<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0121-5612</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Colombia Internacional]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[colomb.int.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0121-5612</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Departamento de Ciencia Política y Centro de Estudios Internacionales. Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de los Andes]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0121-56122009000200002</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[NATURAL RESOURCE TYPES AND CONFLICT TERMINATION INITIATIVES]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="es"><![CDATA[TIPOS DE RECURSOS NATURALES E INICIATIVAS PARA LA FINALIZACIÓN DE CONFLICTOS]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Le Billon]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Philippe]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Universidad de Columbia Británica  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[Vancouver ]]></addr-line>
<country>Canadá</country>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>07</month>
<year>2009</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>07</month>
<year>2009</year>
</pub-date>
<numero>70</numero>
<fpage>9</fpage>
<lpage>34</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0121-56122009000200002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0121-56122009000200002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0121-56122009000200002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[There is mounting evidence that natural resources can influence the likelihood, course and outcome of armed conflicts. Much of these relationships depend on the institutional setting in which the conflict and resource exploitation occurs, and the specific characteristics of resources involved. This paper examines the relevance of two broad resource characteristics-lootability and legality-for conflict termination initiatives. Observing revenue sharing, economic sanction and military interventions in a total of 26 conflicts between 1989 and 2006, the paper suggests that resource characteristics can affect the effectiveness of resource-related conflict termination instruments.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="es"><p><![CDATA[Existe creciente evidencia de que los recursos naturales pueden influenciar las probabilidades, la trayectoria y el resultado de los conflictos armados. Muchas de estas relaciones dependen del marco institucional en el cual el conflicto y la explotación de recursos ocurren, y de las características específicas de los recursos implicados. Este documento examina la relevancia de dos grandes características de un recurso -saqueabilidad (lootability) y legalidad (legality)- para las iniciativas de finalización de conflictos. Observando la repartición de ingresos, las sanciones económicas y las intervenciones militares en 26 conflictos entre el año 1989 y el año 2006, este documento sugiere que las características de un recurso pueden afectar la effectividad de los instrumentos de finalización de un conflicto relacionado con los recursos naturales.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[war]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[natural resources]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[sanctions]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[revenue sharing]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[military interventions]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[guerra]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[recursos naturales]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[sanciones]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[repartición de ingresos]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[intervenciones militares]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <font face="verdana" size="2">       <p align="center" ><font size="4"><b> NATURAL RESOURCE TYPES AND  CONFLICT TERMINATION INITIATIVES</b></font></p>     <p><b> Philippe  Le Billon    <br> </b>profesor  asociado de Geograf&iacute;a en el Instituto Liu de Asuntos Globales de la Universidad  de Columbia Brit&aacute;nica, Vancouver, Canad&aacute;. <i><u> <a  href="mailto:philippe.lebillon@geog.ubc.ca"> philippe.lebillon@geog.ubc.ca</a></u></i></p>  <hr size="1">     <p><b> ABSTRACT</b></p>      <p> There is mounting  evidence that natural resources can influence the likelihood, course and outcome  of armed conflicts. Much of these relationships depend on the institutional  setting in which the conflict and resource exploitation occurs, and the specific  characteristics of resources involved. This paper examines the relevance of two  broad resource characteristics—lootability and legality—for conflict termination  initiatives. Observing revenue sharing, economic sanction and military  interventions in a total of 26 conflicts between 1989 and 2006, the paper  suggests that resource characteristics can affect the effectiveness of  resource-related conflict termination instruments.</p>      <p><b> KEYWORDS</b>    <br> war - natural resources - sanctions - revenue sharing  - military interventions.</p>  <hr size="1">     <p align="center" ><font size="3"><b> TIPOS DE RECURSOS  NATURALES E INICIATIVAS PARA LA FINALIZACI&Oacute;N DE CONFLICTOS</b></font></p>      <p><b> RESUMEN</b></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> Existe creciente  evidencia de que los recursos naturales pueden influenciar las probabilidades,  la trayectoria y el resultado de los conflictos armados. Muchas de estas  relaciones dependen del marco institucional en el cual el conflicto y la  explotaci&oacute;n de recursos ocurren, y de las caracter&iacute;sticas espec&iacute;ficas de los  recursos implicados. Este documento examina la relevancia de dos grandes  caracter&iacute;sticas de un recurso —saqueabilidad (<i>lootability</i>) y legalidad (<i>legality</i>)—  para las iniciativas de finalizaci&oacute;n de conflictos. Observando la repartici&oacute;n de  ingresos, las sanciones econ&oacute;micas y las intervenciones militares en 26  conflictos entre el a&ntilde;o 1989 y el a&ntilde;o 2006, este documento sugiere que las  caracter&iacute;sticas de un recurso pueden afectar la effectividad de los instrumentos  de finalizaci&oacute;n de un conflicto relacionado con los recursos naturales.</p>      <p><b> PALABRAS CLAVE</b>    <br> guerra -  recursos naturales - sanciones - repartici&oacute;n de ingresos - intervenciones  militares.</p>      <p>Recibido el 5 de Mayo de 2009 y aceptado el 13 de Octubre de 2009</p>  <hr size="1">     <p><b> INTRODUCTION</b></p>      <p> Much attention has  been devoted to the relationships between natural resource wealth and armed  conflicts since the mid-1990s (Bannon and Collier 2003; Ballentine and  Nitzschke 2004; Nitzschke and Studdard 2005). The United Nations Security Council  (unsc) has taken an unprecedented number of measures to curtail access to  revenues by targeted groups and help foster a durable transition to peace  (Cortright and L&oacute;pez 2002). Natural resources do not have the monopoly of war  financing, but this priority reffected an upward trend of resource-funded  hostilities since the 1980s until the mid-2000s, and a consensus that insurgent  access to resource revenues tends to prolong conflicts (Ross 2006). This paper  reviews the potential importance of the type of resources involved in  hostilities for conflict termination. If specific instruments are more effective  for some resources than others, matching them may improve the chance of ending a  conflict. The success or failure of resource-focused instruments may also inform  arguments about the role of different types of resources in the prolongation of  conflicts.</p>      <p> The paper first  provides a brief overview of large-n and medium-n studies on natural resources  and conflict duration, making no general claims about small-n studies. It then  discusses potential linkages between resource types and conflict termination,  before reviewing the record of the three main types of resource-focused  instruments used for 26 conflicts between 1989 and 2006. Following a discussion  of their relative effectiveness, the paper concludes with a discussion of  findings, policy implications and avenues for future studies.</p>       <p><b>     <br> HOW DO RESOURCES  INFLUENCE (OR NOT) WARS?