Publication

1 Sep 2000

This publication presents the case of Somalia as a natural experiment to test the conditions under which order can be provided in a decentralized setting. The authors find that the northern regions of Somalia have maintained peace, while the southern area, especially around the capital Mogadishu, remains strife-torn. The authors offer three hypotheses to explain this difference, namely the availability of rents to the warlords and the impossibility of sharing them, the ability of warlords to externalize the costs of their operations onto civilian populations, and the differential effects of the colonial legacy on traditional institutions in the north and south.

Download English (PDF, 17 pages, 110 KB)
Author Jason P Sorens, Leonard Wantchekon
Series MacMillan Center African Studies
Issue 2
Publisher MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies
Copyright © 2000 MacMillan Center
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