Intractable territorial disputes: Concessions, salience, and the political gain of domestic opposition factions
Cho, Hyun Joo
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/116070
Description
Title
Intractable territorial disputes: Concessions, salience, and the political gain of domestic opposition factions
Author(s)
Cho, Hyun Joo
Issue Date
2022-07-11
Director of Research (if dissertation) or Advisor (if thesis)
Dai, Xinyuan
Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
Dai, Xinyuan
Committee Member(s)
Vasquez, John
Prorok, Alyssa
Carroll, Robert
Mondak, Jeffery
Department of Study
Political Science
Discipline
Political Science
Degree Granting Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Degree Name
Ph.D.
Degree Level
Dissertation
Keyword(s)
Territorial disputes
conflict resolution
leadership change
political leaders
Abstract
This dissertation explores how making territorial concessions through peaceful settlement methods can affect a leader’s political fate in office. While there has been extensive empirical research that suggests territorial issues are the primary sources of war and are less likely to be resolved than other types of non-territorial issues, there is a lack of scholarly consensus on why territorial disputes are highly contentious and intractable.
To gain a deeper understanding on why territorial issues are hard to resolve, this dissertation explores the linkage between territorial disputes and domestic political dynamics. The central argument of this dissertation is that incumbent leaders who make territorial concessions through peaceful settlement attempts are more likely to be punished and be replaced by a leader from the political opposition faction – leadership change with a coalition shift occurs. Also, this study makes one of the initial attempts to break down the components of territorial salience (into overall, tangible, intangible saliences, and specific attributes), and investigates how salience can have a systematic impact on the relationship between making territorial concessions and leadership change with a coalition shift.
For empirical analysis, I use two different territorial claims datasets that each covers different regions and periods: all the regions of the world from 1919 to 1995, and the Western Hemisphere and Western Europe from 1816 to 2001. Concerns of potential selection bias that leadership turnover with a coalition shift can be systematically affected by political leaders’ calculation to avoid engaging in risky foreign policy activities that can negatively affect their tenure are addressed both theoretically and through additional robustness checks.
This study demonstrates that making territorial concessions through peaceful mechanisms can be regarded as a critical foreign policy failure that can negatively impact a leader’s tenure in office. This implies that political leaders have domestic political incentives to avoid making major territorial concessions, which can make territorial disputes more difficult to resolve. Furthermore, this dissertation contributes to the literature by studying beyond the influence of territory per se and focusing on how variation within territory or specific attributes of territory can affect conflict dynamics.
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