Root of Conflict Podcast
Why are some places affected by violence and disorder while others enjoy peace and stability? Root of Conflict analyzes violent conflict around the world, and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. Harris Public Policy students meet with leading experts and key stakeholders to discuss what can be done to create more peaceful societies.
This series is produced by University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts, (UC3P) in partnership with The Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts.
Root of Conflict
12.05.24
A Possible Path for Haiti | Michèle Duvivier Pierre-Louis
Root of Conflict
11.07.24
Does Counterterrorism work? | Richard English
Isabella Nascimento:
Hi, this is Isabella and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You're listening to the Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world.
Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with The Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict. Our research institute housed within the Harris Global Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Today's guest is Professor Richard English. He's a professor of politics at Queen's University Belfast, where he's also director of the Senator George J. Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice. Professor English's research focuses on the history of political violence, terrorists and nationalists with a particular focus on Ireland and Britain. His most recent book is called, Does Counter-Terrorism Work?, and it was published in 2024 by Oxford Academic.
Hello, everybody. So my name is Isabella Nascimento. I'm a second year Master of Public Policy student at the University of Chicago, and I'm also a Pearson fellow here.
Raul Leon:
Hi, I'm Raul Leon. I'm a second year MACRM student at the University of Chicago at the Harris School of Public Policy.
Natalia Zorilla:
Hi, I'm Natalia Zorilla. I'm also a second year Master's in Public Policy at the University of Chicago, and I'm also a Pearson fellow.
Richard English:
Hi, I'm Richard English. I'm director of the Senator George J. Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice at Queen's University Belfast.
Raul Leon:
I don't know if you could tell us a bit on why you got interested in the literature behind terrorism and counterterrorism and what brought you to that specific topic inside history.
Richard English:
It was my mother's fault, Raul. So I was born in Belfast. My mother was from Belfast, but I grew up in England. When I was a student at Oxford in the 1980s, I was very left-wing and I had a sense that Marxists had underappreciated the problem that nationalism represented for them. I was a history student, so I looked for a case study to look at in detail and because of my Irish background, because we went to Costumil in Ireland to see my mum's relatives and the rest of Ireland too, because the violence of the Irish Republican Army was in the news, this was a vibrant and to some extent and interesting at a personal level case for me. So I began studying the IRA and this tension between nationalism and Marxism, particularly in the early 20th century. I then got hooked. I got hooked on studying the IRA, on studying Irish history, Irish nationalism.
I did a PhD about Marxists within the IRA in the 1930s. And then I got interested in studying more recent things and then it developed because as often in academic careers, things that have nothing to do with you and are out of your control make a big difference to your decisions. So when the atrocities of 9/11 happened, people around the world became far more interested, including many more universities, became much more interested in terrorism and why it happens, and how you explain you're for violence and also in how it comes to an end that I'd been working on stuff to do with the IRA. The IRA were moving into a peace process phase where they were coming to an end in their violence. And so I then began working on terrorism, not just in relation to Ireland, but in case studies and different settings around the world.
So really it was because of the contingencies of my personal background, of my own idiosyncrasies as a student at Oxford and then historical developments elsewhere propelled an interest which has meant that I've kept developing a way in which with different non-textual settings, I look at the complexities of terrorism as counterterrorism.
Raul Leon:
So to move forward from here, I would like you to provide us various definitions of terrorism, counterterrorism and maybe classification of different strategies that you use so our listeners have a guide for the rest of our following questions.
Richard English:
Thank you. Yes. The definition of terrorism is always inescapable. In my work I use a 93-word definition, which listeners can you look up and I won't inflict it on them now, though I could do having studied it for so long, but essentially with terrorism, I'm looking at deliberately terrorizing, politically-motivating violence, which has a psychological component to its offense that the communication through violence involves more of just the impact of the violence, but the wider audience is watching it and I see it as a subspecies of law.
I don't see it as something which is only done by non-state groups that many scholars do, and I don't see it as something which only targets civilians or non-colonists, as some people do. I think we probably need a more capacious definition, which then subdivides within it.
Counterterrorism, I use in my most recent book, Does Counter-Terrorism Work? I look at counterterrorism there as state's efforts to thwart defeat to contain, constrain, defend against and all the state terrorist actors.
Now these definitions necessarily involve endless dispute because you never get a definition or consensus through our terms like terrorism or counterterrorism particularly because terrorism is such a pejorative term. If I say, "You are the terrorist," and then hopefully people assume I'm saying you're the villain, you're the bad guy, you're the illegitimate one. And I understand it has an enormous punch.
