The motivating and mobilizing effects of inequality on civil conflict: Focusing on trade-induced labor market shocks

IF 3.4 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Journal of Peace Research Pub Date : 2024-04-12 DOI:10.1177/00223433231221447
Hye-Ryoung Jung
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Abstract

This article has two aims: (1) to identify the causal effect of income inequality on civil conflict and (2) to find the mechanism in which disadvantaged individuals can mobilize collective violence. Applying the Heckscher-Ohlin and Stopler-Samuelson theorems, this study hypothesizes that workers in land-rich countries – those who face contracted demand in the labor market and consequently a larger income disparity – will have a lower opportunity cost to engage in conflict as trade expands. Exploiting exogenous spatial variation in inequality due to the country’s factor endowment, together with time variation in tariffs arising from the economic liberalization, the work of this research documents a statistically significant and economically meaningful causal effect of inequality on civil conflict. Secondly, to identify the mobilizing effect of inequality, I test whether higher disparity in income distribution within an ethnic group breeds more rebellions initiated by the group. Esteban and Ray’s model claims that an increase in income inequality within an ethnic group makes collective violence more likely, because the poor within the group provide conflict labor, and the rich within the group provide resources for violence. By merging international census data that cover 115 million individuals from 221 ethnic groups with the groups’ conflict records, the analysis empirically identifies that when holding total ethnic income constant, within-group inequality that is proxied by the unemployment rate is strongly correlated with the group’s propensity to initiate armed conflicts. Shedding new light on the prevailing scholarly discord that exclusively chooses either one of class and ethnic cleavages as sources of intrastate violence, the findings of this study imply that if trade-induced labor market shocks increase within-group inequality, it motivates workers to participate in rebellions by lowering their opportunity cost of fighting and mobilizes ethnic collective violence by allowing the ethnic leaders to recruit combatants at a lower cost.
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不平等对国内冲突的激励和动员作用:聚焦贸易引发的劳动力市场冲击
本文有两个目的:(1) 确定收入不平等对国内冲突的因果效应;(2) 寻找弱势个体动员集体暴力的机制。本研究运用赫克歇尔-俄林(Heckscher-Ohlin)定理和斯托普勒-萨缪尔森(Stopler-Samuelson)定理,假设土地资源丰富的国家的工人--那些在劳动力市场上面临需求萎缩、因而收入差距较大的工人--随着贸易的扩大,参与冲突的机会成本会降低。利用国家要素禀赋导致的不平等的外生空间变化,以及经济自由化导致的关税的时间变化,本研究的工作记录了不平等对国内冲突的统计意义和经济意义上的因果效应。其次,为了确定不平等的动员效应,我检验了一个族群内部收入分配差距越大是否会滋生更多由该族群发起的叛乱。埃斯特万和雷的模型认为,族群内部收入不平等的加剧会使集体暴力更有可能发生,因为族群内部的穷人为冲突提供了劳动力,而族群内部的富人则为暴力提供了资源。通过将涵盖 221 个族群的 1.15 亿人的国际人口普查数据与这些族群的冲突记录合并,该分析从经验上发现,在族群总收入不变的情况下,以失业率为代表的族群内部不平等与族群发起武装冲突的倾向密切相关。目前,学术界普遍认为阶级和民族裂痕是国内暴力的根源,本研究的结论揭示了这一不和谐现象的新含义,即如果贸易引发的劳动力市场冲击加剧了群体内部的不平等,就会通过降低工人的战斗机会成本来激励他们参与叛乱,并通过允许民族领袖以较低的成本招募战斗人员来动员民族集体暴力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
5.60%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: Journal of Peace Research is an interdisciplinary and international peer reviewed bimonthly journal of scholarly work in peace research. Edited at the International Peace Research Institute, Oslo (PRIO), by an international editorial committee, Journal of Peace Research strives for a global focus on conflict and peacemaking. From its establishment in 1964, authors from over 50 countries have published in JPR. The Journal encourages a wide conception of peace, but focuses on the causes of violence and conflict resolution. Without sacrificing the requirements for theoretical rigour and methodological sophistication, articles directed towards ways and means of peace are favoured.
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