Anup Phayal

  • Public and International Affairs, UNCW

There are 6 included publications by Anup Phayal :

TitleDateViewsBrief Description
Deploying to Protect: The Effect of Peacekeeping Troop Deployments on Violence Against Civilians 2019 121 Do UN peacekeeping forces protect civilians from harm in post-war environments? Current evidence suggests that the answer to this question is yes. But extant research mostly examines this relationship at the country-level and consequently has logical...
Fueling rebellion: maritime piracy and the duration of civil war 2019 159 Extant research shows that the presence of natural resources can prolong civil wars. But research also indicates that as rebel groups become stronger, conflicts tend to shorten. These studies suggest an unclear association among the three variables—r...
Should I Signal Trust? Effect of Terrorism on Interpersonal Trust in Post-Conflict and Non-Post-Conflict Countries 2022 253 Generalized interpersonal trust is an essential component of a functioning society. While some studies have examined how the perception of terrorism affects trust, cross-national works investigating the impact of actual terrorist attacks on individua...
UN Troop Deployment and Preventing Violence Against Civilians in Darfur 2019 1019 Does the presence of UN peacekeeping force lower civilian fatalities at the local level? If it does, is it because of their coercive military capacity or for other reasons such as their roles in monitoring and reporting violent atrocities? To explore...
The unexpected consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on maritime crime: Evidence from Indonesia and Nigeria 2023 128 The economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic has been devastating. Job losses, negative growth rates, and increased poverty have all followed rising infection rates. The economic costs have been especially challenging for many piracy-prone countri...
Who Wins, Who Loses, Who Negotiates Peace in Civil Wars: Does Regime Type Matter? 2019 694 Previous research has shown that the outcome of a civil war is related to conflict duration: military victory by either the government or the rebels occurs early if it occurs at all, and the longer a civil war lasts, the more likely it is to end in a...