</b></p>      <p> Studies linking  natural resources and armed conflicts until the late 1990s have generally sought  to examine resource scarcity or environmental degradation effects, mostly  through using comparative case studies (Dalby 2002). Using re-source dependence  as proxy, Collier and Hoefer (1998; 2004) initially argued that greed was a  widespread motivation amongst belligerents, before suggesting that resources  constituted a favorable opportunity, setting the context for violence to escalate into armed rebellion. These arguments  received widespread attention, including in the public media and international  policy circles. The findings and their interpretation, however, have been  challenged—notably  in terms of the interpretation of relationship (e.g. resource dependence being  also a possible proxy for grievances), of the characteristic of the variable  (e.g. being too broad, not accounting for some resources such as diamonds, or  reffecting dependence and its institutional causes rather than resource wealth),  and of the unit of analyses (e.g. not disaggregating the location of resources  and conflict), see (Buhaug and Gates 2002; de Soysa, 2002). Several studies have  re-examined this relationship by checking for robustness (Fearon 2005), using  alternative resource variables (Humphreys 2005; Ross 2006), disaggregating types  of resources (Lujala et al. 2005; Rustad et al. 2008) and conflict levels  (Buhaug and R&oslash;d 2006).</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> The picture emerging  from these recent studies is that the relationship is generally less robust than  was initially found, except in the case of oil. Both oil dependence (oil exports  as a percentage of gdp) and oil abundance (rent per capita) are positively  correlated with the risk of war (Fearon 2005; Ross 2006). Humphreys (2005) finds  this relationship afected by the level of oil dependence and abundance (medium  dependence and abundance present higher risk), the phase of the oil cycle  (production is riskier than discovery), and the strength of institutions (oil  increasing risk for weak states but reducing it for strong states). Basedau and  Lacher (2006) find that the increased risk of high oil dependence is  counterbalanced by high abundance. The location of oil and type of conflict also  matter, with overlapping conflict and oil areas being associated with longer  governmental conflicts (over central government), but not with territorial (i.e.  secessionist) ones (Lujala et al. 2007). The presence of oil in conflict areas  would also increase the number of deaths resulting directly from hostilities,  whereas the presence of oil within the country but outside the conflict area  tends to decrease it (Lujala 2008). Besides oil, Lujala et al. (2005) find that  secondary diamonds (surface or alluvial diamonds) have some effect on ethnic  conflicts. Snyder (2006) stresses in this regard that the type of resource  exploitation institutions plays a major role for building political order  challenged by the particularities of lootable resources—with joint  private/public exploitation offering the best outcomes. Le Billon (2008)  suggests that high diamonds abundance and industrial exploitation seem to reduce  armed conflict occurrence. No staThistically significant relationship was found  for timber (Rustad et al. 2008), while Humphreys (2005) suggests that  agricultural commodities are under-examined and would be positively correlated  with a higher risk of conflict; Dube and Vargas. (2006) qualifying this  relationship as they find that higher coffee prices reduce the likeli-hood of  conflict in Colombia—with the opportunity cost effect (leaving coffee production  employment for rebellion) trumping the rapacity effect (increasing prices exacerbating incentives to illegally  appropriate coffee rents through rebellion). Narcotics tend to strengthen rebel  groups in terms of capacity compared to states, thereby prolonging conflicts  (Cornell 2007).</p>       <p><b>     <br> RESOURCES AND  CONFLICT TERMINATION</b></p>      <p> Of most relevance to  this study are analyses of conflict duration, risk of renewed conflict, and  conflict termination processes. Several empirical studies have suggested that  the availability of valuable resources in a conflict area tends to prolong  hostilities and undermine conflict termination eforts (Doyle and Sambanis 2000;  Stedman 2001; Fearon 2004; Ross 2004; Lujala et al. 2005). Humphreys (2005)  finds, in contrast, that oil or diamond productions are associated with shorter  conflicts (for a critique, see Collier and Hoefer 2005), and highlights the  diversity of mechanisms possibly at play:</p>     <p><b> - </b><i> Feasibility mechanism</i>,  with resources providing a fow of revenues enabling belligerents to continue  fighting;    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Balance  of power </i>mechanism, with resources prolonging wars when easily accessible to the weaker  party, or shortening them when more exclusively accessible to the stronger  party;    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Conflict premium </i> mechanism, with  belligerents opportunistically pursing economic agendas in a rewarding resource  context;    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Fragmentation </i> mechanism, with  economic inTherests and distrust over resource revenue sharing within armed  groups fostering a breakdown of discipline, allegiance switching, or the  crowding out of ideologically driven belligerents by opportunistic ones (see  Weinstein 2007). Hostilities may be prolonged through more diffuse  economically-driven violence and undermining peace negotiations, but also  shortened by militarily weakening fragmented groups if they face a more capable  military force;    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Peace-buying </i> mechanism, whereby  resource revenues can provide an incentive to participate in and abide by a  peace process. Such redistribution may, however, provide an incentive for  further fragmentation among armed groups and difusion of armed violence;    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>International stakes </i> (or international  conflict premium) mechanism, whereby resources can influence the inTherests and  capacity of regional or international actors. InTherest groups in neighbouring  states in particular can economically benefit from a conflict and seek to  prolong it, while major commercial inTherests can also seek to end a conflict to  protect or access resources; and    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Resource enclave </i> (or sparse economic  networks) mechanism argues that, since economic sectors with dense economic  linkages across divided communities would promote conflict termination, the  enclave nature or sparse economic linkages of many resource sectors would tend  to prolong conflicts.</p>      <p> These mechanisms may  have divergent effects on conflict duration. Ross (2005) finds only weak support  for the conflict premium mechanism and its negative effect on the success of  negotiated settlement. Humphreys (2005) finds support for the balance of power,  fragmentation (through military weakening) and the international stakes  mechanisms, but no support for the conflict premium and peace-buying mechanisms.  Finding a positive staThistical association between oil discovery in conflict  areas and increased conflict duration, Lujala (2010) argues in support of the  conflict premium mechanism. Assessing the likely impact of different initiatives  on the various mechanisms may assist to confirm this argument: some initiatives  may be more suited to the types of mechanism at play in a conflict, and help  realize their potential contribution to conflict termination.</p>      <p> Examining the effect  of resource dependence on peacebuilding success, Doyle and Sambanis (2000, 789)  find that these are significantly and negatively associated, and suggest that  &quot;easily looted resources provide incentives for new wars, which would reduce the  probability of &#91;peace-building&#93; success.