Research

Aysegul Aydin and Cem Emrence suggest that both insurgents and governments adopt a wide variety of coercive strategies in war environments.

This book argues that rethinking intervention―redefining what it is and why foreign powers take an interest in others' conflicts―is of critical importance to understanding how conflicts evolve over time with the entry and exit of external actors.
Articles
- Aydin, Aysegul, and Anna Marie Gray. Forthcoming. “Does Emergency Rule Help Counterinsurgents? Testing Hearts and Minds Theories.” Foreign Policy Analysis.
- Aydin, Aysegul. 2021. “Enforcing Openness: Trade Protectionism and Intervention in Civil War.” Civil Wars 23(2): 257-282.
- Aydin, Aysegul, and Cem Emrence. 2021. “Counterinsurgency as an Institution: Evidence from Turkey.” International Interactions 47(3): 530-558.
- Emrence, Cem, and Aysegul Aydin. 2017. “Killing the Movement: How Islam Became a Rival of Ethnic Movement in Turkey.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change, vol.41.
- Aydin, Aysegul, and Patrick M. Regan. 2012. “Networks of Third-Party Interveners and Civil War Duration.” European Journal of International Relations 18(3):561-585.
- Aydin, Aysegul. 2010. “The Deterrent Effects of Economic Integration.” Journal of Peace Research 47(5): 523-533.
- Aydin, Aysegul. 2010. “Where do States Go?: Strategy in Civil War Intervention.” Conflict Management and Peace Science 27(1): 47-66.
- Regan, Patrick M., Richard Frank, and Aysegul Aydin. 2009. “Diplomatic Interventions and Civil Wars: A New Dataset.” Journal of Peace Research 46(1): 135-146.
- Aydin, Aysegul. 2008. “Choosing Sides: Economic Interdependence and Interstate Disputes.” Journal of Politics 70(4): 1098-1108.
- Aydin, Aysegul, and Scott Gates. 2008. “Rulers as Mass Murderers: Political Institutions and Human Insecurity.” In Insecurity in Intra-State Conflicts: Governments, Rebels, and Outsiders, eds. Stephen Saideman and Marie-Joelle Zahar. Routledge Press.
- Regan, Patrick M., and Aysegul Aydin. 2006. “Diplomacy and Other Forms of Intervention in Civil Wars.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 50(5): 736-756.