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The Cost of Fear: Learning How (Not) to Fire a Gun: Combatant Training and Civilian Victimization

Ben A. Oppenheim (), Juan Vargas and Michael Weintraub ()
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Ben A. Oppenheim: University of California, Berkely
Michael Weintraub: Georgetown University

No 110, HiCN Working Papers from Households in Conflict Network

Abstract: What is the relationship between the type of training combatants receive upon recruitment into an armed group and their propensity to abuse civilians in civil war? Does military training or political training prevent or exacerbate the victimization of civilians by armed non-state actors? While the literature on civilian victimization has expanded rapidly, few studies have examined the correlation between abuse of civilians and the modes of training that illegal armed actors receive. Using a simple formal model, we develop hypotheses regarding this connection and argue that while military training should not decrease the probability that a combatant engages in civilian abuse, political training should. We test these hypotheses using a new survey consisting of a representative sample of approximately 1,500 demobilized combatants from the Colombian conflict, which we match with department-level data on civilian casualties. The empirical analysis confirms our hypotheses about the connection between training and civilian abuse and the results are robust to adding a full set of controls both at the department and at the individual level.

Pages: 35 pages
Date: 2011-12
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dev
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Working Paper: Learning how (not) to fire a gun: combatant training and civilian victimization (2011) Downloads
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