内战对环境的影响:哥伦比亚准军事扩张对森林砍伐的影响

L. Fergusson, Dario Romero, Juan F. Vargas
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引用次数: 45

摘要

尽管关于环境恶化如何引发内战的文献越来越多,但其相反的影响,即冲突对环境结果的影响,研究相对较少。从理论的角度来看,这种影响是模糊的,有些力量指向环境恶化的压力,有些指向相反的方向。因此,冲突对环境的总体影响是一个实证问题。我们以哥伦比亚为例研究这种关系。我们将1990年至2010年期间各城市森林覆盖的详细卫星纵向数据集与准军事民兵组织与冲突有关的暴力行动的综合小组相结合。我们首先提供证据,证明准军事活动在包括市政和时间固定效应的面板规范中显著降低了森林覆盖的份额。然后,我们通过利用准实验来证实这些发现,该实验为准军事部队的扩张提供了外生变异源。利用到这种扩张的中心Uraba地区的距离,我们在每个可获得森林覆盖数据的横截面上测量准军事活动。作为一项伪造工作,我们表明,在与政府进行和平谈判后,准军事人员大部分遣散后,该文书就不再具有相关性。此外,在复员后,准军事人员滥伐森林的影响消失了。我们探索了一些可能解释冲突驱动的森林砍伐的潜在机制,并展示了证据表明,准军事暴力导致大量人口外流,以确保种植非法作物的地区,开采矿产资源,并从事广泛的农业。反过来,这些活动又与森林砍伐有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Environmental Impact of Civil Conflict: The Deforestation Effect of Paramilitary Expansion in Colombia
Despite a growing body of literature on how environmental degradation can fuel civil war, the reverse effect, namely that of conflict on environmental outcomes, is relatively understudied. From a theoretical point of view this effect is ambiguous, with some forces pointing to pressures for environmental degradation and some pointing in the opposite direction. Hence, the overall effect of conflict on the environment is an empirical question. We study this relationship in the case of Colombia. We combine a detailed satellite-based longitudinal dataset on forest cover across municipalities over the period 1990-2010 with a comprehensive panel of conflict-related violent actions by paramilitary militias. We first provide evidence that paramilitary activity significantly reduces the share of forest cover in a panel specification that includes municipal and time fixed effects. Then we confirm these findings by taking advantage of a quasi-experiment that provides us with an exogenous source of variation for the expansion of the paramilitary. Using the distance to the region of Uraba, the epicenter of such expansion, we instrument paramilitary activity in each cross-section for which data on forest cover is available. As a falsification exercise, we show that the instrument ceases to be relevant after the paramilitaries largely demobilized following peace negotiations with the government. Further, after the demobilization the deforestation effect of the paramilitaries disappears. We explore a number of potential mechanisms that may explain the conflict-driven deforestation, and show evidence suggesting that paramilitary violence generates large outflows of people in order to secure areas for growing illegal crops, exploit mineral resources, and engage in extensive agriculture. In turn, these activities are associated with deforestation.
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