Understanding Paramilitary Violence

Similar documents
Transnational Dimensions of Civil War

OUTSOURCING COUNTER-INSURGENCY: STATE INVESTMENT IN PRO-GOVERNMENT MILITIAS AS A RESPONSE TO REBEL STRENGTH. Bailee Donahue.

Rebel Finance and Sexual Violence

Interethnic Tolerance, Demographics, and the Electoral Fate of Non-nationalistic Parties in Post-war Bosnian Municipalities

GOVERNMENTS, INFORMAL LINKS TO MILITIAS, AND ACCOUNTABILITY *

Navin A. Bapat Associate Professor, Political Science and Peace, War, and Defense The University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill June 2015

Supplementary Material for Preventing Civil War: How the potential for international intervention can deter conflict onset.

Contiguous States, Stable Borders and the Peace between Democracies

Auxiliary Force Structure: Paramilitary Forces and Pro-Government Militias

Candidate Faces and Election Outcomes: Is the Face-Vote Correlation Caused by Candidate Selection? Corrigendum

Civilianizing Civil Conflict: Civilian Defense Militias and the Logic of Violence in Intra-State Conflict

The Effect of Sexual Violence on Negotiated Outcomes in Civil Conflict: Online Appendix

After the Rain: Rainfall Variability, Hydro-Meteorological Disasters, and Social Conflict in Africa

Powersharing, Protection, and Peace. Scott Gates, Benjamin A. T. Graham, Yonatan Lupu Håvard Strand, Kaare W. Strøm. September 17, 2015

PEACE TO VIOLENCE: EXPLAINING THE VIOLENT ESCALATION OF NONVIOLENT DEMONSTRATIONS. Daniel Gustafson. Chapel Hill 2016

Global Public Opinion toward the United Nations: Insights from the Gallup World Poll

Kent Academic Repository

You Reap What You Sow

Comments on Ansell & Samuels, Inequality & Democracy: A Contractarian Approach. Victor Menaldo University of Washington October 2012

The System Made Me Stop Doing It. The Indirect Origins of Commercial Peace

Openness and Internal Conflict. Christopher S. P. Magee Department of Economics Bucknell University Lewisburg, PA

Political Skill and the Democratic Politics of Investment Protection

Corruption, Political Instability and Firm-Level Export Decisions. Kul Kapri 1 Rowan University. August 2018

Corruption and business procedures: an empirical investigation

Peace to Violence: Explaining the Violent Escalation of Nonviolent Demonstrations

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH VOL. 3 NO. 4 (2005)

The conditional impact of military intervention on internal armed conflict outcomes

Rainfall and Migration in Mexico Amy Teller and Leah K. VanWey Population Studies and Training Center Brown University Extended Abstract 9/27/2013

Commuting and Minimum wages in Decentralized Era Case Study from Java Island. Raden M Purnagunawan

the notion that poverty causes terrorism. Certainly, economic theory suggests that it would be

Lobbying successfully: Interest groups, lobbying coalitions and policy change in the European Union

Just War or Just Politics? The Determinants of Foreign Military Intervention

Figure 2: Proportion of countries with an active civil war or civil conflict,

Margarita Mooney Assistant Professor University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC

Does horizontal education inequality lead to violent conflict?

Brain Drain and Emigration: How Do They Affect Source Countries?

Explaining Civil War Severity: Aformalmodelandempiricalanalysis

The Contribution of Veto Players to Economic Reform: Online Appendix

Of Shirking, Outliers, and Statistical Artifacts: Lame-Duck Legislators and Support for Impeachment

ADDITIONAL RESULTS FOR REBELS WITHOUT A TERRITORY. AN ANALYSIS OF NON- TERRITORIAL CONFLICTS IN THE WORLD,

Roles of children and elderly in migration decision of adults: case from rural China

THE EFFECT OF REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS ON THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AND SOCIETY

Left-Wing Veto Players and Agenda Setters: Economic Reform in Developing Democracies of Latin America

GOP Vote. Brad Jones 1. August 7, University of California, Davis. Bradford S. Jones, UC-Davis, Dept. of Political Science

Legislatures and Growth

Online Supplement to Female Participation and Civil War Relapse

Amy Tenhouse. Incumbency Surge: Examining the 1996 Margin of Victory for U.S. House Incumbents

