D
Dominic Rohner
Researcher at University of Lausanne
Publications - 106
Citations - 3607
Dominic Rohner is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Civil Conflict & Ethnic conflict. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 96 publications receiving 3104 citations. Previous affiliations of Dominic Rohner include University of Zurich & Economic Policy Institute.
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Natural Resource Distribution and Multiple Forms of Civil War
Massimo Morelli,Dominic Rohner +1 more
TL;DR: This article examined how natural resource location, rent sharing and fighting capacities of different groups matter for ethnic conflict and identified a new type of bargaining failure due to multiple types of potential conflicts and hence multiple threat points.
Posted Content
Resource Concentration and Civil Wars
Massimo Morelli,Dominic Rohner +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the importance of natural resource concentration and ethnic group regional concentration for ethnic conflict was highlighted and a new type of bargaining failure due to multiple types of potential conflicts (and hence multiple threat points) was identified.
Posted Content
Education and Conflict Evidence from a Policy Experiment in Indonesia
Dominic Rohner,Alessandro Saia +1 more
TL;DR: This article studied the impact of school construction on the likelihood of conflict, drawing on a policy experiment in Indonesia, and collecting their own novel dataset on political violence for 289 districts in Indonesia over the period 1955-1994.
Posted Content
Beyond Greed and Grievance: Feasibility and Civil War
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an empirical analysis of what makes countries prone to civil war using a global panel data set and examine different determinants of civil war for the period 1960-2004.
Journal ArticleDOI
Protecting cultural monuments against terrorism
Bruno S. Frey,Dominic Rohner +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that an effective strategy to discourage terrorist attacks on iconic monuments is for a government to show a firm commitment to swift reconstruction using a simple game-theoretic model.