Civil War and Political Participation: Evidence from Uganda
研究发现乌干达武装冲突增加了公民的政治讨论和会议出席,但未影响正式选举参与,基于全国代表性数据和多轮调查。
We show that armed conflict in Uganda affects civic participation, measured by the frequency of political discussion and local meeting attendance. Relying on four rounds of nationally representative individual-level data on civic participation bracketing a large number of battle events, we find that civic participation increases in districts in which battle events took place. Evidence from a variety of identification strategies, including difference-in-difference and IV estimates, suggest that the relationship is causal. However, unlike previous studies, we find that experiencing violence does not affect formal electoral participation.