Strengthening Protection of Labor Rights through Preferential Trade Agreements (PTAs)

Congressional Gridlock: The Effects of the Master Lever

Policing the Powerless How Black Political Power Reduces Racial Disparities in Traffic Stops Outcomes

Immigrant Children s School Performance and Immigration Costs: Evidence from Spain

The Shape of Corruption: Colombia as a Case Study. Laura Langbein American University Pablo Sanabria Universidad de Los Andes

Does government decentralization reduce domestic terror? An empirical test

Testing Leniency Programs Experimentally

Mixed Motives? Explaining the Decision to Integrate Militaries at Civil War's End

Chapter 6 Online Appendix. general these issues do not cause significant problems for our analysis in this chapter. One

national congresses and show the results from a number of alternate model specifications for

US FOREIGN AID AND ITS EFFECTS ON UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY VOTING ON IMPORTANT VOTES. A Thesis

International Cooperation, Parties and. Ideology - Very preliminary and incomplete

Evaluating the conflict-reducing effect of UN peacekeeping operations

Modelling Elections in Post-Communist Regimes: Voter Perceptions, Political leaders and Activists

Is Corruption Anti Labor?

Classical papers: Osborbe and Slivinski (1996) and Besley and Coate (1997)

Appendix to Non-Parametric Unfolding of Binary Choice Data Keith T. Poole Graduate School of Industrial Administration Carnegie-Mellon University

Impact of Human Rights Abuses on Economic Outlook

GOVERNANCE RETURNS TO EDUCATION: DO EXPECTED YEARS OF SCHOOLING PREDICT QUALITY OF GOVERNANCE?

Appendix Accompanying Unpacking Nonviolent Campaigns: Introducing the NAVCO 2.0 Dataset

JUDGE, JURY AND CLASSIFIER

Technological Limitations to the Cost Saving Effect of Remote Internet Voting

Internal Instability and Technology: Do Text Messages and Social Media Increase Levels of Internal Conflict?

Chapter Four: Chamber Competitiveness, Political Polarization, and Political Parties

Elections and Political Fragility in Africa

Corruption's Effect on Socioeconomic Factors

The Efficiency of Institutions: Political Determinants of Oil Consumption in Democracies

RELIGIOUS FREEDOM AND ECONOMIC PROSPERITY Ilan Alon and Gregory Chase

What makes people feel free: Subjective freedom in comparative perspective Progress Report

An Empirical Assessment of The Determinants of Tourist Arrivals in the Caribbean Region: Evidence from Tobago

Paper Title: Political Conditionality: An Assessment of the Impacts of EU Trade and Aid Policy

Repression or Civil War?

Human Rights Violations and Competitive Elections in Dictatorships

Does Lobbying Matter More than Corruption In Less Developed Countries?*

Natural Resources & Income Inequality: The Role of Ethnic Divisions

The Impact of the Interaction between Economic Growth and Democracy on Human Development: Cross-National Analysis

Subtle Signals, Limited Device: International Institutions and Credible Commitment of Nondemocracies

Bridging Economics and International Relations to Understand State Capacity and War in Sub-Saharan Africa

How migrants choose their destination in Burkina Faso? A place-utility approach

Forms of democracy, autocracy and the resource curse

Just War or Just Politics? The Determinants of Foreign Military Intervention

Determinants of Voting Behavior on the Keystone XL Pipeline

Extended Abstract: The Swing Voter s Curse in Social Networks

The Domestic Politics of European Budget Support

Non-governmental organizations and economic sanctions i

Evaluating the conflict-reducing effect of UN peacekeeping operations Preprint: Article forthcoming in Journal of Politics.

EXPECTATIONS, RIVALRIES, AND CIVIL WAR DURATION

CSES Module 5 Pretest Report: Greece. August 31, 2016

Immigrants Inflows, Native outflows, and the Local Labor Market Impact of Higher Immigration David Card

Guns and Butter in U.S. Presidential Elections

Legal Corruption. Daniel Kaufmann Pedro C. Vicente. Oxford University November 9, 2005

How (wo)men rebel: Exploring the effect of gender equality on nonviolent and armed conflict onset

Why Low Levels of Democracy Promote Corruption and High Levels Diminish It

Transcription:

