Brothers in arms? Covid-19 and Hindu-Muslim conflict in India1

Anirban Mitra, A. Mukherji
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Abstract

Recurrent episodes of Hindu-Muslim violence have plagued India for many years. The Covid-19 pandemic poses new challenges against this backdrop of religious conflict. We explore the performance of various Indian districts in terms of their Covid-19 cases alongside their historical proclivities towards Hindu-Muslim violence. The link between inter-faith cooperation in an area and its subsequent performance in terms of Covid-19 cases is theoretically ambiguous. It may be that areas characterised by low(er) religious antagonism are better able to harness trust within and across communities to jointly battle the spread of the pandemic. Equally, the continual presence of religious violence may induce cooperation within each community and thus check the spread of the virus in riot-prone areas. Combining several district-level datasets, we uncover a robust correlation between various Covid-related outcomes and past conflict measures. Specifically, we find that higher levels of prior Hindu-Muslim conflict are associated with a lower number of Covid-19 infections, deaths and active cases. This pattern is consistent and holds across a wide range of specifications. Our empirical analysis therefore finds strong support for the latter channel. © 2022 selection and editorial matter, Rajib Bhattacharyya, Ananya Ghosh Dastidar and Soumyen Sikdar;individual chapters, the contributors.
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战友?2019冠状病毒病与印度的印度教-穆斯林冲突
多年来,印度教徒和穆斯林之间反复发生的暴力事件一直困扰着印度。在宗教冲突的背景下,新冠肺炎疫情带来了新的挑战。我们探讨了印度各区在新冠肺炎病例方面的表现,以及它们在印度教-穆斯林暴力事件中的历史倾向。就新冠肺炎病例而言,一个地区的宗教间合作与其后续表现之间的联系在理论上是模糊的。宗教对抗程度较低的地区可能更有能力利用社区内部和社区之间的信任,共同抗击疫情的蔓延。同样,宗教暴力的持续存在可能促使每个社区内部进行合作,从而遏制病毒在易发生骚乱地区的传播。结合几个区级数据集,我们发现各种与covid相关的结果与过去的冲突措施之间存在强大的相关性。具体来说,我们发现先前的印度教-穆斯林冲突水平较高,与Covid-19感染、死亡和活跃病例数量较低有关。此模式是一致的,并且适用于广泛的规范。因此,我们的实证分析为后一种渠道提供了强有力的支持。©2022选择和编辑事项,Rajib Bhattacharyya, Ananya Ghosh Dastidar和Soumyen Sikdar;个人章节,贡献者。
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