π’ New issue of JPR is out now!
This latest issue features articles on repression, defection, insurgent adaptability, trade dependence, nuclear deterrence, and more - plus two new Research Notes and two Special Data Features.
Explore the full issue here:
π academic.oup.com/jpr/issue/63/2
Posts by Journal of Peace Research
Excited to finally share my π¨ new article π¨ now online at
@jpeaceresearch.bsky.social βThe Dark Side of Defection: Security Force Defectors and the Aftermath of Nonviolent Revolutions. academic.oup.com/jpr/advance-.... Brief π§΅
π¨ Our new article on political economy of conflict with @serayyalaz.bsky.social and Seden Akcinaroglu is now online first @jpeaceresearch.bsky.social Also a proud moment to have another piece with an emerging scholar and great student.
It is open access via academic.oup.com/jpr/advance-...
1/4
IR research on so-called βtabooβ weapons often focuses on individual systems or very limited comparisons. In new @jpeaceresearch.bsky.social work w/Dave Allison and @laurensukin.bsky.social, we compare aversions across a broader range of weapons (6).
#OpenAccess: doi.org/10.1093/jopr...
π Together with @krishogl.bsky.social, Iβm excited to share several new outputs from our joint research project on the actors of electoral violence. π§΅ A thread...
#polisky #conflictsky
The jury praised the article's clear, intuitive, and high-quality visualizations as well as the authors' ability to present multidimensional data in a visually compelling way (see Figures 1 and 3 below).
Using geospatial data, the authors analyze how harvest-time-dependent shifts in employment and income affect political violence and social unrest across eight Southeast Asian countries from 2010-2023.
π Read the open access article: doi.org/10.1177/0022...
The 2025 Best Visualization Award has been awarded to Justin Hastings & @davidubilava.bsky.social (@sydney.edu.au) for their article entitled 'Agricultural roots of social conflict in Southeast Asia'.
Congratulations to the authors! π
π’ Read the full announcement: www.prio.org/journals/jpr...
Hartwig's article studies the effectiveness of biased peacekeeping interventions by IGOs on behalf of governments in reducing conflict in Somalia. He impressed the jury with a mixed design using process-tracing, interviews, and diff-in-diff analysis.
Read the article here: doi.org/10.1177/0022...
The 2025 Nils Petter Gleditsch Article of the Year Award goes to @jasonhartwig.bsky.social (@yale.edu) for his article entitled 'The end of rebel rule: Biased peacekeeping interventions and social order'. Congratulations! π
Read the full announcement here: www.prio.org/journals/jpr...
The latest issue of the Journal of Peace Research - our first to be published with @academic.oup.com - is now available on our new journal website. This issue features a diverse set of articles advancing research on peace and conflict.
Read the new issue here:
π academic.oup.com/jpr/issue/63/1
πRead the open-access article by @geoffdancy.bsky.social, Oskar Timo Thoms, Phuong Pham, @kathrynsikkink.bsky.social, and @patrickvinck.bsky.social here: doi.org/10.1177/0022...
The dataset provides information on the type of mechanisms used, how they are designed, when they are implemented, as well as their evolution over time. This new data has a wide range of potential applications, including analysing trends over time and comparing between countries and cases.
π’ New publication alert! π’
How do countries around the world pursue justice after human rights violations?
This special data feature introduces the Transitional Justice Evaluation Tools (TJET) database, which includes 400+ indicators on transitional justice mechanisms worldwide from 1970 to 2020.
We are pleased to see these encouraging developments and proud that JPR is leading the way, not only in publishing high-quality peace research but also in ensuring that this research reflects the full diversity of our scholarly community!
Read more here: www.prio.org/news/3660
Weβre proud to share that JPR now leads its field in gender-inclusive authorship.
Between 2000 and 2024, the share of all-male author teams dropped from nearly 75% to ~40%. This shows the value of inclusive publication policies and collaborative research practices in peace and conflict studies.
π To learn more about the studyβs findings, read the open access article here: doi.org/10.1177/0022...
The authors theorise that identity cues affect willingness to contribute to shared public goods and that collective climate risks may intensify identity-based divisions. Their mixed-methods approach combines focus group discussions with a public good experiment involving 300+ farmers and herders.
π’New publication alert!π’
How do identity cues and climate risks influence farmer-herder cooperation?
In this article, Alexandra Krendelsberger, Francisco Alpizar, Lotje de Vries & Han Van Dijk analyze how in-group and out-group perceptions influence cooperation between farmers & herders in Senegal.
π’Our November issue is now out!
π30 Research Articles on women in conflict, the climate-conflict nexus, support for rebels, sanctions and more
ποΈ1 Research Note on surveying in war zones
π4 Special Data Features on UNSC draft resolutions and more
Read it here: journals.sagepub.com/toc/JPR/curr...
While such promises can help sustain peace, excessive promises may not be credible. To test how far executive constraints should go in post-conflict settings, the article draws on global data from post-conflict regimes between 1975 and 2019 and a case study of the M23 rebels in the DR Congo.
π£New publication alert!π£
How do executive constraints influence the risk of conflict recurrence in post-conflict regimes?
@sverke.bsky.social (@statsvitenskap.bsky.social/MF vitenskapelig hΓΈyskole) explores how executive constraints can act as promises of minority & individual-rights protection.
The authors compare private goods for ex-combatants (e.g. training programmes) and public goods (e.g. development plans) using cross-national data on peace agreements (1975β2021). They show that promises of private goods are more effective at preventing conflict recurrence than public good pledges
π’ New publication alert! π’
How do economic provisions in peace agreements affect the durability of peace?
In this article, @elisaadamico.bsky.social, @sansosa.bsky.social, and Molly Melin examine how private goods for ex-combatants and public goods can shape peace durability after civil war.
Moving beyond group-level explanations alone, they construct a new dataset capturing the value of potential target cities and the costs of attacking them for rebel groups worldwide (2000-2020).
To learn more about the findings, read the article open access here:
doi.org/10.1177/0022...
π’New JPR publication!π’
What explains rebel movement during civil wars? Why do only some head right for the capital?
Bryce W Reeder (University of Missouri) and Gary Uzonyi (@unistrathclyde.bsky.social) develop a new framework linking rebel strategy to the strategic and symbolic value of territory.
The analysis combines data on coercive migration attempts since the 1950s with environmental disaster records.
Read the full research note (open access!) here: journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
Drawing on the concept of coercive engineered migration, which is the deliberate use of cross-border population movements to force concessions, the study argues that environmental disasters can overwhelm state capacity and make such coercion more effective.