&quot; Collier, Hoefer et al. (2004) do not  find that primary commodity export dependence has significant effect on the  duration of civil wars; yet they find that lower commodity prices reduce  conflict duration—sanctions able to lower prices through closing &#39;open&#39; markets  should thus help shorten conflicts. Beyond such contradictory findings, several  studies examine the sensitivity of conflict duration to the characteristics of  the resources, their location with regard to the conflict, as well as the type  of conflict involved and initiative deployed (see <a href="#t1">Table 1</a>). Using a large-n  analysis that spatially disaggregates resources and conflict areas, Buhaug et  al. (2009) find that the presence of resources within a conflict zone increases  the duration of conflict—ending hostilities around resource areas should thus be  a priority. Examining the specific case of &#39;lootable&#39; or &#39;contraband&#39; goods,  Fearon (2004) finds that, compared to a total sample of 128 civil wars between  1945 and 1999, those in which <i>rebels </i>had access and relied heavily on  contraband goods such as narcotics or gems lasted about five times  longer—cutting access to such resources should thus also contribute to hastening  peace. Based on thirteen case studies of civil wars involving natural resources  in the 1990s, Ross (2004) finds that access to resource wealth by rebel groups  lengthened eight of them, but shortened two conflicts as a result of military  interventions by regional powers and had a mixed effect on two others as rebel  groups defected to the government, in part to maintain access to resource  revenues in the face of mounting military pressure. Ross&#39; findings seem to  confirm that access to resource revenues by the weaker party prolongs conflicts;  they offer weak support, however, for the argument that resources offer a  financial incentive to oppose a peace settlement through current gains on  present or future control of resources. Given these studies, one would expect  that resource-related peacebuilding initiatives—such as wealth sharing, military interventions and economic sanctions—would  contribute to conflict termination and post-conflict stability. As discussed  below, these initiatives are not likely to have the same effect within all  conflict environments—notably with respect to resource type.</p>     <p align=center><a name=t1><img src="img/revistas/rci/n70/70a02t1.jpg"></a></p>      <p> Many studies have  examined relationships between conflict termination initiatives in general and  conflict settlement. Licklider (1995) finds for a sample of 91 civil wars  between 1945 and 1993 that the risk of renewed conflict is higher for negotiated  settlement than a military victory, thereby suggesting that interventions should  aim at facilitating military victory rather than negotiations. Using a sample of  55 civil wars between 1960 and 1999, Collier, Hoefer et al. (2004) points out  that only military interventions on the rebel side shorten civil war. Several  studies have found that foreign interventions tend to increase the duration of  civil wars (Regan 2002); although towards negotiated but not military settlement  (Balch-Lindsay et al. 2008). Regan, Frank et al. (2009) qualify these findings  by arguing that well-timed diplomacy conducted by some international actors,  alone or combined with other initiatives, can help reduce conflict duration.  Besides these general studies, at least four studies have examined conflict termination initiatives either targeting resources or  deployed in a specific resource context. Using a selection of 16 cases, Stedman  (2001, 11) finds that no peace agreement in which international actors were  assigned a prominent role on the ground has been successfully implemented where  there are &quot;valuable, easily  marketable commodities such as gems or timber,&quot; and suggests that such resources  &quot;not only provide armies with the means for continued fighting, they also become  the reward against which they weight the benefts of peace.&quot;<sup><a   name="s1" href="#1">1</a></sup> In his  study of conflict duration and mode of termination, Fearon (2004) notes that  conflicts are about four times longer in cases where ethnic minorities took up  arms to protect their access to land, fuel or mineral resources against migrants  or the state. Fearon (2004) suggests that negotiated settlements would be more  problematic in such contexts by increasing the stakes of one party and  suspicions about reneging by the other.<sup><a   name="s2" href="#2">2</a></sup> Therritorial conflicts may  not be the only ones prolonged by the availability of resources.</p>      <p> Arguably, if resource  revenues are only available to the stronger party, then resources should not  prolong but <i>shorten </i>conflicts by providing the stronger party more  economic leverage to achieve a military victory or to &#39;buy peace&#39; (Le Billon  2003). Humphreys (2005) finds that both oil and diamond export dependence is  associated with <i>shorter </i>wars by making military victory easier, but not  by obstructing negotiated settlements. Oil revenues are generally much more  accessible to governments than to rebels, even if rebel forces can steal oil or  extort protection rents or kidnapping ransoms from oil companies. Diamond  revenues may be as much accessible to rebels than governments, but Le Billon  (2005) find that military victory over diamond-funded rebels is also easier,  suggesting that deriving revenues from diamonds could have a deleterious effect  on rebel organizational structure (see also Weinstein 2005; 2007; Le Billon  2008).</p>      <p> Overall, recent  studies on resources and conflict termination underline the relevance of  commodity-related instruments for ending conflicts. They also point to the  importance of distinguishing between diferent type of resources and conflicts  involved, their relative location, as well as the parties accessing resources  and the mechanisms prolonging or shortening the conflict. Finally, they tend to  suggest that conflicts involving resources are more likely to be successfully  settled through military victory than negotiated settlements resource, and that policy initiatives should in general seek to  deny resource access to the weaker party rather than accommodate its demands.</p>       <p><b>     <br> RESOURCE TYPE AND  CONFLICT TERMINATION INITIATIVES</b></p>      <p> The literature on  conflicts and natural resources identifies several resource type dimensions  potentially influencing their relationship, including those affecting conflict  duration and preferred mode of conflict termination (Le Billon 2001; Lujala  2003; Ross 2003). The most classic dimension in resource and war studies is that  of &#39;scarcity,&#39; measuring the imbalance between &#39;supply&#39; and &#39;demand,&#39; and thus  the motivational element in a &#39;struggle&#39; over &#39;strategic&#39; or &#39;vital&#39; resources.  This imbalance is not set only by the supply and demand for the resource itself,  but by the broader economic and livelihood context (e.g. conditions of poverty).  Scarcity is often interpreted through the categories of renewable and  non-renewable, with much of the literature emphasizing more robust links between  large-scale violence and non-renewable resources than for renewable ones (de  Soysa 2002; Binningsbo et al. 2007; Theisen 2008). The argument that &#39;abundant&#39;  resource would motivate conflicts, although apparently contrary, builds on some  of the same assumptions, but shifts scale from local to global scarcity (hence a  locally abundant but still highly valuable resource), and often adds the  dimension of dependence.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> The most well known  dimension in the current literature is the idea of &#39;loot-ability,&#39; measuring the  ease with which a rebel group could access revenue from this resource. This  aspect has been declined through terms such as accessibility and  appropriability, as well as variations on this theme such as obstructability  (i.e. ability to racket through threats of obstruction—see Ross 2003). All of  these relate to the &#39;opportunity&#39; effect according to which a rebel group  operating in a more &#39;opportune&#39; environment would be more viable. There are many  components to this lootability: the materiality of the resources, its mode of  exploration and production, its spatial spread and accessibility to its  revenues, and (il)legal and (il)licit character along its value/commodity chain.</p>      <p><b> - </b><i> Materiality  </i>of the resource  influences for example its ease of extraction and transportation, and its  price/weight ratio. The easier to extract and transport, and the more valuable  per weight, the more &#39;lootable&#39; the resource.    