From Politicization to Vigilance: The Post-war Legacies of Wartime Victimization

Authors

Liu, SX

Abstract

Following regime change, how does wartime victimization shape political attitudes and participation in the long run? I argue that it increases post-war political vigilance: greater sensitivity to illiberal politics and poor governance, but with dampened effects on participation under authoritarianism due to greater fear of harm. I examine Protected Villages (PVs) in the Zimbabwe Liberation War (1972–1979). PVs, a Rhodesian counterinsurgency strategy, was a large-scale and violent resettlement program that intensified politics’ role in civilian lives. I map PV-affected areas within pre-war and current-day administrative divisions, and estimate a difference-in-discontinuities regression to identify PVs’ long-run effects. PV-affected areas report greater sensitivity to the country’s illiberal politics and are more critical of poor government performance today. Contrary to existing literature however, I find no evidence of increased political participation and pro-social behavior in the long run, nor hardened support for the ruling party—whom these areas had once supported during war.

Citation

Liu, S. X. “From Politicization to Vigilance: The Post-war Legacies of Wartime Victimization.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 69, no. 5 (May 1, 2025): 868–97. https://doi.org/10.1177/00220027241268533.

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