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Conflict Management Regimes and the Management of Land, River, and Maritime Claims Sara McLaughlin Mitchell University of Iowa Andrew Owsiak University.

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Presentation on theme: "Conflict Management Regimes and the Management of Land, River, and Maritime Claims Sara McLaughlin Mitchell University of Iowa Andrew Owsiak University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Conflict Management Regimes and the Management of Land, River, and Maritime Claims Sara McLaughlin Mitchell University of Iowa Andrew Owsiak University of Georgia

2 Motivation Fact-finding missions Innocuous form of conflict management Usage of strategy varies tremendously River claims: used repeatedly Land claims: only if river also involved Maritime claims: never used What explains this puzzling fact? Our answer focuses on conflict management regimes, which are a function of 1) state interests and issue characteristics, 2) transaction costs, and 3) distribution of power Institutionalization occurs because of disputants’ desire to reduce transaction costs and stabilize expectations

3 Terminology Regime: socially constructed institution containing a set of behavioral standards for managing interstate conflicts. Finnemore & Sikkink (1998), Keohane (1984), Ruggie (1998). Types of territorial claims (ICOW, Hensel et al 2008) Territorial claim types Land claimRiver claimMaritime claim

4 Conflict Management Strategies Binding Non-Binding Third-Party Conflict ManagementDisputants Only Greater Disputant Control Less Disputant Control Negotiation Bilateral Multilateral Good offices Fact-finding Mediation Arbitration Adjudication (All) Peaceful Conflict Management

5 Land ClaimsMaritime Claims River Claims Issue Characteristics & State Interests (CM Regime Factor #1) -High tangible & intangible salience; -High domestic audience costs for issue failure -Global resource with high tangible salience; -EEZ claims similar to land claims -High tangible salience; -Regional resource management -Interdependence Transaction Costs (CM Regime Factor #2) -High; borders are often negotiated separately -Low; UNCLOS establishes CM rules/procedures -Global IGO involvement -Medium; regional treaties/IGOs for CM, but variance -Bilateral vs. multilateral basins Key Regime Events-UN Charter recognizes sovereignty, calls for peaceful settlement -Some principles established through legal judgments (e.g. Uti Possedetis) -Traditions of the law of the sea; -Creation of UNCLOS -Strong CM regime (ITLOS, Article 287) -UN Convention on Watercourses; -Growing # of river treaties/RBOs

6 Land ClaimsMaritime Claims River Claims Hypotheses-Bilateral negotiations used frequently -Issues handled with 3PCM more frequently than land or river claims, especially adjudication -River claims more likely to involve fact finding (UN Convention). -Higher salience land claims will involve CM strategies with greater disputant control -EEZ claims will be handled more like land claims with bilateral negotiations and 3PCM that give disputants control -Regional IGOs more likely to help settle river claims than land or maritime claims. -Arbitration preferred to adjudication

7 Conflict Management Regime Factor #3: Distribution of Power In asymmetric dyads: Powerful can enforce preferences in bilateral negotiations Powerful less swayed by third-party punishments/incentives As asymmetry grows: Hypotheses Less conflict management of all kinds in asymmetric dyads Less involvement of global IGO We will not present these results, but the findings support these hypotheses.

8 Research Design ICOW, version 1.1 (1816/1900-2001): claim-dyad-year Logistic & rare events logistic regression Dependent variables: Conflict management strategies, and aggregate categories Key independent variables: Claim type: land, river, maritime (EEZ, non-EEZ) Global IGO, regional IGO (any c.m.) Control variables: Claim salience Recent MIDs, failed peaceful (any) c.m. attempts (10 year index) Joint democracy Relative capabilities (stronger/weaker) Claim duration

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10 Management of claims, 1816-2001 (1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)(7) D.V.All c.m.Bil. Neg.All t.p.Non- binding BindingRegional IGO Global IGO Non EEZ -0.4486*** (0.1029) -0.6255*** (0.1222) 0.1152 (0.1584) 0.2941* (0.1643) -0.9215* (0.5282) 1.6500*** (0.3276) -0.2809 (0.5788) EEZ -0.2246** (0.1015) -0.3295*** (0.1143) 0.2417 (0.1634) 0.2524 (0.1821) 0.1574 (0.3140) 1.3594*** (0.3704) 1.0349*** (0.3822) River 0.2696** (0.1111) 0.1715 (0.1233) 0.5627*** (0.1693) 0.6410*** (0.1805) -0.0617 (0.4787) 2.1516*** (0.3404) 0.7538 (0.4881)

11 Third-party Conf. Mgmt. (1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6) D.V.Good offices Fact- finding Mediatio n ArbitrationAdjud.Multi. Neg. Non EEZ -0.26612*** (1.0156) None-0.2778 (0.3786) None0.4232 (0.6320) 1.5406*** (0.2300) EEZ 0.5396* (0.2877) None-0.1212 (0.3148) 0.0092 (0.5503) 1.0207** (0.5055) 0.6004* (0.3424) River 0.6808** (0.3203) 2.9658*** (0.6702) 0.4685 (0.3103) None1.2937** (0.5900) 0.4067 (0.3715)

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13 Conclusions Overview of our argument: State interests high, power asymmetry high, transaction costs low → states prefer conflict management strategies of greater control Control + potential for other actor involvement (function of transaction costs) → conflict management regimes Conflict management regimes have emerged historically Maritime More multilateral: EEZ: global IGO (adjudication) Non-EEZ: multilateral negotiation, no global IGO Mixed support that EEZ mirrors land claims Land: Bilateral negotiations, less third-party (except: arbitration) River: Non-binding third-party conflict management (esp. fact-finding) Limited multilateral framework (regional, not global)

14 Questions and comments

15 Appendix: Table 2, all

16 Appendix: Table 3, all


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