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Mode of  exploration, production, and consumption </i> influences its  accessibility, notably through labour, technical, and capital input, but also  the social relations and financial fows that take place around resources along  the (global) commodity chain.    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Location, spatial spread and accessibility to its revenues </i> are defined by the  components presented above, as well as the geographical spread of resources  (either in the form of placer/reserves or suitable socio-ecosystems in the case  of cash crops for example). Depending on the relative  capacity of the belligerents to capture revenues, point source or diffuse  resources can provide advantages to some belligerents over others—with  diffuse resources generally favoring rebellions over governments.    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Livelihood impact </i> of the resource  reffects its importance for the survival of individuals or groups. This can  relate to &#39;vital&#39; resources such as water, not only in terms of access but also  of quality (e.g. mining related pollution).    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Legal  and licit character </i> is defined,  respectively, in judicial and moral terms. What is illegal by law can be  considered licit by the population, such as narcotics at some production sites,  and thereby further advantage an &#39;illegal&#39; actor such as a rebellion vis &agrave; vis a  government.    <br> <b>-</b><b> </b><i>Identity and divisibility </i> characters defined by  how much a resource is identified by a social group as its own and by the  divisible character of resource ownership and benefts, both of which relate in  large part to its territoriality, mode of production, and revenue fows. These  dimensions are less often examined, notably by quantitative studies due to its  &#39;qualitative&#39; character (although not always impossible to measure). Beyond  simple dimensions of &#39;property rights,&#39; this can extend for example to cultural  rights. The particularity of this dimension is the indivisible character it can  give to resources, especially with respect to land. This notion of identity is,  of course, socially constructed and historically contingent. It can help  explain, as discussed above, the longer duration of many secessionist or &#39;sons  of soil&#39; conflicts.</p>      <p> Most of the  contemporary resource and conflict literature has focused on the financial  opportunities aforded by resources to belligerents in conflict situations: the  legality of a resource, and its accessibility or &#39;lootability.&#39;<sup><a   name="s3" href="#3">3</a></sup> The  legality of a resource refers to its legal status in domestic and international  markets. This legal character shapes specific opportunities for belligerents. In  the case of an illegal resource, a rebel group is advantaged compared to a  government that risks losing its international legitimacy and associated sources  of support if it engages in trafficking. In the case of a legal resource, a  government is advantaged since the market should offer higher prices to a  recognized authority rather than an illegal one.</p>      <p> The accessibility of a  resource is defined by the ease with which an armed group can generate revenues  from it, through exploitation, theft, as well as taxation or extortion (see <a href="#t2">Table 2</a>). Several factors influence this accessibility. Some relate to the  production and commercial characteristics of a resource: a resource is more  accessible when its exploitation requires less financial, technological or  labour inputs, and when the high price per volume ratio  facilitates transportation. Other factors relate to the geographical context and  mode of exploitation of a resource: a resource is more accessible when it is  spread over a vast territory, in a terrain propitious to insurgency, and along  an international border, as well as when it is exploited by high number of  businesses vulnerable to protection rackets and protected by ineffective or  corrupt security forces (Le Billon 2005).<sup><a   name="s4" href="#4">4</a></sup></p>      <p align=center><a name=t2><img src="img/revistas/rci/n70/70a02t2.jpg"></a></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> Together, the  legality and accessibility criteria may be used to define four categories of  resources: illegal lootables (e.g. narcotics), legal lootables (e.g. alluvial  diamonds, on-shore oil), legal nonlootables (e.g. of-shore oil), and illegal  nonlootables. Illegal nonlootables could include uranium, which exploitation is  mostly conducted by tightly controlled industrial mines and which trade comes  under regulation through the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the national  legislation of Nuclear Suppliers Group members (akin to the voluntary agreement  of participants to the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme). Uranium from the  Democratic Republic of Congo, however, was identifed by a un group of experts as both &#39;lootable&#39; through  arThisanal exploitation, and somewhat &#39;legal&#39; given the total absence of control  on the site and the porous borders of the country.<sup><a   name="s5" href="#5">5</a></sup> Some  commodity-focused instruments may better address specific resources given these  distinctions; I review each type of instrument in turn.</p>      <p> Conflict termination  is often presented in three stages that are frequently over-lapping each other:  peacemaking consists of initiatives seeking to settle a conflict through  negotiations (and possibly military intervention), peacekeeping consists in  preventing further hostilities through a military interposition between  contending parties, and peacebuilding consists in normalizing relations and  reconciling contending parties. Diagram 1 matches these three stages with the  three main arguments relating natural resources and armed conflicts (see Le  Billon 2008): the <i>resource curse </i>argument suggesting that resource  dependence negatively affects economic performances and the quality of  institutions—thereby supposedly increasing the vulnerability of countries to  armed conflicts;<sup><a   name="s6" href="#6">6</a></sup> the <i>resource conflict </i>(resource dispute)  hypothesis positing that the resource itself, its discovery and its exploitation  can increase the likelihood of conflicts and various forms of violence, notably  through disputes over rent allocation as well as the social and environmental  impacts of exploitation; and the <i>conflict resource </i>(looting or resource  financing) argument for which resources shape the opportunities and behavior of  belligerents by financing their activities, dissociating them from a popular  base and securing the support of external actors.<sup><a   name="s7" href="#7">7</a></sup> The resulting  framework can help situate initiatives targeting potential resource and conflict  linkages.</p>       <p><b>     <br> MILITARY  INTERVENTIONS, SANCTIONS, AND REVENUE SHARING</b></p>      <p> Tree main types of  conflict termination instruments targeting resources have been used: military  interventions taking over the control of resource production areas from  belligerents, economic sanctions against targeted belligerents, and revenue  sharing agreements between belligerents.</p>      <p> These three types of  instruments are not the only ones deployed to address the role of resources in  prolonging conflicts, as indicated in <a href="#t3">Diagram 1</a>. Some of these instruments have been used to implement or  complement the three main types of instruments examined in this study, such as  the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme seeking to enable more effective  sanctions against &#39;conflict diamonds&#39;  (Le Billon 2008). Some have also been deployed according to conflict prevention  or human rights abuse accountability objectives, rather than conflict  termination per se. Although rare, litigation against resource companies or  individuals suspected of trading in conflict commodities has occurred, in order  to implement and give future credibility to un sanctions. Dutch timber merchant  Guus Van Kouwenhoven, for example, received an eight-year prison sentence for  violating a un arms embargo imposed on the Liberian government.