New analysis suggests war is not in decline

New analysis suggests war is not in decline

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While some researchers have claimed that war between nations is in decline, a new analysis suggests we shouldn’t be too quick to celebrate a more peaceful world.

19195818_sThe study finds that there is no clear trend indicating that nations are less eager to wage war, said Bear Braumoeller, author of the study and associate professor of political science at the Ohio State University.

According to HLS News Wire conflict does appear to be less common than it had been in the past, he said. This is due more to an inability to fight, however, than to an unwillingness to do so. As empires fragment, the world has split up into countries that are smaller, weaker and farther apart, so they are less able to fight each other,” Braumoeller said. Once you control for their ability to fight each other, the proclivity to go to war hasn’t really changed over the last two centuries.”

An Ohio State University release reports that Braumoeller presented his research on the 29th August in Chicago at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. 

Several researchers have claimed in recent years that war is in decline, most notably Steven Pinker in his 2011 book The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined. As evidence, Pinker points to a decline in war deaths per capita. Braumoeller, however, said he believes that is a flawed measure. That accurately reflects the average citizen’s risk from death in war, but countries’ calculations in war are more complicated than that,” he said. Moreover, since population grows exponentially, it would be hard for war deaths to keep up with the booming number of people in the world.

iHLS – Israel Homeland Defense

Because we cannot predict whether wars will be quick and easy or long and drawn-out, a better measure of how warlike we as humans are is to start with how often countries use force — such as missile strikes or armed border skirmishes — against other countries, he said. Any one of these uses of force could conceivably start a war, so their frequency is a good indication of how war prone we are at any particular time,” he said.

The release notes that Braumoeller used the Correlates of War Militarized Interstate Dispute database, which scholars from around the world study to measure uses of force up to and including war. The data shows that the use of force has held more or less constant through World War I, but then increased steadily thereafter. This trend is consistent with the growth in the number of countries over the past two centuries.

Just looking at the number of conflicts per pair of countries, however, is misleading, he said, because countries won’t go to war if they aren’t “politically relevant” to each other. Military power and geography play a big role in relevance; it is unlikely that a small, weak country in South America would start a war with a small, weak country in Africa. Once Braumoeller took into account both the number of countries and their political relevance to one another, the results showed essentially no change to the trend of the use of force over the last 200 years.

While researchers such as Pinker have suggested that countries are actually less inclined to fight than they once were, Braumoeller said these results suggest a different reason for the recent decline in war. With countries being smaller, weaker and more distant from each other, they certainly have less ability to fight. But we as humans shouldn’t get credit for being more peaceful just because we’re not as able to fight as we once were,” he said.

There is no indication that we actually have less proclivity to wage war.”