Understanding Paramilitary Violence Navin Bapat Lucia Bird Chelsea Estancona Kaisa Hinkkainen University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University of Lincoln November 13, 2015 Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 1/26

The Logic of Paramilitary Violence Paramilitaries are a common feature of civil conflict. Examples: Sudan and Sierra Leone Usually conceptualized with principal-agent frameworks This raises three questions: Why do paramilitaries prefer fighting to negotiated settlements? Why do states support paramilitaries, risking decreased control? Why do states seek to keep their paramilitary support private? Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 2/26

What do we know about paramilitary involvement? Paramilitaries are present in a variety of intrastate conflicts (Jentzch, Kalyvas and Schubiger 2015) Scholars debate the level of state control over paramilitary violence (Stanton 2015; Mitchell, Carey and Butler 2014) States make efforts to keep ties to paramilitaries secret (Carey, Colaresi and Mitchell 2015) Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 3/26

Modeling Paramilitary Presence Rebels, Local Elites, and the Government 2 stage, 3 player game: Rebels, Local Elites, Government Stage 1: Government chooses to arm elites, fight conventionally, or do nothing Stage 2: Rebels challenge, and elites respond by ceding territory or fighting This process repeats. Power is endogenous: transfers from elites improve future rebel fighting power. Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 4/26

Modeling Paramilitary Presence Basic Game Tree: Second Stage Elites Offer x Accept Power shift, repeat Rebels Contest Rebels Reject Conflict ~Contest Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 5/26

Modeling Paramilitary Presence Discontinuous Shifts: Contraband Elites fight if ceding territory means a discontinuous increase in rebel power: Power shifts arise when territory has valuable lootable resources Occurs in weak states where the government does not defend conventionally H1: If the contested territory has contraband, high state capacity decreases the probability of paramilitary activity. Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 6/26

Modeling Paramilitary Presence Full Game Tree Elites Offer x Accept Power shift, repeat Rebels Contest Rebels Reject Conflict Aid Elites Gov. ~Contest No Conflict Conventional Conflict Defend Conventionally Cede Territory Rebels take territory, power shift away from Gov. Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 7/26

Modeling Paramilitary Presence No Contraband Commitment Problems Weak states benefit when elites resist but the elites cannot credibly commit do so. If the government arms elites that agree to fight, this improves the elites ability to combat the rebels. Elites lose the capacity to resist if they negotiate with rebels and the government pulls their support. Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 8/26

Modeling Paramilitary Presence Government Support Elites have an incentive to fight rebels immediately to avoid an unstable peace. Occurs when the government can strengthen elites but cannot fight rebels conventionally. H2: If the territory has no contraband, increasing state capacity has a curvilinear effect. Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 9/26

Modeling Paramilitary Presence Empirical Predictions Pr. Paramilitary Violence Weak Moderate High Government Capacity (wg) Territory with Contraband (Discontinuous Shift) Territory without Contraband (Continuous Shift) Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 10/26

Research Design Data Sources Pro-governmental Militia Data Set (PGMD) from Carey, Mitchell, Lowe (2013) Our analysis is limited to minor powers and states experiencing some degree of civil violence Variables Added: Fearon s contraband variable (2004) Logged GDP per capita (World Bank, 2005) Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 11/26

Research Design Dependent and Primary Independent Variables Dependent Variable: Informal Pro-government Militias Independent Variables: Presence of lootable natural resources (Contraband) State capacity (ln(gdp) per capita) Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 12/26

Empirical Results Table 1 : Logistic Regression: Paramilitary Presence (Key Variables) Model 1 ln(gdp) 6.10 (1.01) ln(gdp) 2 0.44 (0.07) Contraband 7.33 (1.92) GDP Contraband 1.03 (0.28) Num. obs. 523 Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 13/26

H1: Effect of Contraband No State Support 4 2-2 -4-6 -8-10 6 7 8 9 10 11 LGDP Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 14/26

H1: Effect of Contraband Percent Increase in Probability, No State Support Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 15/26

H2: Effect of State Capacity No Contraband 4 2 6 7 8 9 10 11 LGDP -2-4 Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 16/26

H2: Effect of State Capacity Percent Increase in Probability- no Contraband % Increase in Pr. Paramilitary 0.2.4.6 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Government Capacity (LGDP) Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 17/26