<sup><a   name="s8" href="#8">8</a></sup>  Several transparency instruments, most notably the Extractive Industries  Transparency Initiative, have also been deployed to curb the likelihood of  corruption and revenue embezzlement.</p>      <p align=center><a name=t3><img src="img/revistas/rci/n70/70a02t3.jpg"></a></p>      <p> Curtailing wartime  access to resource revenues can take two main forms: military interventions to  capture resource production areas; or economic sanctions preventing investments,  technical inputs or the trading of resources. The three main categories of  military interventions relevant to this discussion are: those conducted by  domestic forces as part of the general conduct of war; those conducted by  external mercenary forces (or private military companies, pmcs) working under  contract from one of the belligerents; and those conducted by external military  forces under a mandate from the un, a regional organization, or in the form of a  &#39;coalition of the willing&#39;. These divisions are not always clear, especially when  external governments intervene outside of a un mandate using foreign  mercenaries.</p>      <p> Economic sanctions,  or &#39;commodity sanctions,&#39; seek to prohibit the import of resources under the  control of the sanctioned party, an alternative being restricting investment  for, or export of production technology to, the sanctioned party. Sanctioned  parties have included governments (often through a country-wide sanction regime)  or non-state groups (mostly rebel movements). Sanctions aiming at particular  commodities (commodity sanctions) can be applied to a country but in effect only  target the actor most benefiting from that commodity. Commodity sanction regimes  have also been applied to a country, but provide for the exemption of  commodities certified by the government, once a credible system is in place.  Sanctions targeting resources have been imposed by the Security Council,  regional associations of states such as the Economic Community of West African  States (ecowas), or individual governments such as the us, as well as business  associations and non-governmental organizations (ngos)—through market access  restrictions through sectoral reforms or consumer boycotts, as in the case of  the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme for &#39;conflict diamonds,&#39; or industry  guidelines for coltan in relation to the conflict in the Democratic Republic of  Congo. Sanctions have been the most studied among the three types of initiatives  examined in this essay and, as reviewed by Cortright and L&oacute;pez (2000), findings  generally suggest that un sanctions most often fail to change the behaviour of  their targets. Mack and Khan (2000) argue that, nevertheless, many un sanctions  had positive impacts in terms of stigmatizing and containing targets, notably in  terms of funding opportunities. Furthermore, the use of sanctions has much  evolved since the end of the Cold War, with a greater use of un sanctions that  are better targeted and implemented (Cortright and L&oacute;pez 2002; Le Billon 2003).</p>      <p> Although sanctions  have been imposed to alter the behaviour of their targets, they have  increasingly been used with the objective of curtailing the financial means  available to rebel groups. The growing use of so-called &#39;smart sanctions&#39; has  allowed for selective targeting to maximize the impact on the selected group,  while lowering it on the general population. Measures such as the public &#39;naming  and shaming&#39; of sanction busters by un expert panels and the threat or  implementation of &#39;secondary sanctions&#39; on sanction busting states have  strengthened their implementation. The National Union for the Total Independence  of Angola (unita), for example, lost logistical and diplomatic support in 2000  and 2001, following exposure by un expert panel reports. The imposition of  sanctions against the government of Liberia progressively eroded its support for  the Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone. Resource smuggling, however,  remained widespread under most sanction regimes, in part because of a lack of  enforcement on the ground and effective judicial action against sanction  busters. The characteristics of resources have also played a role, in terms of  ease of transport, concealment, or low traceability. Yet the smuggling in the  1990s of vast quantities of petroleum from Iraq or logs from Cambodia illustrate  that, with the collusion of local authorities on both sides  of an international border, the bulkiness of a resource is less of a major  factor.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> Positive incentives  can address the linkages between resources and wars. Rather than seeking to  curtail revenue access to belligerents, revenue can be made accessible to  &#39;former&#39; belligerents. Sharing resource revenues, in other words, can &#39;buy  peace.&#39; This type of positive incentive encompasses a broad range of options.  Resources constitute divisible goods, especially in terms of revenues and to a  lesser degree in terms of ownership (especially if considering state  sovereignty), and are thus amenable to self-enforcing sharing agreements.  Divisibility can be arranged according to territorial, organizational, or  commercial criteria. A first option is to simply leave the armed group in—at  least partial—control of the territory and resources it is holding, for example  as part of a local autonomy or secession agreement or even as part of a sanction  regime as in the case of the oil-for-food program in Iraq. A second option is to  offer the armed group new resource concessions, the control of resource  businesses, or lucrative government positions overseeing resource sectors. A  third option is to establish a broad sharing agreement for resources through  fiscal legislation. In this regard, any conflict settlement could be considered  as involving a sharing of resource revenues as long as opposing parties are  allowed to have an input into governing. However, in this analysis I only  consider the cases in which natural resources constituted a major financial  stake in the conflict and in which agreements had an important resource  dimension (although not always incorporated into formal documents, see below).  These agreements can take place at various levels, concerning an entire rebel  movement as part of a comprehensive peace agreement, or only regional units as  part of a local ceasefre or defection process.</p>      <p> As with military  interventions and economic sanctions, there are ethical dimensions to the use of  sharing agreements, since those benefiting from these agreements (or at least  negotiating them) include individuals or groups bearing responsibility for war  crimes and occupying positions of power through force rather than consent and  popular representation. Buying peace, in other words, could be perceived as  rewarding violence (Le Billon 2003). The trade-of is of course curbing further  abuses that could result from the absence of such agreements. Although sanctions  and military interventions should have the ethical advantage of punishing rather  than rewarding war criminals, in practice both also often bring about sufering  for the general population.</p>      <p> As the cases of Sudan  (1997 Khartoum Agreement), Liberia (1995 Abuja Accord), Sierra Leone (1999 Lom&eacute;  Agreement), or Angola (1994 Lusaka Protocol) illustrate, sharing revenue  initiatives face in practice many risks of failure. The parties to the sharing  agreement may not encompass all actors with a capacity to prolong the conflict.  The incapacity of a party to enforce the agreement within its own ranks can lead to a resumption of the  conflict by new factions rejecting the agreement. Such agreement can also  motivate rebellion in other aggrieved regions (e.g. in Darfur). Finally, a party  can be duplicitous and use such agreement for tactical use to rearm, reorganize  or relocate troops to achieve its objectives by military means.</p>      <p> There remains much  debate about the effectiveness of these strategies, and more generally about the  use of force, sanctions or negotiations. In the following section I present an  assessment of initiatives conducted since 1989, before discussing possible  factors influencing the relative effectiveness of these initiatives.