论文标题
非洲的农业意外收获和政治暴力的季节性
Agricultural Windfalls and the Seasonality of Political Violence in Africa
论文作者
论文摘要
当谷物的价格上涨时,社会动荡和冲突可能就可能。在农村地区,肇事者的捕食动机可以解释价格与冲突之间的正相关关系。捕食发生在可以分配的损失的地方和时期。在主要的农业社会中,这类时报与收获季节保持一致。农业收入的季节性是否导致冲突的季节性?我们通过分析1997 - 2020年期间,非洲准军事团体上演的5.5万事件来解决这个问题。我们通过国际谷物价格的变化来调查针对农业收入冲击的暴力年度模式。我们发现,主要谷物谷物价格的同比一年一度标准偏差年度增长会导致民兵暴力的收获时间飙升,而这种谷物谷物的种植在一个度量中。这意味着在后季节初期,暴力行为增长了近10%。我们没有观察到国家部队或叛军团体的暴力事件发生变化 - 其他两个著名的行为者。通过进一步调查机制,我们表明民兵暴力在合理地收获季节后会放大,当时要适当的战利品的价值较高。通过关注与收获相关的冲突季节性,以及更有可能参与针对平民的暴力行为,我们为不断增长的关于主要是农业社会冲突的经济原因做出了贡献。
When the prices of cereal grains rise, social unrest and conflict become likely. In rural areas, the predation motives of perpetrators can explain the positive relationship between prices and conflict. Predation happens at places and in periods where and when spoils to be appropriated are available. In predominantly agrarian societies, such opportune times align with the harvest season. Does the seasonality of agricultural income lead to the seasonality of conflict? We address this question by analyzing over 55 thousand incidents involving violence against civilians staged by paramilitary groups across Africa during the 1997-2020 period. We investigate the crop year pattern of violence in response to agricultural income shocks via changes in international cereal prices. We find that a year-on-year one standard deviation annual growth of the price of the major cereal grain results in a harvest-time spike in violence by militias in a one-degree cell where this cereal grain is grown. This translates to a nearly ten percent increase in violence during the early postharvest season. We observe no such change in violence by state forces or rebel groups--the other two notable actors. By further investigating the mechanisms, we show that the violence by militias is amplified after plausibly rich harvest seasons when the value of spoils to be appropriated is higher. By focusing on harvest-related seasonality of conflict, as well as actors more likely to be involved in violence against civilians, we contribute to the growing literature on the economic causes of conflict in predominantly agrarian societies.