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There is the presentation of a typology of wars together with the review of several literatures indicating the relationship of war and underdevelopment. Generally, wars particularly the civil war is considered as one of the primary reasons of economic underdevelopment as well as human suffering1. However in spite of this, economic examination of developing countries at war is comparatively uncommon. At the same time as the global confrontation involving communism and capitalism at the time of the Cold War did not lead to nuclear Armageddon, all through the forty–year period several nations in the ‘Third World’ were involved in war.
From the time of the 1950s and 1990s, fifteen million deaths were resulted directly or ultimately by wars of every kind in developing countries. These also include the global conflicts, government violence against citizens as well as civil war. Provided the conclusion of the Cold War, there was a changeover in the direction of peace in the majority of the regions in which conflict had been fired up by East-West aggression. However while this aggression lessened from the 1980s and on, new wars emerged which were particularly unique from the wars by replacement and procedures of anti-colonial resist and nationwide emancipation which had set apart developing country wars at the time of the Cold War era.
These wars, on the other hand, carried on to be situated nearly completely in developing countries: from 1989 to 1995, there were between 31 and 54 globally documented struggles in each year, and an average of 15 major wars happening at any time. A number of older ideological struggles continued in a unique manner, like the one in Afghanistan, whereas other long–lasting separatist struggle turned out to be stronger, like that of Sri Lanka and Eritrea. The Central American conflicts came to a conclusion in a troubled deadlock; however sometime after it broke out again in Mexico.
Territorial as well
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