ID | 186328 |
Title Proper | Competition and Civilian Victimization |
Language | ENG |
Author | Kenkel, Brenton ; Rueda, Miguel R ; Michael Gibilisco ; Gibilisco, Michael |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Violence against civilians in civil war is widely thought of as a strategic choice by combatant groups. We argue that a common strategic logic of competition underlies diverse theories of civilian victimization. We develop a theory of strategic complements in victimization, hypothesizing that an armed group’s propensity to victimize civilians will increase with its expectation that its competitors will act likewise. We test this argument by structurally estimating a formal model of strategic interdependence between armed groups using data from the Colombian civil war. Our findings indicate that strategic expectations are responsible for a substantial amount of violence against civilians: the two major combatant groups would have systematically victimized civilians in at least 9% fewer municipalities if they had expected no violence by their rival. Examining causal mechanisms, we also find that victimization in the Colombian case was more likely aimed at controlling civilians than at influencing peace negotiations. |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of Conflict Resolution Vol. 66, No.4-5; May 2022: p.809-835 |
Journal Source | Journal of Conflict Resolution Vol: 66 No 4-5 |
Key Words | Civil Wars ; Game Theory ; Colombia ; Civilian Casualties ; Structural Estimation |