4.3 Article

Citizens and Peace Mediations in Divided Societies: Identifying Zones of Agreement through a Conjoint Survey Experiment

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION
Volume 66, Issue 9, Pages 1619-1649

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00220027221108221

Keywords

integrative (win-win) negotiations; ZOPA; peace agreements; conjoint analysis; power-sharing; federal courts; displacement

Funding

  1. Isik Kuscu and Feargal Cochrane as PI/CO-I

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This article introduces a conjoint experiment conducted in Cyprus to test public opinion on future settlement. Contradicting conventional wisdom, it finds that there is a potential zone of agreement from a public opinion perspective.
How can areas of potential agreement be identified and endorsed by citizens in protracted conflicts? In an effort to answer this question, the article introduces a conjoint experiment across the ethnically and territorially split communities of Cyprus and tests a range of hypotheses about the structure of public opinion with respect to a future settlement. We test hypotheses on security and credible commitments, the legacy of past negotiations, as well as transitional justice mechanisms following United Nations plans to mediate the conflict between Greek and Turkish Cypriots. Contrary to conventional wisdom, we demonstrate that a zone of possible agreement (ZOPA) exists from a public opinion perspective. We specifically explore power-sharing in the context of security, provisions for the internally displaced, federal courts, and territorial readjustments and highlight their relative importance for public opinion interventions across conflict-ridden societies.

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