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Bibliothèque Land grabbing and ethnic conflict

Land grabbing and ethnic conflict

Land grabbing and ethnic conflict

Resource information

Date of publication
Novembre 2016
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
OSF_preprint:46015-1AE-2A6

We study the effect of large-scale land acquisitions on the risk of ethnic tensions for a sample of 133 countries for the 2000-2012 period. Running a series of fractional response models, we find that more land grabbing activity is associated with a higher risk of ethnic tensions, indicating that the negative effects of land deals outweigh their potential benefits. In addition to that, we also show that democratic institutions may moderate the relationship between land deals and ethnic tensions. That is, non-democratic countries face a substantially higher risk of ethnic tensions as the level of large-scale land acquisitions increases; by contrast, strongly democratic countries tend to see lower ethnic tension risk. large-scale land acquisitions,land grabbing,conflict,ethnic tensions,democratic accountability,weak institutions

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Daniel Meierrieks
Tim Krieger

Data Provider
Geographical focus