2019
DOI: 10.1177/0022343319839449
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Will there be blood? Explaining violence during coups d’état

Abstract: Although just under half of all coup d’état attempts involve fatalities, there has been surprisingly little attention to the conditions under which coups turn violent. Existing research emphasizes the incentives coup plotters have to avoid bloodshed but does not explain the conditions under which violence nonetheless occurs. This article develops a theoretical framework that predicts that the extent of violence that occurs during coup attempts will vary systematically with central features of incumbent regimes… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, the consequences of coups are severe. Coup attempts often result in the imprisonment, death, or exile of the former leader (Goemans 2008) as well as more general violence with a significant number of deaths (Bruin 2019), and are known to have long-term effects on a country's political stability and economy even in the case of failed coups (Harkness 2018;Roessler 2016;Powell and Chacha 2016).…”
Section: Coups and Leader Punishment During Civil Warmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Furthermore, the consequences of coups are severe. Coup attempts often result in the imprisonment, death, or exile of the former leader (Goemans 2008) as well as more general violence with a significant number of deaths (Bruin 2019), and are known to have long-term effects on a country's political stability and economy even in the case of failed coups (Harkness 2018;Roessler 2016;Powell and Chacha 2016).…”
Section: Coups and Leader Punishment During Civil Warmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, as a growing body of coup literature demonstrates, coups led by different types of plotters are fundamentally different in terms of their causes and consequences (e.g. Albrecht and Eibl 2018;Aksoy, Carter, and Wright 2015;Bruin 2019). Lumping together these different types of coups would prevent us from fully understanding the causal mechanism behind wartime coups as well as their impacts on the trajectory of civil war.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the success rate of the aggregated coup attempts stands at 50%, substantial differences exist when looking at coup agency, with elite officers significantly more successful than junior plotters. Recent scholarship found that elite officers have superior capacities to coordinate for coup plots compared to their junior colleagues (Albrecht & Eibl, 2018, p. 319; De Bruin, 2019, p. 5; Singh, 2014)—a factor of particular importance amid uncertain political dynamics of revolutionary mass uprisings.…”
Section: Empirical Evidence: Rollback Coups Amid Consolidated Politicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Drawing on our original medium- n data set of endgame coups, we suggest disaggregating specific coup types by distinguishing between different context factors (regular coups vs. endgame coups) and coup agents (senior vs. junior officers). In so doing, this article contributes to a growing research program differentiating between discrete types of coups, for instance, by emphasizing distinct agents within the military apparatus (Albrecht & Eibl, 2018; Bou Nassif, 2015; De Bruin, 2019; Singh, 2014) or the social and ethnic identities of coup plotters (Harkness, 2018; Kandeh, 2004; Roessler, 2011).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While existing frameworks help understand how institutions mitigate the risk of reshuffling coups led by members of the ruling coalition, they cannot explain whether and how institutions affect regime-changing coups. As the literature on coups highlights, there are important variations among coups regarding the types of plotters and their interests (e.g., Aksoy et al, 2015; Albrecht & Eibl, 2018; De Bruin, 2019; Singh, 2014; Sudduth, 2021). 4 Lumping together these actors with distinct interests within the state apparatus prevents us from fully understanding how institutions affect authoritarian regime survival.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%