From Violence to Voting: War and Political Participation in Uganda
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Abstract
What is the political legacy of violent conflict? I present evidence for a link from past violence to increased political engagement among excombatants. The evidence comes from northern Uganda, where rebel recruitment generated quasiexperimental variation in who was conscripted by abduction. Survey data suggest that abduction leads to substantial increases in voting and community leadership, largely due to elevated levels of violence witnessed. Meanwhile, abduction and violence do not appear to affect nonpolitical participation. These patterns are not easily explained by conventional theories of participation, including mobilization by elites, differential costs, and altruistic preferences. Qualitative…
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Topics
Keywords
- Generalizability theory
- Political violence
- Politics
- Voting
- Affect (linguistics)
- Political science
- Social psychology
- Political economy
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Gender equality
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