H i C N Households in Conflict Network

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H i C N Households in Conflict Network The Institute of Development Studies - at the University of Sussex - Falmer - Brighton - BN1 9RE www.hicn.org Identifying Conflict and its Effects Using Micro-Level Surveys Carlos Bozzoli * and Tilman Brück cbozzoli@diw.de tbrueck@diw.de HiCN Research Design Note 13 April 2009 Acknowledgements: This presentation was given at the conference, Assessments and Surveys in Conflict-Affected Countries: Analyzing Poverty, Social, and Human Development, held at the World Bank, Washington, D.C. on 27 April 2009. Copyright Carlos Bozzoli and Tilman Brück 2009 * Research Associate, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Mohrenstraße 58 10117 Berlin Head of International Economics Department, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Mohrenstraße 58 10117 Berlin

Acknowledgements e Debby Guha-Sapir, CRED, and her team Ana María Ibáñez, Universidad de los Andes Patricia Justino, IDS Els Lecoutere, Ghent, and her team Kati Schindler, DIW Berlin Philip Verwimp, Antwerp University, and his team Marc Vothknecht, DIW Berlin all also at the Households in Conflict Network H i C N Households in Conflict Network 2

Select ect Bibliography Brück, T. and K. Schindler (2009). The Impact of Violent Conflicts on Households: What Do We Know and What Should We Know about War Widows? Oxford Development Studies, vol. 37. no. 3. Bundervoet, T., E. Nillesen, P. Verwimp and M. Voors (2009). Integrating Conflict Questions in a Household Survey: An Example from Burundi. HiCN Research Design Note. Dalen, K., K. Stig, M. Bøås, J. Pedersen and A. Hatløy (2009). The development of a conflict module in survey research. Fafo, Oslo Norway. Justino, P. (2008). http://www.un.org/esa/policy/wess/wess2008files/ws08backgroun dpapers/justino p _ 2008.pdf. H i C N Households in Conflict Network 3

Aim and Motivation o Aim of my presentation to discuss how the collection of micro-level surveys can be augmented to account better for mass violent conflict Why bother? either study conflict as a topic in its own right or control for conflict in the analysis to avoid bias either way, data is needed to account for conflict To measure or to identify? conflict traditionally has been unobservable hence measure effects of conflict (eg battle deaths) but, to truly open black box, we should identify conflict itself hence measure conflict and its direct and indirect effects H i C N Households in Conflict Network 4

Definition of War and Conflict War = Mass violent conflict = Systematic challenge to right and ability of the state to define and implement property rights ( institutions ) Use terms war, mass violent conflict and conflict interchangeably H i C N Households in Conflict Network 5

Identifying Conflict: Concepts (1) Economic analysis in times of peace exogenous factors and endowments behavior by agents outcomes, eg welfare assume that property rights are well defined and protected Economic analysis in times of conflict exogenous factors and endowments mass violent conflict behavior by agents (perhaps: mass violent conflict) outcomes, eg welfare What are we trying to measure here? conflict? conflict-affected ff t behavior? conflict-affected ff t outcomes? H i C N Households in Conflict Network 6

Identifying Conflict: Concepts (2) Conflict analysis 1.0 Conflict Zone Not Conflict Zone Households Affected direct victims, incl. indirect victims, by Conflict civilian casualties eg returned IDPs Households Not indirect victims, reference group Affected by Conflict eg farmers Conflict analysis 2.0 differentiate causes, nature and effects of conflict across groups, space and time - including by victims and perpetrators much more data-intensive H i C N Households in Conflict Network 7

Identifying Conflict: Concepts (3) Measurement of participation in conflict this requires additional information may be hard to elicit truthful responses Measurement of victimization victims of conflict are not usually randomly chosen hence study their conflict-relevant identity this must be multi-dimensional: political, social, economic and other factors (probably a mix of all is relevant) there are strong ethical implications to ask questions on individual victimization (eg about sexual violence in war) Measurement of nature of conflict (and its legacy) this matters hugely for study of its effects perhaps this differentiates conflict from, eg, HIV hence harder to develop a standard set of questions H i C N Households in Conflict Network 8

Identifying Conflict: Challenges (1) Identification direct versus indirect effects of war can rarely be traced in surveys hence in the past often focus on conflict as a shock (easy to measure!) eg death: killed in action or died due to poor medical services Boundaries What is individual, household or community shock? especially with expectations: one action may affect all households Location aim to specify where conflict occurred develop maps of conflict (geo-coding data?) Intensity and other characteristics measure severity and nature of conflict and its component elements H i C N Households in Conflict Network 9

Identifying Conflict: Challenges (2) Conflict dynamics trace events across space and time do not measure conflict as a singular shock - rather study conflict cycle Selection bias most conflict action cannot be measured contemporaneously ex post measurement suffers from recall error and attrition Crime versus conflict what is difference between looting in war and theft due to high insecurity (eg cattle rustling)? Linkages with related topics measurement of conflict links with measurement of political institution, groups, identity, crime, violence etc H i C N Households in Conflict Network 10

Identifying Conflict: Approaches (1) Types of conflict questions questions about direct effects of conflict (eg asset destruction) questions about indirect effects of conflict (eg displacement) most basic option: include additional, conflict-relevant answer codes (eg why did you loose this cattle?) Conflict module or integration of conflict questions? conflict module may help to focus may help to achieve comparability across surveys perhaps better for tracing conflict events and direct effects, less useful for causes and indirect effects beware of varying local circumstances response rates in separate conflict modules may be lower H i C N Households in Conflict Network 11

Identifying Conflict: Approaches (2) Conflict-survey versus normal surveys on the one hand: addition of conflict dimension as a rich source of information in the context of a multi-topic, multi-module survey on the other hand: smaller scale, single-topic surveys on conflict can go into more depth here the focus is on large scale surveys like LSMS or DHS Cross-sectional versus panel surveys normally, LSMS and DHS are cross-sectional surveys much can be learned from them if a few select conflict questions (or answer codes) are added for understanding conflict dynamics and dynamics of coping with conflict, panel data with conflict questions in all waves are needed this is still a key gap on the literature! (eg survey in Lebanon) H i C N Households in Conflict Network 12

Identifying Conflict: Levels e of Analysis s Individual randomly selected individuals in household or all individuals (roster) also to account for intra-household issues especially shocks: death, disability, disease, dislocation, destruction also: activities, outcomes and expectations could ask about group identification here (eg ethnicity) H i C N Households in Conflict Network 13

Identifying Conflict: Levels e of Analysis s Household head or other member of household responds on behalf of household beware of shifting definitions and compositions of households in times of conflict and over time (and space) shocks, access to services and markets, investments, land access and use, social relations and networks H i C N Households in Conflict Network 14

Identifying Conflict: Levels e of Analysis s Community ask knowledgeable member of community or focus groups or aggregate up from individual or household responses also focus on policy activities (especially reconstruction) H i C N Households in Conflict Network 15

Identifying Conflict: Priorities 1. Identify conflict-induced losses and damages human capital, physical assets, infrastructure etc 2. Identify effects of conflict on people changes in coping strategies ( doing ) changes in welfare, including food security ( being ) 3. Identify effects of conflict on infrastructure and markets including trust, social capital, exchange etc Account for pre-war, war-time and post-war periods H i C N Households in Conflict Network 16

Thank you for your attention! H i C N Households in Conflict Network 17