Love thy neighbour? Violent armed conflict and trust: Evidence from Ethiopia
研究利用新型个体冲突数据,发现埃塞俄比亚青年暴露于暴力冲突会降低对同社区邻居的信任,但对普遍信任或外社区信任无显著影响,且低度暴露可能反而提升本地信任。
This study investigates the effects of exposure to violent conflict on trust among young adults in Ethiopia, using novel individual-level conflict data collected via audio computer-assisted self-interviewing. Overall, we find that greater exposure to violence decreases trust towards individuals living in the same neighbourhood but has no significant effect on generalized trust or trust in individuals from other neighbourhoods. The decline in local neighbourhood trust is pervasive across men and women and across ethnic groups, and is observed for both direct personal victimization and indirect exposure through family, friends, and witnessed events. We also find that low levels of exposure to violence may foster higher local trust, whereas higher levels of exposure lead to substantial declines. Finally, conflict exposure is significantly associated with deteriorations in mental health, lower perceived neighbourhood safety, physical displacement, and greater food insecurity, pointing to potentially plausible channels through which violent conflict may weaken trust within local communities. • We study the effects of exposure to violent conflict on trust among young adults in Ethiopia using novel individual-level ACASI data. • Greater exposure to violence decreases trust towards individuals living in the same neighbourhood. • No significant average effects on generalized trust or trust in individuals from other neighbourhoods. • Local trust declines across men and women, across ethnic groups, and for direct and indirect exposure; low exposure may foster higher local trust. • Mental health, safety, displacement and food insecurity are plausible pathways linking conflict exposure to lower local trust.