</p>       <p><b>     <br> MEDIUM-N STUDY (26  CONFLICTS BETWEEN 1989 AND 2006)</b></p>      <p> Resource revenues did  finance belligerents before the end of the Cold War, but in most cases their  relative importance was much lower given the financial and military involvement  of foreign powers. Furthermore, the number of international commodity-focused  initiatives only sharply increased from the early 1990s onwards. I thus select  commodity-focused international initiatives taken between 1989 and 2006,  identifying 26 armed conflicts in which at least one resource-focused initiative  was used. In total, 45 resource-focused initiatives are surveyed (see also Le  Billon and Nicholls 2007). A number of caveats and limitations to this dataset  need mentioning.</p>      <p> First, with regard to  sharing initiatives, I only consider in this analysis the cases in which a  reference to the control of a key resource by the opposing party is included in  a publicly available settlement agreement, as in the options outlined above. Yet  revenues are generally fungible and other types of economic incentives may be  offered in addition to, or as a substitute for, resource revenues in a sharing  agreement. Furthermore, not all financial deals appear publicly and any  confidential agreement would not appear in this dataset. The selection criterion  thus effects the difficulty of identifying other types of agreements, either  be-cause they are clandestine or because they occur at a smaller scale and fail  to be reported. The 14 sharing initiatives identified were concluded between  opposing armed groups, with the exception of three cases that were set up  unilaterally by central governments, in part to address secessionist agendas (in  Angola for Frente de Liberta&ccedil;&atilde;o do Estado de Cabinda (flec) and in Indonesia for  both the Free Aceh Movement (gam) and the Free Papau Movement (opm)). Finally, I  assess the effectiveness of these initiatives through only three main criteria:  successful implementation, conflict outcome after one year and peace stability  after five years.</p>      <p> Second, I limit  analysis of economic sanctions to those mandated by the Security Council. This  selection is motivated by the fact that un sanctions are currently the sole  means of legally and internationally imposing a market access denial, with the  exception of the prohibition of specific commodities through international  agreements, as in the case of narcotics, or voluntary agreements and peer  monitoring as in the case of the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme. un  sanctions can thus be considered more comprehensive than other types of  sanctions and related initiatives, even if they have often been less strictly  implemented than sanctions originating from individual states (for example us  sanctions); and ngo advocacy was often key in bringing about a more effective  implementation of un sanctions, as in the case of &#39;conflict diamonds.&#39; Of the  seven sanction initiatives identified, only one involves a ban on the export of  production material to the targeted group—the Taliban in Afghanistan—since  narcotics were already illegal on the international market. Third, I only  consider external military interventions, including major mercenary  interventions and foreign government-mandated interventions that were publicly  reported. Of the 17 selected military interventions, five involved international  mercenaries groups (or private military companies).</p>      <p> Among the initiatives  examined, external military interventions were the most frequent, followed by  revenue sharing, and un sanctions. Four conflicts were addressed through all  three types of instruments, and eight through two types of initiatives. To  assess their potential effectiveness in terms of conflict settlement in general,  I use three criteria: effective implementation and status of the conflict after  one and five years. Implementation success represents the achievement of  operational objectives, specifically: the institutionalization of the agreement  in the case of sharing; curtailment of trade in the case of sanctions; and  control of resource production area in the case of military interventions.  Effectiveness has been assessed through a review of un situation reports and  expert panel investigations, as well as think tank, civil society and press  reports. As such, these assessments remain tentative and at times subjective. The  one and five year lags assess the immediacy and sustainability of a potential  effect on conflict termination. I do not argue that peace is the result of the  implementation of instruments, but simply assess the occurrence of both events.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> I find that among the  different types of instruments, those most successfully implemented were  military interventions and revenue sharing mechanisms, while sanctions were  lagging.<sup><a   name="s9" href="#9">9</a></sup> This result is not surprising since sharing involves  willing—if sometimes duplicitous—parties; military intervention is generally used when there are reasonable chances of success,  especially in the case of military interventions by western powers; and  sanctions represent a limited instrument of coercion which has furthermore been  criticized for being poorly enforced and used as a default policy option. When  examining the potential effect of instruments on a resolution of a conflict,  however, peace was achieved within a year for about half of the successfully  implemented revenue sharing agreements, sanctions, and military interventions.  This proportion increases for all instruments after five years, but sanctions  were associated more frequently with durable peace than revenue sharing, and  military interventions. This suggests that, whereas military interventions are  the most frequently used and success-fully implemented, their potential  contribution to peace seems lower than that of the two other instruments when  these are also successfully implemented. Military interventions were more  successfully implemented against states than non-state groups, but these  successes were more frequently followed by war than for non-state armed groups.  Sanctions seem to have been more successfully implemented and followed by peace  in the cases where they targeted whole countries or governments, rather than  non-state groups. Sharing agreements all involved state and non-state groups (or  the separaThist government).</p>      <p> Turning to the  criteria of resource type, <a href="#t4">Table 3</a> provides an assessment for the major  different resources. Regrouping resources further into three major types, I note  that revenue sharing agreements have been used for all three types. The  implementation success rate of revenue sharing agreements is highest for illegal  lootables and non-lootables, but their association with a stable peace is strong  only in the case of illegal lootables. Sanctions have also been used for all  three types of resources, but mostly for lootable goods. Sanctions failed to be  implemented in the only case of illegal lootable resource, have a low  implementation success rate for other lootables and a medium one for  non-lootables. Association with peace stability is also nil for illegal  lootables, but medium for the other two categories. Military interventions were  used for all three types of resource categories. Military interventions were  successfully implemented in most cases, but most strongly for non-lootable  resource, a result that also appears to be associated with peace stability.</p>      <p> Overall, this survey  of instruments indicates that <i>illegal lootable resources </i>have been most  successfully dealt with through revenue sharing mechanisms.<sup><a   name="s10" href="#10">10</a></sup> There  are several reasons for such a finding. First, a high level of implication of  state officials in the narcotics sector and the influence of drug  cartels in the affairs of the state are relatively common within producing  countries—as  suggested by the extensive literature on &#39;narcostates&#39;—some of these relations  providing (in the eyes of some protagonists) a degree of &#39;political stability&#39;  (McCormack 1999; Le Pichon 2008). Second, clandestine operations by state agents  have been financed through illegal but lucrative sectors, some of which have  involved alliances with insurgent groups—as alleged in the case of the  cia—occasionally leading in the entrenchment of narcotics inTherests through  continued support for (former) allies (Dale-Scott and Marshall 1999; McCoy  2003). Third, narcotics income can play a significant economic role, especially  during economic downturns, thus leading to acquiescence or even complicity on  the part of authorities to sustain the economy (for the case of Mexico in the  late 1990s, see Block 2001); an argument that also applies during  &#39;reconstruction.