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  • Why We Fight: The Roots of War and the Paths to Peace
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Why We Fight: The Roots of War and the Paths to Peace

Why We Fight: The Roots of War and the Paths to Peace

doorChristopher Blattman
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Ryan Boissonneault
5,0 van 5 sterren Insightful analysis grounded in both theory and field experience
Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten 🇺🇸 op 3 mei 2022
Geverifieerde aankoop
Preventing war and violence, if it’s not the top concern, has to rank among the most important problems facing humanity. As those in the throes of war will tell you, there is no greater freedom than the freedom from violence. Learning how to prevent it, then, or how to elect the leaders who can, should remain a top priority for everyone.

The stakes are high. We can’t afford to get the causes of war wrong because, if we do, the proposed solutions won’t work. And yet that is exactly what happens, time and time again. War, like any complex social phenomenon, resists a simple narrative, and yet if there is anything humans are consistently good at, it’s providing simple narratives. We blame wars on villains, oversimplified scenarios, or just invented conspiracies. But it’s never that simple.

Chris Blattman—an economist and political scientist who studies global conflict, crime, and poverty—resists this tendency towards oversimplification at every turn. Having studied prolonged violent conflicts between groups—whether it be gang violence, civil wars, or wars between nations—he knows how difficult war can be to explain, and to prevent.

Fortunately, for most people, most of the time, peace is the normal state of affairs. As Blattman explains, the costs of violent conflict almost always compel groups to compromise. Successful societies accomplish this all the time. You probably live in one, and you probably don’t spend too much time worrying about war breaking out.

But when war does break out, it is rarely for any single reason—it’s usually the result of complex factors all interacting to collectively decrease the perceived costs of war and increase the incentives to fight. In fact, Blattman identifies five such factors. To the degree that the five factors or causes of war are present, the risk of war increases. The flip side is that, to the degree we can manage the five causes of war, we can likewise mitigate the risks of conflict breaking out (this is obviously much easier said than done).

Normally, war is too costly for either side to pursue, and the incentive is to compromise peacefully, with the weaker side willingly taking less (but achieving more than they would win by fighting). The calculus changes, however, in certain scenarios.

According to Blattman, there are five reasons one side might initiate war, despite the costs: 1) unchecked leaders can benefit from war while being shielded from its costs, 2) ideologies can compel people to fight despite the costs (e.g., religious conflict), 3) uncertainty regarding the relative strength of an opponent can compel one side to test the waters or call a bluff, 4) commitment problems can compel an adversary to attack an enemy before the enemy grows stronger in the future, and 5) misperceptions can distort an adversary’s perceptions of the intentions of an enemy.

War results from a combination of these factors, and Blattman discusses several examples of how various conflicts throughout history can be explained in these terms. The end result is that the reader will be equipped with a much more sophisticated toolkit when assessing the causes of conflict, past and present.

The final part of the book considers the paths to peace, which, unsurprisingly, work to mitigate the five causes of war. Checks and balances on power, rules and enforcement, and democratic institutions and voting top the list, as these procedures collectively reduce the risk of a nation falling victim to an unchecked ruler. As the philosopher Karl Popper said, democracy is the ideal system not because it necessarily selects the best, strongest leaders, but that it provides a mechanism for removing the worst leaders, leaders who would sacrifice the well-being of the population at large for their own personal gain.

The other key to peace is interdependence. Societies that are dependent on each other economically and socially rarely go to war, as the costs would be too high. You don’t attack your enemy when your enemy provides economic benefits for you, just as you don’t demonize and attack the people you work or live with. It’s true that pluralism can create conflict as the result of different worldviews placed in competition with one another, but this rarely turns into violent civil war in integrated democracies.

On a final note, since we want our politicians to create stability and peace, this book not only outlines the causes of war and peace, but also outlines the manner in which we should elect politicians. Following the political philosophy of Karl Popper, Blattman recommends treating politics more like science by trying to improve society in incremental steps that can be tested, rather than by instituting grand sweeping plans that fulfill some utopian vision. We should be wary of any politician that proclaims that they alone can fix complex social problems, and, frankly, if we vote for them anyway, we probably deserve them.

The bottom line: Buy this book to have a deeper understanding of the causes of war and the paths to peace and stability, and to develop a more sophisticated toolkit for the evaluation of political candidates and policy decisions.
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Johannes Schmidt
4,0 van 5 sterren Relevant und interessant
Beoordeeld in Duitsland 🇩🇪 op 23 december 2022
Geverifieerde aankoop
Gutgeschriebenes Buch mit interessanten Ansätzen zur Erklärung von Kriegen bzw nicht Kriegen. Manchmal erscheinen mir die lösungsansätze ein wenig zu einfach, aber zumindestens regt es zum Nachdenken an
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Marc Bellemare
5,0 van 5 sterren A Masterful Look at Conflict
Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten 🇺🇸 op 25 mei 2022
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I have known Chris Blattman for almost 20 years, having met him at an SSRC grantees conference when we were both graduate students. Since then, I have learned a lot from his blog and from his Twitter feed. It was thus with much delight that I read Why We Fight, his first book.

