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Replication Data for: "Resisting the Blood Tax: Coercive Capacity, Railroads and Draft Evasion in Colonial West Africa"

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Replication Data for: "Resisting the Blood Tax: Coercive Capacity, Railroads and Draft Evasion in Colonial West Africa"
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/97KSIK
 
Creator Pruett, Lindsey
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description What effect did infrastructure expansion have on state coercive capacity? A growing body of literature ties infrastructure—particularly for communication and transportation—to increased state capacity and societal control. Yet, the same infrastructure that extends the reach of the state simultaneously alters local contexts in ways that may unravel social control and enable resistance to state-led coercion. Drawing on novel time-series cross-sectional data on draft evasion in French West Africa—a measure of resistance to coercive policies—this paper demonstrates that railway expansion did not neatly increase the colonial regime’s ability to monitor the population and effectively extract conscripts. Railway infrastructure was highly disruptive to many of the economic and social conditions that enable coercion, including legibility and local compliance. Railways drove displacement and urbanization; altered opportunity costs and incentivized everyday resistance, and opened possibilities for exit. Ultimately, by heightening mobility and undermining conditions favoring social control, railroads were associated with higher draft evasion.
 
Subject Social Sciences
conscription, state capacity, colonialism, everyday resistance
 
Date 2023-10-28
 
Contributor Pruett, Lindsey