H
Håvard Mokleiv Nygård
Researcher at Peace Research Institute Oslo
Publications - 34
Citations - 1257
Håvard Mokleiv Nygård is an academic researcher from Peace Research Institute Oslo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Democracy & Democratization. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 30 publications receiving 914 citations. Previous affiliations of Håvard Mokleiv Nygård include University of Oslo & Uppsala University.
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Development Consequences of Armed Conflict
TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted the first analysis of the effect of armed conflict on progress in meeting the United Nation's Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and they also examined the impact of conflict on economic growth.
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Predicting Armed Conflict, 2010–2050
TL;DR: In this article, the authors predict changes in global and regional incidences of armed conflict for the 2010-2050 period based on a dynamic multinomial logit model estimation on a 1970-2009 cross-sectional data set.
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Autocratic Elections: Stabilizing Tool or Force for Change?
TL;DR: This article showed that elections increase the short-term probability of regime failure in 259 autocratic regimes from 1946 to 2008, and that these temporal effect patterns are present for both executive and legislative elections, and they are robust to using different measures, control variable strategies, and estimation techniques.
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ViEWS: A political violence early-warning system:
Håvard Hegre,Håvard Hegre,Marie Allansson,Matthias Basedau,Matthias Basedau,Michael P. Colaresi,Michael P. Colaresi,Mihai Croicu,Hanne Fjelde,Frederick Hoyles,Lisa Hultman,Stina Högbladh,Remco Jansen,Naima Mouhleb,Sayyed Auwn Muhammad,Desirée Nilsson,Håvard Mokleiv Nygård,Håvard Mokleiv Nygård,Gudlaug Olafsdottir,Kristina Petrova,David Randahl,Espen Geelmuyden Rød,Gerald Schneider,Gerald Schneider,Nina von Uexkull,Jonas Vestby +25 more
TL;DR: ViEWS as mentioned in this paper is a political violence early warning system that seeks to be maximally transparent, publicly available, and have uniform coverage, and sketches the methodological innovations of the system.
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Governance and Conflict Relapse
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that formal democratic institutions are states' most important vehicle to reduce deprivation-motivated armed conflict against their governments, and they argue that the wider conce...