&#39; Empirically, this finding is mostly driven by cases of  cease-fire agreements taking place between the government of Burma/Myanmar and  several insurgencies involved in drug production and trafficking (Sherman 2003;  see also Snyder, this volume). The case of Afghanistan is also relevant here. The  us-led military campaign against the Taliban in 2001 seemed to match a drop in  poppy production, suggesting an apparently successful case of military  intervention. Yet the intervention occurred after the Taliban had imposed a ban,  and the us military were not tasked with military cracking down on drug  production, trafficking, and revenue flows before 2005 (Felbab-Brown 2005).<sup><a   name="s11" href="#11">11</a></sup>  Since 2001, opium production sharply increased, partly a result of a sharing  agreement between former warlords now in the Afghan government,  with—at  the time—the tacit knowledge (if not agreement) of the us government.</p>      <p align=center><a name=t4><img src="img/revistas/rci/n70/70a02t4.jpg"></a></p>      <p> In the case of <i> legal lootable resources</i>, sanctions appear to be the most successful with  regard to peace stability, despite a low implementation success rate. Although  sharing appears as a second best option, with a higher rate of implementation  success, all successful cases were only part of broader negotiated peace  agreements, rather than prior to a settlement of the conflict. Revenue sharing  in Papua New Guinea, for example, was part of a comprehensive agreement signed  after a three-year truce between belligerents. Military interventions to control  legal and lootable resources, while highly successful in terms of  implementation, were very often followed by a resumption of the conflict within  the next five years. In the case of <i>non-lootable resources</i>, military  intervention was most successful, followed by sanctions. This could be explained  by the fact that these resources were controlled by central governments  unwilling to respond to sanctions (e.g. Iraq), or facing politically motivated  secessionist groups with which sharing agreements were not respected or proved  unsaThisfactory (e.g. Aceh in 1999, Chechnya in 1996 and Sudan in 1997).</p>     <p> As discussed in Le  Billon and Nicholls 2007, the choice of instruments should thus not only be  dictated by the type of resources, but also by the type of conflicts involved  and the mechanisms at play. In turn, the selected instruments could be  articulated with other conflict resolution measures so as to sustain or amplify  the positive impacts of instruments on a possible return to peace. Furthermore,  organizations seeking to curtail revenue access for belligerents should also  consider the structure of the industry as well as the capacity and motivations  of intermediaries and authorities along the resource supply chain—as  demonstrated in the case of &#39;conflict diamonds&#39; and the creation of the  Kimberley Process (Smillie 2004).</p>       <p><b>     <br> CONCLUSION</b></p>      <p> This analysis  suggests three preliminary findings of relevance to conflict termination. First,  and mostly based on a review of the literature and anecdotal evidence from the  case studies reviewed, the analysis provides qualified support to the argument  that access to resource revenues by belligerents generally prolongs armed  conflicts, thereby justifying that conflict settlement initiatives should  ad-dress this relationship. This argument is supported by the relatively short  delay within which a number of conflicts are settled after resource-focused  initiatives are implemented. Yet renewed hostilities after many of these  &#39;successful&#39; interventions indicate that curtailing financial opportunities is  not a panacea. It suggests, rather, that the importance of resource revenues for  the viability and motivation of rebellion in these conflicts may be  overemphasized. In this regard, resources are rarely the only source of revenues and motivation  for belligerents who often find ways to adapt their struggle to more difficult  economic conditions resulting from effective resource-focused initiatives (Jean  and Rufn 1996).</p>      <p> Second,  resource-focused initiatives have different levels of successful implementation  and potential association with stable peace. Military interventions appear to be  a deceptive &#39;quick-fx&#39;: often successfully implemented, these appear to force  the targeted party into a settlement, but fail to be followed by a stable peace.  Military intervention would thus require significant follow-up to avoid the  recurrence of hostilities. In the light of the Angolan and Sierra Leonean cases,  the deployment of peacekeeping forces with weak mandates following interventions  by external mercenary groups targeting rebel-controlled resource production  areas warrants attention in this regard—in particular stronger mandating of un  peacekeepers to militarily intervene in resource control (as in the case of unsc  resolution 1856 for the monuc in the Democratic Republic of Congo, see Le Billon  2009). Revenue sharing seems as successful as military intervention in terms of  implementation and is more rapidly followed by conflict settlement, but is also  rarely followed by a stable peace. This finding, however, may reffect a timing  issue since agreement on revenue sharing is often concluded as part of a  settlement of a conflict. Given the asymmetry between belligerents and the risks  of duplicity characterizing many of these sharing agreements, third parties may  have a role in guaranteeing these arrangements. Adequately mandated peacekeeping  forces and an international supervising mechanism for the resource sector can  help provide such guarantees. The un Secretary General recently stressed the  importance of supporting mediation, notably for wealth sharing agreements, a  task assigned to the un Mediation Support Unit (unsg 2009). Sanctions have a  poor overall record in terms of implementation for the period examined, but  major improvements have been noted since the late 1990s in terms of monitoring  and enforcement. Sanctions are furthermore generally lifted only once a conflict  is comprehensively settled, possibly contributing to a lasting peace.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> Third, the  characteristics of the resource sectors targeted seem to affect the  effectiveness of these instruments. This finding does not only argue in favour  of contextualising responses, but also points to some of the dilemmas and limits  of resource-focused instruments. Conflicts involving primarily illegal lootable  resources seem best addressed by sharing arrangements; legal lootable resources  by sanctions; and non-lootable resources by military intervention. Responding to  conflicts related to narcotics poses a dilemma: sharing arrangements are rarely  an official option for governments and even less so for conflict responding  countries. As noted earlier, however, a number of governments or government  officials have nevertheless taken this option to secure a conflict settlement,  to support local allies, or to reduce levels of violence (see Snyder, this  issue)—not to mention benefiting from narcotics revenues at the  individual level or to sustain the economy. There is a greater chance that at  least some government officials will be amenable to such wealth sharing if  narcotics are deeply entrenched in the political economy of the area, support  numerous livelihoods (with few alternatives) as well as local revenue  reinvestments, politicized and portrayed as &#39;emancipatory&#39; (from  poverty or specific elites), and if the state is too &#39;weak&#39; to impose anti-drugs  policies through coercive means or incentives, and the state is isolated from  major donors and sources of capital investment.