- Organizer: Amsterdam Centre for Conflict Studies (ACCS)
On May 9th, the Amsterdam Centre for Conflict Studies (ACCS) and the EVaP project warmly welcome political scientist Aditi Malik for a book talk. Aditi will discuss her newly published book, Playing with Fire: Parties and Political Violence in Kenya and India. The event will also feature a workshop where scholars researching political violence and ethnic conflict will present their work and receive feedback.
For more details, contact Noyonika Das at n.das@uva.nl.
About Playing with Fire: Parties and Political Violence in Kenya and India
Drawing on a rare cross-regional comparison of Kenya and India, Playing with Fire develops a novel explanation about ethnic party violence. Combining rich historical, qualitative, and quantitative data, the book demonstrates how levels of party instability can crucially inform the decisions of political elites to organize or support violence. Centrally, it shows that settings marked by unstable parties are more vulnerable to experiencing recurring and major episodes of party violence than those populated by durable parties. This is because transient parties enable politicians to disregard voters’ future negative reactions to conflict. By contrast, stable party organizations compel politicians to take such costs into account, thereby dampening the potential for recurring and severe party violence. By centering political parties as key actors in the production of conflict, and bringing together evidence from both Africa and South Asia, Playing with Fire contributes new insights to the study of political violence.
About Aditi Malik
Aditi Malik is Associate Professor of Political Science at the College of the Holy Cross. She studies political violence, gender-based violence, and social movements and contentious politics in Africa and South Asia. Aditi has published on these topics in Political Science, African Studies, and South Asian Studies journals, and conducted original fieldwork in Rwanda, Kenya, South Africa, Cambodia, India, and Nepal. Playing with Fire is her first book.