Elective courses
Credits

Description:
What are the factors driving civil unrest, protest, and conflict in the global North and South? In this course, we will look at how historical factors, business cycles, diversity, or access to the internet and social media affect conflict. Synthesizing the conclusions of a number of seminal studies in the field, we will identify and discuss the various drivers of conflict. In so doing, the course will address some of the most important questions in the study of conflict: Why and when is violence motivated on ethnic or religious grounds? How do violent groups ensure loyalty within their ranks? What are the human consequences of violence, specifically with regard to sexual assault? How can conflict be mitigated? How do minority groups coordinate and mobilize non-violent protest? We will critically evaluate the empirical strategies of research papers in the relevant sub-fields, identifying the strengths and weaknesses in causal identification. On the empirical side, topics to be covered include: Instrumental variable methods, differences-in-differences, regression discontinuity design and other empirical strategies. There will be deep-dives into various papers, where students prepare referee reports.

Lecturers:
Sulin Sardoschau

Time & venue:
Tuesdays, 16:00-18:00; HU Berlin, Sapndauer Str. 1, room 21A

Exam:
Portfolio exam
The first assignment is to draft referee reports for several research papers.  The second assignment to draft an original research proposal related to the field. The final grade will be given/will be awarded for the portfolio of all assignments.

More information can be found on Moodle.