Can Insurgents Capture Aid through Credit Claiming? Evidence from Afghanistan

IF 1.7 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Jori Breslawski
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract The provision of development aid has become a favored counterinsurgency strategy, with governments reasoning that the delivery of needed services will improve civilians’ perceptions of the government, and consequently decrease civilian collaboration with insurgents. However, this reasoning relies on the critical assumption that civilians attribute projects to the government, and not to the very insurgents that the government seeks to defeat. In information poor environments like civil wars, it may be relatively easy for armed groups to capture the reputational benefits of aid by engaging in credit claiming. Drawing upon on a survey experiment in Afghanistan, I find that civilians who are told that the Taliban allowed a project in their village to occur are more likely to identify the Taliban as a facilitator of development projects, in spite of their own, real-life, experiences. While the effect size is modest, the finding points to the ability of armed groups to capture the reputational benefits of aid through purely rhetorical strategies, with implications for the viability of development aid as a counterinsurgency strategy.
叛乱分子可以通过信用索赔获得援助吗?来自阿富汗的证据
提供发展援助已成为一种受欢迎的反叛乱策略,政府认为提供所需的服务将改善平民对政府的看法,从而减少平民与叛乱分子的合作。然而,这种推理依赖于一个关键的假设,即平民将项目归因于政府,而不是政府试图击败的叛乱分子。在内战等信息匮乏的环境中,武装组织可能相对容易通过索取信用来获取援助带来的声誉利益。根据在阿富汗的一项调查实验,我发现,那些被告知塔利班允许在他们的村庄进行项目的平民更有可能将塔利班视为发展项目的推动者,尽管他们自己的真实经历。虽然效果不大,但这一发现表明,武装组织有能力通过纯粹的修辞策略来获取援助带来的声誉利益,这意味着发展援助作为一种反叛乱战略的可行性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Global Security Studies
Journal of Global Security Studies INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
34
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