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Impact Factor:1.609 | Ranking:International Relations 15 out of 85 | Political Science 29 out of 161
Source:2014 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2015)

Reintegrating Rebels into Civilian Life: Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Burundi

Abstract

Considerable resources are devoted to ex-combatant reintegration programs in current peace processes, but evidence on their effectiveness remains thin. We use original survey data to study an ex-combatant reintegration program implemented after Burundi's 1993-2004 civil war. Previous quantitative studies have found reintegration programs to be ineffective, but only ex-combatants who self-selected into programs were studied. We avoid such selection problems with a quasi-experimental design exploiting an exogenous bureaucratic failure. We find the program resulted in a 20 to 35 percentage point reduction in poverty incidence among ex-combatants and moderate improvement in livelihoods. But this economic boost does not seem to have caused political reintegration: while we find a modest increase in propensities to report civilian life as preferable to combatant life, we find no evidence that the program contributed to either more satisfaction with the peace process or a more positive disposition toward current government institutions.

This Article

  1. Journal of Conflict Resolution 0022002712448908
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    1. Version of Record - Jul 5, 2013
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