Finance & economics | Economics and ethnic conflict

The link between poor harvests and violence

Historically there were more anti-Semitic attacks when crops failed

The very dark ages

LAST year over 102,000 people died in nearly 50 armed conflicts across the world, according to the Peace Research Institute Oslo, a think-tank. Much of this violence is caused by tensions between ethnic groups—two-thirds of civil wars have been fought along ethnic lines since 1946. Yet historians differ over whether cultural differences or economic pressures best explain how tensions explode into violence.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “A bitter harvest”

How to deal with Venezuela

From the July 29th 2017 edition

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