The aftermath of an election crisis: Kenyan attitudes and the influence of individual-level and locality violence |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Global & Sociocultural Studies, Florida International University, USA;2. Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway;3. University of Florence, Italy;4. University of Reading, UK;5. University of South Carolina, USA;6. Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity, University of Oldenburg, Germany;7. University of St. Andrews, UK;1. Department of Economics, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland;2. CEPR, London, United Kingdom;3. CESifo Munich, Germany;4. Department of Economics, Monash University, Australia |
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Abstract: | How does violent conflict affect social and political attitudes? To answer this question I pair Kenyan survey and violence data for the time period following the country's December 27th 2007 national election. I find that respondents who personally experienced electoral violence are less likely to express certain forms of inter-personal and institutional trust than those individuals who did not. The association is not universally powerful, however. First, noteworthy differences emerge between populations who relocated as a result of post-election conflict and those who did not. Differences between these groups suggest that internal migration in the wake of tragedy influenced the Kenyan social landscape. In addition to personal exposure to electoral conflict, I test how local level violence may indirectly condition Kenyan political attitudes. Across all models, individual-level exposure to violence has the most consistent influence upon opinions, although district level effects emerge in analyses without survey respondent ethnicity controls. This finding suggests that living in a setting of regional insecurity does not have as important an effect on certain political views as personal victimization. |
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Keywords: | Political violence Conflict Elections Kenya |
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