Legacies of Survival: Historical Violence and Ethnic Minority Behavior

IF 2.2 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Amiad Haran Diman, D. Miodownik
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

How is the electoral behavior of minorities shaped by past violence? Recent studies found that displacement increases hostility between perpetrators and displaced individuals, but there has been paltry research on members of surviving communities. We argue that the latter exhibit the opposite pattern because of their different condition. Violence will cause cross-generational vulnerability, fear and risk-aversion—leading the surviving communities to seek protection and avoid conflict by signalling loyalty and rejecting nationalist movements. In their situation as an excluded minority in the perpetrators’ state, they will be more likely to vote for out-group parties. Exploiting exogenous battlefield dynamics that created inter-regional variation in the Palestinian exodus (1947–1949), microlevel measurements that capture the damage of violence, and an original longitudinal data set, we show that Palestinian villages in Israel more severely impacted by the 1948 war have a much higher vote share to Jewish parties even 70 years later. Survey evidence further supports our theory, revealing that this pattern exists only for members of the surviving communities, and not among displaced individuals. The findings shed new light on the complex social relations that guide political decision-making in post-war settings and divided societies that suffer from protracted conflicts.
生存的遗产:历史暴力与少数民族行为
过去的暴力事件是如何影响少数族裔的选举行为的?最近的研究发现,流离失所增加了犯罪者和流离失所者之间的敌意,但对幸存社区成员的研究却很少。我们认为,后者由于其不同的条件而表现出相反的模式。暴力将导致跨代的脆弱性、恐惧和风险厌恶,导致幸存的社区通过表示忠诚和拒绝民族主义运动来寻求保护和避免冲突。在他们作为犯罪者所在州被排斥的少数群体的情况下,他们更有可能投票给外部团体政党。利用造成巴勒斯坦人外流(1947–1949)地区间差异的外部战场动态、捕捉暴力破坏的微观层面测量以及原始纵向数据集,我们表明,即使在70年后,受1948年战争影响更严重的以色列巴勒斯坦村庄的选票份额也比犹太政党高得多。调查证据进一步支持了我们的理论,表明这种模式只存在于幸存社区的成员中,而不存在于流离失所的个人中。这些发现为指导战后政治决策的复杂社会关系以及遭受长期冲突的分裂社会提供了新的线索。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
9.70%
发文量
101
期刊介绍: The Journal of Conflict Resolution is an interdisciplinary journal of social scientific theory and research on human conflict. It focuses especially on international conflict, but its pages are open to a variety of contributions about intergroup conflict, as well as between nations, that may help in understanding problems of war and peace. Reports about innovative applications, as well as basic research, are welcomed, especially when the results are of interest to scholars in several disciplines.
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