Abstract

AbstractDo rebel elites who gain access to political power through power-sharing reward their own ethnic constituencies after war? The authors argue that power-sharing governments serve as instruments for rebel elites to access state resources. This access allows elites to allocate state resources disproportionately to their regional power bases, particularly the settlement areas of rebel groups' ethnic constituencies. To test this proposition, the authors link information on rebel groups in power-sharing governments in post-conflict countries in Africa to information about ethnic support for rebel organizations. They combine this information with sub-national data on ethnic groups' settlement areas and data on night light emissions to proxy for sub-national variation in resource investments. Implementing a difference-in-differences empirical strategy, the authors show that regions with ethnic groups represented through rebels in the power-sharing government exhibit higher levels of night light emissions than regions without such representation. These findings help to reconceptualize post-conflict power-sharing arrangements as rent-generating and redistributive institutions.

Highlights

  • Distributional conflict lies at the heart of many contemporary civil wars

  • This means that grid cells with an ethnic group represented by rebels in a power-sharing government have, on average, a regional GDP that is about 1 per cent higher than the regional GDP of other grid cells based on their night light increase

  • In this article, we examine the relationship between post-conflict power-sharing, state revenues and resource redistribution in Africa

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Summary

Introduction

Distributional conflict lies at the heart of many contemporary civil wars. In negotiated settlements to civil wars, government and rebels sometimes resort to wealth-sharing arrangements, natural resource management institutions or territorial decentralization to resolve disagreements over redistributive politics (Bakke 2015; Binningsbo and Rustad 2012). Consistent with our theoretical prediction, we find robust support that power-sharing increases night-time light intensity in areas inhabited by ethnic groups linked to rebel elites in power-sharing governments.

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