten, Judith Verweijen, Saidi Kubuya Batundi & Janvier Murairi
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Tidsskriftsartikel2021Armed checkpoints along key trade routes—not natural resources—are the key to financing rebel groups and insurgencies around the world.Peer Schouten
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Rapport2021Results of Consultation with transboundary herders, semi-settled herders and settled communities in Ouham Pendé and Western OuhamGuillaume de Brier, Peer Schouten, Peter Mardsen & Dirk Gillebert
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Working papers etc.2021En introduktionLars Engberg-Pedersen & Adam Moe Fejerskov
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DIIS Working Paper2021the case of ColombiaLine Jespersgaard Jakobsen
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Tidsskriftsartikel2020Boom-era political and institutional innovationNelson Oppong, Luke Patey & Ricardo Soares de Oliveira
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Bogkapitel2020Political recognition and justice practices in the Naga Self-Administered ZoneLue Thar, Myat The Thitsar & Helene Maria Kyed
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseBogkapitel2020Land-buying Companies & their Long-term Implications in Laikipia, KenyaMarie Ladekjær Gravesen, Jeremy Lind, Doris Okenwa & Ian Scoones
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DIIS Working Paper2020A literature reviewNanna Lynggaard & Helle Munk Ravnborg
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DIIS Working Paper2019Supply chains as a new frontline in conflict financing?Peer Schouten
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DIIS Working Paper2019Emerging practices in the livestock value chains between Kenya and SomaliaPhilemon Ng'asike
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Tidsskriftsartikel2019The makings of the Berbera corridor in Somali East AfricaFinn Stepputat & Tobias Hagmann
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseBog2019The co-production of logistical and political ordersPeer Schouten, Finn Stepputat & Jan Bachmann
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseWorking papers etc.2019Geopolitics and Statemaking in SomalilandWarsame Ahmed & Finn Stepputat
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Working papers etc.2019Kassahun Berhanu
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DIIS Working Paper2019Institutional change in livestock trade in Somaliland after 1991Ahmed Musa
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseTidsskriftsartikel2019a window on the making of maritime intervention actorsJessica Larsen
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DIIS Working Paper2019Cross-border trading in the Ethio-Somaliland corridorAsnake Kefale
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Photo/illustration by Pexels. Jens Mahnke. copyright licenseRapport2019Impact of armed interference & responsible sourcingPeer Schouten, Ken Matthysen & Steven Spittaels
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Tidsskriftsartikel2019a new research agenda on business and peace-buildingPeer Schouten & Jason Miklian
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DIIS Policy Brief2013the need for support
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DIIS Policy Brief2013a case study of OPENDiana Felix da Costa, Søren Vester Haldrup, John Karlsrud, Frederik Rosén & Kristoffer Nilaus Tarp
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DIIS Policy Brief2008Lars Buur
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DIIS Policy Brief2006Sudan in FocusLuke Patey
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DIIS Policy Brief2006the case of LiberiaLouise Riis Andersen
Eksperter
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Billede/illustration af Lynggaardhansenfoto.dk
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Billede/illustration af Lynggaardhansenfoto.dk