是升级之源还是克制之源?公民社会如何影响大屠杀的实证研究

E. Chenoweth, Evan Perkoski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

为什么一些国家主导的大屠杀很快就结束了,而另一些则持续了十多年?为什么有些州在大规模屠杀的过程中杀害了数百万选民,而其他州在杀害数千人后似乎从边缘€œretreat (Straus 2012)?大量的工作集中在民间社会和非政府行动者在不同的大规模屠杀案件中发起不同形式的救援、逃避和援助方面所发挥的重要作用,以及他们为结束国内冲突所施加的政治压力。尽管有许多在强烈镇压制度下采取集体行动的鼓舞人心和充满希望的案例,但其他研究发现,在大规模杀戮的背景下,公民社会可以发挥更恶毒的作用。在本文中,我们测试了一些基本机制,这些机制来自于关于公民社会与大规模杀戮之间更一般关系的文献。我们发现,一般来说,一个相对参与和自主的公民社会与较短的大规模杀戮有关。然而,我们还发现,活跃的民间社会与较高的死亡率有关,特别是当这些民间社会部门在高度不平等的政治中活跃时。由于大多数大规模屠杀的时间相对较短,我们的研究结果表明,在权力不平等的国家,公民社会与政府暴力的时间更短、更致命的关系更普遍。这一结论似乎支持了民间社会怀疑论者的观点,至少在大规模屠杀已经开始的情况下是这样。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Source of Escalation or a Source of Restraint? An Empirical Investigation of How Civil Society Affects Mass Killings
Why do some state-led mass killings end quickly while others endure for over a decade? And why do some states murder millions of constituents during the course of mass killings, whereas other states seem to “retreat from the brink†after killing thousands (Straus 2012)? A large body of work has focused on the important role played by civil society and non-governmental actors in initiating different forms of rescue, evasion, and assistance in the midst of different cases of mass killings, as well as the political pressure they have applied in bringing about the ends of civil conflicts. Despite many inspiring and hopeful cases of collective action under systems of intense repression, other research finds civil society can play a much more malevolent force in the context of mass killings. In this paper, we test some basic mechanisms that emerge from the literature on more general relationships between civil society and mass killings. We find that, in general, a relatively participatory and autonomous civil society is correlated with shorter mass killings. However, we also find that active civil societies are associated with higher rates of lethality, particularly when those civil society sectors are active in highly unequal polities. Because most mass killings are relatively short, our findings suggest that civil societies in states with uneven access to power are more commonly correlated with shorter, deadlier spells of government violence. This conclusion seemingly supports the view of civil society skeptics, at least in contexts where mass killings have already begun.
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