A multiethnic country like Côte d’Ivoire, which
was relatively stable until the late 1980s, has been mired in crisis in
the last two decades and experienced large-scale violence. This paper
undertakes a disaggregated analysis of the civil war at sub-national
levels in Cote d’Ivoire for the period from 1998 to 2006 using: (1)
nationally representative household survey data, and (2) the ACLED
conflict database that contains information on the date and geographical
location of conflicts. We use both the department and the
sub-prefecture levels as units of analysis, and find robust evidence
that ethnic diversity is significantly associated with conflicts. We
also find strong empirical evidence that the share of Ivoirites
population and the share of Muslim population is a significant
determinant of civil war at the sub-prefecture level. Furthermore, more
populous areas are at high risk of civil war, but the outcome is
statistically significant only at the department level. However, we do
not find significant evidence that income inequality and land inequality
have determined the level of civil conflict. Overall the findings
suggest ethnicity and religious identities are the significant
determinants of civil war in Cote d’Ivoire. Read more
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