Replication Data for: Good Times and Bad Apples: Rebel Recruitment in Crackdown and Truce
Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)
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Title |
Replication Data for: Good Times and Bad Apples: Rebel Recruitment in Crackdown and Truce
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Identifier |
https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/CL0RU2
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Creator |
Hanson, Kolby
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Publisher |
Harvard Dataverse
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Description |
Even in long-running civil conflicts, governments may permit rebels to recruit and gather resources freely during years-long truce periods. Scholars and policymakers assume that these periods of forbearance allow rebel organizations to gather strength unchecked. Instead, with innovative evidence from five conflict zones in Northeast India, I show how leniency can actually undermine rebel organizations in the long run. Despite rebel leaders' best efforts, safety and comfort attract selfish opportunists who may later desert in battle, defect to the enemy, or abuse civilians. First, I show experimentally that the benefits of leniency disproportionately attract low-commitment recruits. By sampling in local recruitment hotspots, I gathered nearly 400 likely rebel recruits, testing their motivations with attitudinal questions and a conjoint survey experiment. Second, I conducted dozens of qualitative interviews with rebel leaders, rebel soldiers, and civilian observers, tracking how truce periods altered rebel recruitment and behavioral patterns over time.
ERRATUM: An erratum was approved by AJPS Editors for this manuscript. The updated code and codebook files are included with this version of the published record. (2021-07-13) |
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Subject |
Social Sciences
Civil conflict Rebel organizations Rebel recruitment Armistices Experiments |
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Contributor |
Hanson, Kolby
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