I mean, it’s pretty relevant for peace (I guess most wars result from conflict of factions or succession crises) and for a well functioning government. People talk about the dangers of polarization, about why nations fail, or autoritarianism, or iidm… It’s not neglected per se (it’s been the focus of some of classical works in political phil & sci), but I’m not sure all low-hanging has been eaten; plus, thinking about interventions as increasing / decreasing political stability might help assessing other areas (like IIDM).
I was thinking about Chad current situation and Vox’s piece on Parliamentarism… Has anyone assessed (ITN or EA-style evaluation) political stability as a cause area?
I mean, it’s pretty relevant for peace (I guess most wars result from conflict of factions or succession crises) and for a well functioning government. People talk about the dangers of polarization, about why nations fail, or autoritarianism, or iidm… It’s not neglected per se (it’s been the focus of some of classical works in political phil & sci), but I’m not sure all low-hanging has been eaten; plus, thinking about interventions as increasing / decreasing political stability might help assessing other areas (like IIDM).