Why We Fight: The Roots of War and the Paths to Peace

Why We Fight: The Roots of War and the Paths to Peace

  • Downloads:3483
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-04-20 06:52:22
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Christopher Blattman
  • ISBN:1984881574
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

The truth is, warfare shouldn't happen - and most of the time it doesn't。 Around the world there are millions of hostile rivalries at any given moment and yet only a tiny fraction erupt into prolonged fighting。 Most books on conflict forget this。 So in those rare instances of war, what broke down and kept the sides from compromise? From unchecked interests and intangible incentives, through uncertainty commitment problems and misperceptions, this peerlessly authoritative and thought-provoking book shows that there are only so many logical possibilities for why we fight and how by knowing them we can act to prevent war altogether。

Drawing on the latest research in behavioural economics; gripping, counterintuitive examples from the long history of warfare around the world; and distinguished professor Christopher Blattman's own experience in warzones, we see, for example, how queens have waged war more than kings; that the homicide rate in the ganglands of Medellín, Columbia is lower than you think; and that even monkeys have an innate righteousness。 In an accessible, intuitive structure framed around causes and solutions, Why We Fight is a hopeful book, with answers to some of history's most important questions。 In an age of growing isolationism and the weakening of global institutions, this book couldn't be timelier。

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Reviews

Dylan Matthews

A quick, thoughtful, epistemically humble guide to both game theory and the latest empirical social science on the roots of conflict。 Highly recommended。

Robert Wiblin

The review by Andrew1982 is mistaken。Blattman does not 'defend' the War in Iraq, he tries to explain the motives of the various actors, with the same tone as for the other conflicts discussed in the book。He does note that the US supported Hussein in the 80s, on page 129。 It does not say that the invasion was primarily down to Hussein being a bad man, but rather a combination of bad intelligence (uncertainty), biases and personal motives for war (intangible incentives), underestimation of the dif The review by Andrew1982 is mistaken。Blattman does not 'defend' the War in Iraq, he tries to explain the motives of the various actors, with the same tone as for the other conflicts discussed in the book。He does note that the US supported Hussein in the 80s, on page 129。 It does not say that the invasion was primarily down to Hussein being a bad man, but rather a combination of bad intelligence (uncertainty), biases and personal motives for war (intangible incentives), underestimation of the difficulty (misperceptions), as well as difficulty on the parts of both parties to credibly commit to any agreement they struck。 。。。more

Andrew1982

ABSOLUTE TRASH! It's absolutely astonishing how much this man lives in his own filter bubble。 He talks about all the bad wars that China, Russia, Nazi Germany fight/have fought, but continues by defending the war in Iraq because Saddam Hussein was a bad man。 Which of course he was, but claiming that was the reason we invaded speaks to intellectual dishonesty and disqualifies the entire book。 No talk of how the US wanted Saddam there in the first place, no talk of how Saddam could keep massacring ABSOLUTE TRASH! It's absolutely astonishing how much this man lives in his own filter bubble。 He talks about all the bad wars that China, Russia, Nazi Germany fight/have fought, but continues by defending the war in Iraq because Saddam Hussein was a bad man。 Which of course he was, but claiming that was the reason we invaded speaks to intellectual dishonesty and disqualifies the entire book。 No talk of how the US wanted Saddam there in the first place, no talk of how Saddam could keep massacring his own people for years without any intervention from us。 It was only when Saddam wanted to get rid of the petrodollar we invaded。 Basically this book claims: US started wars good, wars started by others bad。 Disgusting。 。。。more