传染性内乱理论的因果证据

IF 2.4 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS International Studies Quarterly Pub Date : 2024-10-11 DOI:10.1093/isq/sqae124
Rebekah Fyfe, Bruce Desmarais
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人们发现,许多类型的内乱,包括抗议、暴力冲突和叛乱,都会在国家之间和国家内部蔓延。这些溢出效应通常是通过使用观测数据估算的参数结构模型进行检验的。通过对网络分析方法的研究,我们注意到在观察数据中对传染效应进行因果推断所面临的重要挑战。我们回顾了最近开发的一种非参数检验方法--"分裂-哈尔夫斯检验"--它对混杂因素具有稳健性,并将该检验方法应用于最近几项研究中的复制数据,在这些研究中,研究人员检验了内乱中的传染效应。我们发现,在已发表的文献中,约有一半的研究结果无法通过分裂-半数检验进行复制。在总共十次复制中,我们没有发现哪些结果可以复制,哪些结果不可以复制的强烈模式。不过,我们确实在其中六次重复中发现了普遍传染的证据,这表明传染是内乱中的一种普遍现象。因此,我们建议研究人员:(1)在研究内乱时,将分裂半球检验作为对传染参数模型的通用稳健性检验;(2)考虑在内乱研究中建立传染模型。
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Causal Evidence for Theories of Contagious Civil Unrest
Many types of civil unrest, including protest, violent conflict, and rebellion, have been found to be subject to both inter- and intra-state contagion. These spillover effects are conventionally tested through the application of parametric structural models that are estimated using observational data. Drawing on research in methods for network analysis, we note important challenges in conducting causal inference on contagion effects in observational data. We review a recently developed non-parametric test—the “split-halves test”—that is robust to confounding and apply the test to replication data from several recent studies in which researchers tested for contagion in civil unrest. We find that about half the time findings in the published literature fail to replicate with the split-halves test. Across ten total replications, we do not see strong patterns in terms of which results do and do not replicate. We do, however, find evidence for general contagion in six of the replications, indicating that contagion is a prevalent phenomenon in civil unrest. As such, we recommend that researchers (1) use the split-halves test as a general-purpose robustness check for parametric models of contagion in the study of civil unrest, and (2) consider modeling contagion in research on civil unrest.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
7.70%
发文量
71
期刊介绍: International Studies Quarterly, the official journal of the International Studies Association, seeks to acquaint a broad audience of readers with the best work being done in the variety of intellectual traditions included under the rubric of international studies. Therefore, the editors welcome all submissions addressing this community"s theoretical, empirical, and normative concerns. First preference will continue to be given to articles that address and contribute to important disciplinary and interdisciplinary questions and controversies.
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