Local Conflict in Indonesia : Incidence and Patterns
Major intrastate conflicts, such as civil wars, and the resulting set-backs for economic and political development, have received increasing research attention in recent years. A growing literature has sought to investigate conditions that affect t...
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okr-10986-112622021-04-23T14:02:54Z Local Conflict in Indonesia : Incidence and Patterns World Bank CAUSES OF CONFLICT CIVIL WAR COMMUNITIES CONFLICT CONFLICT PREVENTION CONFLICT RESOLUTION CONFLICT RISK CONFLICTS COSTS OF CONFLICT CRIME ECONOMIC SHOCKS EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ETHNIC DIVERSITY ETHNIC DOMINANCE ETHNIC GROUPS HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS INCOME INEQUALITY INTRASTATE CONFLICTS LEADERSHIP LEVELS OF CRIME LOCAL CONFLICT PEACE POOR PROPERTY RIGHTS RECONSTRUCTION RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY RURAL AREAS SANCTIONS SEGREGATION SOCIALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SOCIETY UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN AREAS VIOLENCE VIOLENT CONFLICT VIOLENT CONFLICTS WAR CONFLICT DISPUTES CIVIL WAR CONFLICT CHARACTERISTICS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONFLICT PREVENTION INTERNAL CONFLICT POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT POLITICAL STABILITY VIOLENT CONFLICTS CIVIL UNREST POLITICAL RISK ANALYSIS TRANSITIONS ECONOMIC TRANSITION TRANSITION ECONOMIES VILLAGE LEADERSHIP STATISTICAL AGENCIES Major intrastate conflicts, such as civil wars, and the resulting set-backs for economic and political development, have received increasing research attention in recent years. A growing literature has sought to investigate conditions that affect the probability of countries experiencing large-scale violence, in particular the likelihood of civil war. However, many developing countries are affected by high levels of communal and inter-communal conflict that does not take the form of a civil war, but nonetheless results in significant casualties, destruction of livelihoods and property. Pervasive and widespread local conflict is not only a barrier to development but in some cases threatens to escalate into larger incidents of unrest or even fully-fledged violent conflict. Countries undergoing difficult political and economic transitions appear especially vulnerable.This paper defines local conflict in Indonesia in terms of its incidence and impact measured within a locality, while the causes of local conflict may be endogenous or extra-local. The Indonesia statistical agency has adopted a definition of local conflict beyond some threshold of violence within a given locality in the past year, that may in turn have been associated with loss of life, serious injury, or property damage. Responses are compiled from village leaders and central government statistical agents posted at the subdistrict level. 2012-08-13T14:35:49Z 2012-08-13T14:35:49Z 2004-07 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/07/4938900/local-conflict-indonesia-incidence-patterns http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11262 English Social Development Notes; No. 19 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research East Asia and Pacific Indonesia |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
CAUSES OF CONFLICT CIVIL WAR COMMUNITIES CONFLICT CONFLICT PREVENTION CONFLICT RESOLUTION CONFLICT RISK CONFLICTS COSTS OF CONFLICT CRIME ECONOMIC SHOCKS EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ETHNIC DIVERSITY ETHNIC DOMINANCE ETHNIC GROUPS HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS INCOME INEQUALITY INTRASTATE CONFLICTS LEADERSHIP LEVELS OF CRIME LOCAL CONFLICT PEACE POOR PROPERTY RIGHTS RECONSTRUCTION RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY RURAL AREAS SANCTIONS SEGREGATION SOCIALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SOCIETY UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN AREAS VIOLENCE VIOLENT CONFLICT VIOLENT CONFLICTS WAR CONFLICT DISPUTES CIVIL WAR CONFLICT CHARACTERISTICS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONFLICT PREVENTION INTERNAL CONFLICT POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT POLITICAL STABILITY VIOLENT CONFLICTS CIVIL UNREST POLITICAL RISK ANALYSIS TRANSITIONS ECONOMIC TRANSITION TRANSITION ECONOMIES VILLAGE LEADERSHIP STATISTICAL AGENCIES |
spellingShingle |
CAUSES OF CONFLICT CIVIL WAR COMMUNITIES CONFLICT CONFLICT PREVENTION CONFLICT RESOLUTION CONFLICT RISK CONFLICTS COSTS OF CONFLICT CRIME ECONOMIC SHOCKS EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ETHNIC DIVERSITY ETHNIC DOMINANCE ETHNIC GROUPS HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS INCOME INEQUALITY INTRASTATE CONFLICTS LEADERSHIP LEVELS OF CRIME LOCAL CONFLICT PEACE POOR PROPERTY RIGHTS RECONSTRUCTION RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY RURAL AREAS SANCTIONS SEGREGATION SOCIALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SOCIETY UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN AREAS VIOLENCE VIOLENT CONFLICT VIOLENT CONFLICTS WAR CONFLICT DISPUTES CIVIL WAR CONFLICT CHARACTERISTICS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONFLICT PREVENTION INTERNAL CONFLICT POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT POLITICAL STABILITY VIOLENT CONFLICTS CIVIL UNREST POLITICAL RISK ANALYSIS TRANSITIONS ECONOMIC TRANSITION TRANSITION ECONOMIES VILLAGE LEADERSHIP STATISTICAL AGENCIES World Bank Local Conflict in Indonesia : Incidence and Patterns |
geographic_facet |
East Asia and Pacific Indonesia |
relation |
Social Development Notes; No. 19 |
description |
Major intrastate conflicts, such as
civil wars, and the resulting set-backs for economic and
political development, have received increasing research
attention in recent years. A growing literature has sought
to investigate conditions that affect the probability of
countries experiencing large-scale violence, in particular
the likelihood of civil war. However, many developing
countries are affected by high levels of communal and
inter-communal conflict that does not take the form of a
civil war, but nonetheless results in significant
casualties, destruction of livelihoods and property.
Pervasive and widespread local conflict is not only a
barrier to development but in some cases threatens to
escalate into larger incidents of unrest or even
fully-fledged violent conflict. Countries undergoing
difficult political and economic transitions appear
especially vulnerable.This paper defines local conflict in
Indonesia in terms of its incidence and impact measured
within a locality, while the causes of local conflict may be
endogenous or extra-local. The Indonesia statistical agency
has adopted a definition of local conflict beyond some
threshold of violence within a given locality in the past
year, that may in turn have been associated with loss of
life, serious injury, or property damage. Responses are
compiled from village leaders and central government
statistical agents posted at the subdistrict level. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Brief |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Local Conflict in Indonesia : Incidence and Patterns |
title_short |
Local Conflict in Indonesia : Incidence and Patterns |
title_full |
Local Conflict in Indonesia : Incidence and Patterns |
title_fullStr |
Local Conflict in Indonesia : Incidence and Patterns |
title_full_unstemmed |
Local Conflict in Indonesia : Incidence and Patterns |
title_sort |
local conflict in indonesia : incidence and patterns |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/07/4938900/local-conflict-indonesia-incidence-patterns http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11262 |
_version_ |
1764416103273988096 |