This is a masterful look at conflict, and for a book looking at conflict, it starts from what struck me as a relatively controversial hypothesis: Conflict is the exception, not the norm. From there, Chris relies on his own expertise, which is both deep and broad, to discuss the causes of conflict, but also what we can do to minimize the likelihood of conflict, if not altogether avoid it.

Given existing tensions and increasingly inflammatory rhetoric in the United States, I hope policy makers at the state and federal levels are paying attention to what Chris has to say in this book.
2 mensen vonden dit nuttig
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Shane M Conway
5,0 van 5 sterren Definitive source on prolonged violent conflict
Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten 🇺🇸 op 20 april 2022
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The control of violence is one of the central organizing forces of society. Economists and political theorists ranging from Fukuyama, North/Wallace/Weingast, James Scott, and Acemoglu/Robinson have posited well developed theories about how liberal societies (open access orders) have developed in response to the threat of violence. But yet most of developed humanity lives in a state of peace. How does prolonged violent conflict start, and how can it be avoided?

No one is better positioned to address this question than Chris Blattman. “Why We Fight” is filled with compelling stories alongside comprehensive research. This should be required reading for anyone trying to understand modern social order.
5 mensen vonden dit nuttig
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Megan Kang
5,0 van 5 sterren This book will change the way you think about violence!
Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten 🇺🇸 op 5 mei 2022
Geverifieerde aankoop
This book synthesizes decades of research on why we fight with riveting first hand stories from the leading expert on conflict today. It's written in a way that will make you want to keep turning the pages, while in the meanwhile gaining a rigorous analytic framework to recognize 5 reasons for why we fight.

After reading this book, you will have tools to think about violence, conflict, war and peace in a careful and clear sighted way.
5 mensen vonden dit nuttig
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Mallow
2,0 van 5 sterren Insubstantial
Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten 🇺🇸 op 22 juni 2022
Geverifieerde aankoop
I was induced to get this book by a review in the Wall Street Journal. Jacket blurbs include encomiums by such luminaries as Nicholas Christakis and Tyler Cowen. One suspects they may be personal friends of the author who sought to do him a favor without actually reading the manuscript. Otherwise, their currency is seriously degraded.
All of us try to leverage whatever (even minimal) assets we have to achieve maximum results. In this case, the author has strung together a number of superficial (and prolix) anecdotes about Ugandans, gangs, Spartans, Germans, etc., and purports to extract important (? profound) principles. Much is written using the first person, suggesting that the author's impressions are dispositive. I found them superficial and unpersuasive. The 35 pages of small-print bibliography is completely over-the-top, designed one suspects only to add gravitas to a very thin effort. (Which of us have not mendaciously padded a bibliography?) The most valuable of the citations is that to Daniel Kahneman, who seems to have the only substance to contribute.
Remind me NOT to take Tyler Cowen's recommendations in the future.
2 mensen vonden dit nuttig
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JB - Ottawa
5,0 van 5 sterren Insightful, compelling reading with a personal touch.
Beoordeeld in Canada 🇨🇦 op 3 mei 2022
Geverifieerde aankoop
A fresh approach to the topic without sounding like a textbook. An easy and informative read.
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CK
5,0 van 5 sterren Straightforward analysis
Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten 🇺🇸 op 19 juli 2022
Geverifieerde aankoop
Simple and to-the-point explanations. Useful for teaching econ and political science undergrads.
Een iemand vond dit nuttig
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Amazon Customer
5,0 van 5 sterren fun, and counterintuitive
Beoordeeld in Canada 🇨🇦 op 3 mei 2022
Geverifieerde aankoop
great lessons from the field and various empirical work.
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Pax
1,0 van 5 sterren Underwhelming and incomplete.
Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten 🇺🇸 op 3 mei 2022
Geverifieerde aankoop
I wanted to like this book. Sadly, I couldn’t bring myself to look past some glaring flaws. The first major issue is that the book states that war is the exception, not the rule, without backing that up with any rigor. Considering the vast scholarship already done on this topic, and how inconclusive it is, the generality of the claim made is highly suspect. This sets the foundation for the entire book. Next, game theory is used to attempt to explain war, conflict, and peace. Again, there isn’t any data used to support the use of game theory, which is itself suspect in complex situations such as war, where people are not acting as purely rational. Each successive “explanation” or “why” is vague, straight forward, and overall incomplete. There are far grander, rigorous, and complete works out there. This one is far too simplistic, taking something so complex and challenging, breaking it down to a handful of easy rules, and making it palatable for the everyday reader. It is not accurate. It’s just simple. Don’t waste your time if you actually want to understand conflict.
9 mensen vonden dit nuttig
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Vertaal recensie in het Nederlands
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