冲突后背景下的政治精英线索与态度形成

IF 3.4 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Journal of Peace Research Pub Date : 2023-09-25 DOI:10.1177/00223433231168189
Natalia Garbiras-Díaz, Miguel García-Sánchez, Aila M Matanock
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引用次数: 0

摘要

国内冲突通常以谈判解决告终,但许多解决方案失败了,往往是在普通公民影响力日益增强的执行阶段。公民有时通过公投或谈判领导人投票来评估和平协议,而且几乎总是由他们来决定是否合作。然而,除了他们的作用,我们对公民如何形成对和平协议的态度知之甚少。在本文中,我们评估公民如何形成对定居点的态度,特别是从中产生的政策规定,这是塑造冲突后环境的核心。这些都是复杂的政策变化,涉及深刻的派系行为者,而评估这些变化的公民往往专注于重建他们的生活。因此,我们的理论是,公民使用与他们有亲缘关系的政治精英的明显暗示来形成他们的态度。我们在哥伦比亚用调查实验来检验我们的理论。我们发现,公民依靠政治精英的暗示来决定他们对和解条款的立场。这些线索似乎提供了容易获得的信息,被调查者使用这些信息胜过其他信息。与假设和平协议是例外,疲惫的公民是稳定力量的研究相反,我们的研究结果表明,即使是这些决定也像往常一样是政治,政治精英之间的分歧推动了结果。
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Political elite cues and attitude formation in post-conflict contexts
Civil conflicts typically end with negotiated settlements, but many settlements fail, often during the implementation stage when average citizens have increasing influence. Citizens sometimes evaluate peace agreements by voting on referendums or the negotiating leaders, and, almost always, they decide whether to cooperate. Yet, despite their role, we do not know much about how citizens form attitudes toward peace agreements. In this article, we assess how citizens form attitudes toward settlements, specifically the policy provisions that emerge from them, which are central in shaping the post-conflict context. These are complex policy changes, involving deeply factionalized actors, and the citizens evaluating them are often focused on rebuilding their lives. We therefore theorize that citizens use stark cues from political elites with whom they have affinity to form their attitudes. We test our theory using survey experiments in Colombia. We find that citizens rely on political elites’ cues to decide their stance on the settlement’s provisions. These cues appear to supply easily-accessible information that respondents use over other information. In contrast to work positing that peace agreements are exceptional and weary citizens are stabilizing forces, our results suggest that even these decisions are politics as usual, where divisions among political elites drive the outcome.
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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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