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Violence, kinship networks, and political resilience

Author

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  • Cassy Dorff

    (Department of Political Science, University of New Mexico)

Abstract

Previous literature has shown a link between violent victimization and pro-sociopolitical behavior. This study asks why victimization is shown to increase the likelihood of political participation in regions of ongoing armed conflict. I argue that previous answers to this question have overlooked a key variable for predicting civilian behavior: individual-level social context. As a step forward in connecting social networks to behavior outcomes, I present the kinship network as a novel measure for proxying an individual’s valuable and private social interactions. Building on previous victimization literature, I suggest that to comprehensively understand the effects of victimization, scholars should account for social context. Specifically, I examine the hypothesis that as kinship ties strengthen, victimization positively influences the likelihood of political participation. To test this argument, I turn to the Mexican criminal conflict. I use original survey data of 1,000 respondents collected in July 2012 from the ongoing drug war in Mexico, and in doing so, I find that kinship plays a key role in motivating political participation during armed conflicts in that survivors of criminal violence with strong ties to kinship networks are the most likely to participate in political groups; these results are robust to state-level fixed effects and are unlikely to be driven by victimization selection bias.

Suggested Citation

  • Cassy Dorff, 2017. "Violence, kinship networks, and political resilience," Journal of Peace Research, Peace Research Institute Oslo, vol. 54(4), pages 558-573, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:joupea:v:54:y:2017:i:4:p:558-573
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