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Votes and violence
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ISBN: 052182916X 0511211724 9780511211720 9780521829168 0511217099 9780511217098 0511215304 9780511215308 9780511510458 0511510454 0521536057 1107147727 9781107147720 1280540524 9781280540523 0511327315 9780511327315 0511213492 9780511213496 9780521536059 0521536057 Year: 2004 Publisher: Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press

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Abstract

Why do ethnic riots break out when and where they do? Why do some governments try to prevent ethnic riots while others do nothing or even participate in the violence? In this book, Steven I. Wilkinson uses collected data on Hindu-Muslim riots, socio-economic factors and competitive politics in India to test his theory that riots are fomented in order to win elections and that governments decide whether to stop them or not based on the likely electoral cost of doing so. He finds that electoral factors account for most of the state-level variation in Hindu-Muslim riots: explaining for example why riots took place in Gujarat in 2002 but not in many other states where militants tried to foment violence. The general electoral theory he develops for India is extended to Ireland, Malaysia and Romania as Wilkinson shows that similar political factors motivate ethnic violence in many different countries.

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