But a lot of the time in history and social science in academic study, we have terms which are both pejorative and contentious, imperialist, fascist, colonialist, revolution, Marxist. There's a whole series of terms which are either pejorative and/or contentious in their multiple definitions and it doesn't get in the way of our having meaningful conversations. So, for example, the person who is the university president at St. Andrews University when I worked there was a brilliant terrorism scholar, Louise Richardson, and went there well into his work, it's wonderful.
She and I have somewhat different definitions of terrorism. I've never found it a problem in terms of discussing terrorism and counterterrorism with her because there's so much shared ground between the differences that there are in definition.
But broadly speaking with terrorism, I see it as personally motivated, deliberately terrorize and violence are subspecies of war and with a psychological component to its mechanism, there are certainly overlaps in terms of figuring out we would assume to be involved in terrorism and in terms of the organization's movements and context which would be discussed, it's disgusting.
So for people with a definitional issue I tend to say, "Find the definition which you find most compelling. Stick to it consistently and don't let it immobilize you in the discussions of this word."
Isabella Nascimento:
Richard, let me ask you something. Are there successful anti-terrorism strategies?
Richard English:
Thanks, Isabella. I think there are some things which work better than others. I argue in my work that counterterrorism tends to work better if it doesn't exaggerate what Military means alone can achieve.
I argue that counterterrorism tends to work better if it's attending to the root causes of which the terrorist violence is an appalling symptom.
I argue that counterterrorism tends to work better when intelligence is accurately and expertly gathered, carefully interpreted and acted on in lifesaving ways.
I argue that counterterrorism tends to be most effective, particularly when it's [inaudible 00:07:47] democracies engaging in it. When those democracies adhere to the democratically established rule of law and to the things which distinguish them from the enemies they're combating, how do we treat suspects, how do we treat prisoners, how do we treat the laws which govern all of us in terms of our freedoms and our civil liberties?
And I argue that counterterrorism tends to work best when there is a credibility of public argument. If you say things as a state against terrorist opponents which are incredible, these people are just gangsters. They're probably not... These people are all psychopaths. They almost certainly aren't. These people have no political support. If they didn't, you wouldn't be talking about them. In other words, if you are credible in your public analysis as a state, you're more likely to be successful.
Do those things mean that counterterrorism is easy? No, it's incredibly [inaudible 00:08:30] and it's very hard to do. You can't predict who will become involved with any certainty. You can't predict the contingencies of which movements are going to go in which direction, but those things are just adumbrated there. If you look at the long history of counterterrorism seem to me to be intuition's guidelines which will make it more likely that counterterrorism will be effective in terms of maintaining normal conditions of life within society.
Isabella Nascimento:
And how to be credible as a state.
Richard English:
Not an easy task and not easy either to be credible or to communicate credibility. States tend not to be very agile at their narratives. They tend to be somewhat mechanistic.
How to be credible as a state? I think you should be honest in terms of terrorism about what's really going on, why is this happening? I don't think you should confuse symptoms with causes.
So, for example, if you're looking at terrorist violence, and I live and work in Belfast in Northern Ireland where there has for a long time been terrorist violence pro and anti-state, I don't think any of it was justified. I'm sure all of it had not happened, but you cannot explain it unless you recognize that there's a profound conflict over the legitimacy and fairness of the state, Northern Ireland in the United Kingdom.
The same would be true in terms of mass separatist violence in Spain. The same would be true in terms of violence in Colombia. The same would be true in terms of the ongoing appalling conflict in Israel and Palestine. The same is true of jihadist violence of the late 1990s and the early 21st century. It's not a comfortable thing for politicians to say, "There are root causes which are serious here," but in order to be credible in your analysis, in order to be persuasive in your arguments and in order to be adept and agile in your counter terrorist response, credibility is a resource and the lack of credibility gives gifts to states' terrorist opponents.
Isabella Nascimento:
And do you see something that becomes repetitive in all this terror complex, let's say like this?
Richard English:
Tragically, I think there's much that's very repetitive in ways that make life much worse.
One thing is that terrorist organizations tend to exaggerate the degree to which violence is going to produce strategic action. Overwhelmingly historically, that tends not to be the case.
In terms of achieving central primary goals, terrorist organizations are overwhelmingly unsuccessful that the violence endures.
In terms of counterterrorism, there's very often an overreaction, very often a Militarized overreaction, which often makes things worse. We've seen that in terms of French response to Algerian terrorism, repeatedly UK responses to anti-state terrorism in Ireland, I think repeatedly indeed at the moment as well what's been happening after the terrible attack by Hamas in October last year, much of what's happening from the Israeli response seems to be to exaggerate what Military needs to achieve and to cause human suffering, which is both wrong and counterproductive. Those are repeated lessons.