Conclusion Results and Future Work Preliminary evidence in support of hypotheses: Lootable natural resources increase the probability of paramilitary activity in weak or moderately weak states. Paramilitaries arise in moderately powerful states without contraband. Future work: Why keep support secretive? Testing with microlevel data Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 18/26

Conclusion Thank you! Navin Bapat bapat@email.unc.edu Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 19/26

Appendix Table 2 : Description of Game Parameters Parameter Values Meaning x 0-1 Elites transfer to Rebels p 0-1 Rebel probability of victory wr 0-1 Rebel capacity wg 0-1 Government capacity β 0-B Cost to government of arming elites θ 0-1 Decrease in p with armed elites c 0-1 Cost of conventional fighting Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 20/26

Appendix Table 3 : Summary Statistics, DV: Informal Paramilitary Presence Frequency Percentage No Paramilitary Emergence 264 51% Paramilitary Emergence 259 49% Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 21/26

Appendix Table 4 : Summary Statistics, IV: Contraband Frequency Percentage No Contraband Present 370 71% Contraband Present 153 29% Table 5 : Summary Statistics, IV: ln(gdp per capita) Minimum Mean Standard Deviation Maximum ln(gdppc) 4.24 6.77 1.18 9.92 Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 22/26

Appendix Table 6 : Logit: Paramilitary Presence Estimate Std. Error Pr(> z ) (Intercept) -23.7436 3.5195 0.0000 ln(gdp) 6.0958 1.0141 0.0000 ln(gdp) 2-0.4406 0.0720 0.0000 Contraband 7.3303 1.9243 0.0001 GDP contraband -1.0289 0.2818 0.0003 Distance 0.0003 0.0001 0.0261 Polity2 0.1322 0.0228 0.0000 Polity2 2 0.0126 0.0043 0.0037 Ethnic fractionalization -0.7680 0.4869 0.1147 Dem. Aid GDP 0.0093 0.0036 0.0106 Aut. Aid GDP -0.0528 0.0447 0.2381 ln(area) 0.2042 0.0898 0.0230 N 523 AIC 631.05 BIC 682.16 Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 23/26

Appendix Table 7 : Probit: Paramilitary Presence Estimate Std. Error Pr(> z ) (Intercept) -14.17297 2.044321 0.000 ln(gdp) 3.660687.597108 0.000 ln(gdp) 2 -.2648403.0423717 0.000 Contraband 4.242742 1.140394 0.000 GDP contraband -.5962883.1676685 0.000 Distance.0001711.0000727 0.019 Polity2.0784443.0132507 0.000 Polity2 2.0069624.0025685 0.007 Ethnic fractionalization -.5007565.2875475 0.082 Dem. Aid GDP.0053449.0021334 0.012 Aut. Aid GDP -.028052.024979 0.261 ln(area).119687.0540717 0.027 N 523 Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 24/26

Appendix Table 8 : Logit (country-clustered standard errors) Estimate Std. Error Pr(> z ) (Intercept) -23.74359 7.457397 0.001 ln(gdp) 6.095782 2.1377 0.004 ln(gdp) 2 -.4405869.1504182 0.003 Contraband 7.330315 3.391101 0.031 GDP contraband -1.028915.5059483 0.042 Distance.0002739.0002027 0.177 Polity2.1321893.0454957 0.004 Polity2 2.0125556.0078566 0.110 Ethnic fractionalization -.7680098 1.168355 0.511 Dem. Aid GDP.0092525.0077422 0.232 Aut. Aid GDP -.0527618.0719103 0.463 ln(area).2041773.1955083 0.296 N 523 Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 25/26

Appendix Table 9 : Probit (country-clustered standard errors) Estimate Std. Error Pr(> z ) (Intercept) -14.17297 4.239232 0.001 ln(gdp) 3.660687 1.247406 0.003 ln(gdp) 2 -.2648403.0879848 0.003 Contraband 4.242742 2.033947 0.037 GDP contraband -.5962883.3068264 0.052 Distance.0001711.0001174 0.145 Polity2.0784443.0264926 0.003 Polity2 2.0069624.0045972 0.130 Ethnic fractionalization -.5007565.668406 0.454 Dem. Aid GDP.0053449.0045661 0.242 Aut. Aid GDP -.028052.0368838 0.447 ln(area).119687.1195323 0.317 N 523 Bapat, Bird, Estancona, Hinkkainen Understanding Paramilitary Violence 26/26