</p>      <p> The above analysis is  admittedly tentative, as it does not address the many other conditions that  affect the settlement of a conflict and the likelihood of war recurrence. In the  absence of a multivariate analysis that controls for these other factors, the  findings of this article should be treated as hypotheses for further  investigation, rather than a demonstration of causal links between conflict  resolution mechanisms and outcomes. Tree further specific studies could be  conducted. The frst is a large-n study encompassing all conflicts involving  resources since 1946. Such a study is currently being undertaken by Rustad et  al. (2009) using the prio/Uppsala conflict dataset—with preliminary results  suggesting that the type of resource (lootable and non-lootable) does affect  sta-Thistically the duration of &#39;post-conflict&#39; peace. Wealth sharing appears to  be an effective peacebuilding tool when applied to conflicts involving lootable  resource. So far, results have not reproduced findings from (Le Billon and  Nicholls 2007) and more work is needed to consider the impact of sanctions and  the legality of resources. The second study would consist of a more detailed  comparative analysis of individual case studies, so as to determine more  precisely the relative impact of resource-focused instruments. Whereas sanctions  have been the object of much attention, this has not been the case for military  interventions and wealth sharing initiatives. Such study could be extended to  other instruments, such as certification schemes, judicial measures, and  corporate social responsibility measures. The last study would be a comparative  analysis of both international and domestic conflict resolution initiatives  across a variety of sectors within one or several countries. The instruments  examined here represent only some of the initiatives taken to address  connections between resources and conflicts, and such a detailed study would  broaden scope and depth.</p>      <p> More generally, a  more precise analysis would result from a standardization of the assessment of  instrument effectiveness (e.g. standard questionnaires sent to conflict  specialists). A more comprehensive approach would require an examination of the  effectiveness of military interventions by domestic groups; a more detailed  differentiation of the types of economic sharing agreements, including at  different scales; as well as an examination of regional and unilateral sanction  regimes. Future analyses could also examine the influence of the timing and complementary of these various initiatives, as well  as the influence of resources on the capacity and will of external interveners,  including the question of commercial inTherests among interveners (Balch-Lindsay  and Enterline 2000). Finally, further research could focus on the means by which  to establish a credible and enforceable sharing agreement, and examine how  credibility and enforceability might vary according to the type of resources  involved. Learning more about the context in which conflict termination  instruments are deployed may improve their effectiveness and reduce the risk of  renewed conflicts.</p>  <hr size="1">      <p><b>Comentarios</b></p>     <p><sup><a  href="#s1" name="1">1</a></sup>  This finding should be qualified, however. Stedman (2001) assesses that two  peace agreements were partial successes (Cambodia and Liberia) and that there  were as nearly many peace agreements that were partial successes or failures in  the case of available and valuable &#39;lootable&#39; resources than in their absence  (Cambodia, Lebanon, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Angola I and II, versus Bosnia, Sri  Lanka, Rwanda, and Somalia).</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s2" name="2">2</a></sup>  Fearon (2004: 284) notes, however, that &#39;the business synergies between rebel  groups and drug traffickers are so strong that <i>any </i>rebel group that can  avoid destruction long enough will eventually move into this area.&#39;</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s3" name="3">3</a></sup>  On the potential importance of the specific characteristics and modes of  production of different types of resources on the likelihood, type, or duration  of armed conflicts, see (Le Billon 2001; Ross 2003; Snyder 2006).</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s4" name="4">4</a></sup>  The low traceability of resources can also facilitate trading and the  collaboration of business intermediaries with rebel groups. Difficulties over  the identification of the origin of diamonds, for example, delayed the effective  application of sanctions and required significant reforms in rough diamond  trading, notably through the Kimberley Certification Process Scheme.</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s5" name="5">5</a></sup>  Letter dated 18 July 2006 from the Chairman of the Security Council Committee  established pursuant to resolution 1533 (2004) concerning the Democratic  Republic of the Congo ad-dressed to the President of the Security Council,  S/2006/525, accessed at <u> <a target=_blank href="http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N06/391/16/PDF/N0639116.pdf?OpenElement"> http://daccess-dds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N06/391/16/PDF/N0639116.pdf?OpenElement</a></u>.</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s6" name="6">6</a></sup>  The resource curse argument remains debated, with Mehlum et al. (2006) finding  that the resource curse result disappears in a cross-section of countries once  the quality of institutions is accounted for.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><sup><a  href="#s7" name="7">7</a></sup>  Conflict resources are defined by Global Witness, a UK-based NGO, as &quot;natural  resources whose systematic exploitation and trade in a context of conflict  contribute to, benefit from or result in the commission of serious violations of  human rights, violations of international humanitarian law or violations  amounting to crimes under international law,&quot; see <u> <a target=_blank href="http://www.globalwitness.org/pages/en/defnition_of_confict_resources.html"> http://www.globalwitness.org/pages/en/defnition_of_conflict_resources.html</a></u>.</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s8" name="8">8</a></sup>  The sentence was subsequently overturned by a Dutch court of appeal. &#39;Profle:  Liberia&#39;s &#39;Mister Gus&#39;&#39;, BBC News, 7 June 2006, accessed at <u> <a target=_blank href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/5055442.stm"> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/5055442.stm</a></u>.</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s9" name="9">9</a></sup>  As noted above, these results are tentative since they derive from somewhat  subjective and non-standardized measures. Furthermore, in part because of the  small number of cases, I do not control for the influence of one initiative on  the implementation effectiveness of the other. Arguably military interventions  can be more effective following sanctions that have weakened a party. Such  military intervention, in turn, can affect the likelihood of a successful  sharing agreement. In 14 cases only one instrument was used; in 8 cases two were  used; in four cases three instruments were used (Angola-UNITA, Cambodia,  Liberia, and Sierra Leone).</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s10" name="10">10</a></sup>  Although sanctions move a commodity from a legal to an illegal category, for the  purpose of analysis I maintain the pre-sanction legal status of the commodity.  This allows to measure the effect of the sanctions on commodities with  pre-existing systems of trade controls (i.e. against illegal commodities), from  systems specifically established against legal commodities under sanctions.  Since the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme was established in 2003,  conflict diamonds are in effect illegal commodities. I have nevertheless  maintained conflict diamonds, even after 2003, in the &#39;legal&#39; category for this  analysis.</p>      <p><sup><a  href="#s11" name="11">11</a></sup>  Nor was major US funding provided for counterdrug activities, contrasting with  the USD 750 million dollars allocated in 2003 for the Andean region (see White  House 2003 National Drug Control Update).</p>  <hr size="1">     <p><b>Referenes</b></p>      <!-- ref --><p> Auty, Richard. 2004.  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