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  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.7910/DVN/XRJE8U</identifier>
  <creators>
    <creator>
      <creatorName nameType="Personal">Owsiak, Andrew</creatorName>
      <givenName>Andrew</givenName>
      <familyName>Owsiak</familyName>
      <affiliation>University of Georgia</affiliation>
    </creator>
  </creators>
  <titles>
    <title>Replication Data for: Conflict Management Trajectories: Theory and Evidence</title>
  </titles>
  <publisher>Harvard Dataverse</publisher>
  <publicationYear>2020</publicationYear>
  <subjects>
    <subject>Social Sciences</subject>
    <subject>conflict management, Mediation, Peacekeeping/Peacebuilding, Conflict</subject>
  </subjects>
  <contributors>
    <contributor contributorType="ContactPerson">
      <contributorName nameType="Organizational">Interactions, International</contributorName>
      <affiliation>University of Pittsburgh</affiliation>
    </contributor>
  </contributors>
  <dates>
    <date dateType="Submitted">2020-07-30</date>
    <date dateType="Available">2020-10-22</date>
  </dates>
  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset"/>
  <sizes>
    <size>540094</size>
    <size>103835</size>
    <size>13413</size>
  </sizes>
  <formats>
    <format>text/tab-separated-values</format>
    <format>application/x-stata-smcl</format>
    <format>application/x-stata-syntax</format>
  </formats>
  <version>1.0</version>
  <rightsList>
    <rights rightsURI="info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess"/>
    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0" rightsIdentifier="CC0-1.0" rightsIdentifierScheme="SPDX" schemeURI="https://spdx.org/licenses/" xml:lang="en">Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication.</rights>
  </rightsList>
  <descriptions>
    <description descriptionType="Abstract">When multiple attempts to manage a given conflict occur, are these&#13;
attempts interdependent—and if so, how? Policymakers and practitioners&#13;
regularly report that such interdependence exists; and yet, explicit&#13;
theorizing about it remains underdeveloped. The need for theorizing&#13;
motivates the current study. Using the concept of a conflict management&#13;
trajectory as a foundation, I develop four models that potentially link&#13;
successive conflict management efforts together: a cost model, a limited&#13;
cost model, a learning model, and a baseline model. I then test these&#13;
models&amp;apos; predictions empirically with data on diplomatic interventions&#13;
during the period 1946-2000 (i.e., verbal pleas, mediation, arbitration,&#13;
adjudication, humanitarian and other administrative tasks, and peace&#13;
operations). The analysis shows that the limited cost model best explains&#13;
interdependence among conflict management attempts. In that model,&#13;
states balance their desire to do something with their incentive to&#13;
minimize costs. This creates an intervention ‘threshold’ beyond which&#13;
third parties less frequently travel—particularly if that threshold has not&#13;
yet been crossed in a given dispute. Third-party intervention&#13;
overwhelmingly resides on the less costly end of the spectrum,&#13;
exceeding the costs associated with mediation rarely. If a third party&#13;
crosses that threshold, the probability of further intervention on the&#13;
high-cost side of the threshold rises, but third parties still prefer to&#13;
return to low-cost conflict management strategies. It seems, therefore,&#13;
that rational considerations dominate, as third parties work to achieve&#13;
the benefits of peace for the lowest possible price.</description>
  </descriptions>
</resource>
