Infectious disease and political violence: Evidence from malaria and civil conflicts in Sub-Saharan Africa
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作者:
Chen, Haohan
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Univ Hong Kong, Dept Polit & Publ Adm, Hong Kong, Peoples R ChinaUniv Hong Kong, Dept Polit & Publ Adm, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
Chen, Haohan
[1
]
Wang, Zifeng
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机构:Univ Hong Kong, Dept Polit & Publ Adm, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
Wang, Zifeng
Han, Enze
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Univ Hong Kong, Dept Polit & Publ Adm, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
Univ Hong Kong, Dept Polit & Publ Adm, Pokfulam, 953 Jockey Club Tower, Hong Kong, Peoples R ChinaUniv Hong Kong, Dept Polit & Publ Adm, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
Han, Enze
[1
,2
]
机构:
[1] Univ Hong Kong, Dept Polit & Publ Adm, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Hong Kong, Dept Polit & Publ Adm, Pokfulam, 953 Jockey Club Tower, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
As an infectious disease, malaria consumes around 250 million yearly clinical cases and with more than half a million annual deaths. It has shown tremendous burden for the economic and social life of many countries around the world, particularly in the tropical and developing nations. The conventional wisdom claims that the prevalence of malaria infection either prolongs or should be positively correlated with outbreaks of civil conflicts. We contend that malaria infection should deter civil conflict occurrences because warming parties should avoid engaging each other in areas with rampant malaria infection. We test the hypothesis with 20 years of geo-referenced panel data of conflict event and malaria risk from Sub-Sahara Africa. Our result renders strong support for our hypothesis that areas with more malaria infection tends to have less civil conflicts.