Those are repeated patterns in much counter terrorist experience. You can explain why they happened when something happens, which is an awful terrorist atrocity, states want to show that they're going to do something dramatic, something decisive, something muscular. It often makes the problem worse before you even make it better in the longer term. It's a difficult thing to learn from previous mistakes rather than from your own.
But all of those areas that I've just described cost people's lives. All of those areas cost people's lives normally on all sides of the conflict in ways which could be avoided if we listened more attentively to the things which we can learn as intuitions and from the complexities of a historical record.
Natalia Zorilla:
And, Professor Richard, you mentioned the psychological component in the definition of terrorism and counterterrorism. What role does ideology play in both the motivation of terrorist groups and in shaping counterterrorism policies? Is ideology sufficiently addressed in current strategies?
Richard English:
Thanks, Natalia. I think ideology is one component part of serious terrorisms. In other words, many terrorist actions are by French groups, tiny groups that don't get off the ground and states don't tend to be that worried about them. The ones that states are worried about are the more substantial, durable, well-cemented groups.
With those groups in whatever part of the world they emerge some kind of ideological motivation seems almost always to be significant. It's not sufficient. In other words, people can have a strong ideological motivation but not feel that terrorism is the thing they want to do although it seems to be the most effective. So I don't think because you have a strong ideological commitment to an independent Basque state or an independent Islamic Palestinian state or a United Independent Ireland, that's enough for you to become involved in violence. But it is one thing which is part of it.
In terms of states, I think it's less well studied, but of course the ideology of states is every bit is important in counterterrorism as the ideology of non-state terrorist is for those movements that nationalism at the heart of many states becomes intensified as counter terrorist strategies become more intense. You saw that after the atrocity of 9/11 when in the early phase in particular there was a very strong American nationalism, which became part of the response of the United States, that awful attack.
I think also the ideology of states plays a part in terms of thinking about who's not part of the state. And quite often it's easier for states to identify as terroristic those movements which they can ideologically see as being other.
So, for example, if you look at the period since 2001 in the United States where I was speaking, jihadist violence of a terrorist kind in the USA since then has killed very few people. It's a terrible tragedy when it has. But very few people. Violence, which comes from a Christian heritage, right-wing source is more likely to be lethal, but until comparatively recently has been seen less as the terrorist problem, which you look at if you arrived from another planet in the United States in the early 21st century and said non-state violence by people with political motivation are they're going to kill or rape or threaten you, you wouldn't pick as the big threat the awful violence done by jihadists. You'd be looking at Christian heritage terrorists.
And I think in the United Kingdom, again, there have been ways in which jihadist terrorists, which is Irish terrorism, it's easier for the state to see it as something which is to be focused on because of the ideology against you. Even in North Ireland, pro-state terrorist groups like the Ulster Defence Association, the Ulster Volunteer Force carry out appalling levels in terroristic violence, pro-state violence. The state did oppose them, but saw the anti-state terrorists as the main opponents you dealt with. So ideology plays a part both in terrorism and in counterterrorism.
And implied in your question, and this is where the psychological aspect of it comes in again, terrorism and counterterrorism are strangely mutually reinforcing phenomena. They engage in a back and forth that shapes each other. So strangely what we find is that the ideology of one and the ideology of the other can have an antiphonal relationship, which can reinforce sometimes misunderstandings of what the other side's really about. So I do think that the ideological aspect of it is important and I think the psychological aspect of it is crucial also because it's very hard to deal with these things calmly because the emotions of the reactions are so strong.
Natalia Zorilla:
Right. And now that you mentioned, obviously you have studied quite a lot, 9/11, war on terror, and Northern Ireland. What are the most significant lessons that policymakers can learn from this historical experiences when designing counterterrorism strategies today?
Richard English:
I'll pick two. I mean my recent book has a list of things towards the end, which is much lengthier, but let me pick two.
One is you need to set realistic goals and pursue that consistently. Don't set goals which are unrealistic. Don't say you're going to stamp out all terrorism, don't say you're going to rid the world of terrorism of international which you won't. Set realistic goals and assume them consistently. Don't say you're going to do something in Afghanistan and then change your mind and give up on it, okay?
The second thing I would look at is that I think you do need to think about long-term as in not short-term. That's one of the problems particularly for liberal democracies is the short-term framework of governmental thinking. Terrorist struggles tends to come from very deep roots and the effects of counter terrorist policies will have a very long shadow into the future. Think about long pasts and long futures that is more likely that would be effective.
Raul Leon:
So now I would like to turn the topic to civilian harm mitigation and response, like counterterrorism in densely populated areas like Gaza presents immense challenges for protecting civilians while conducting Military operations.
What policies or strategies or philosophy should the Military have or would you recommend to minimize civilian harm in such scenarios while still us achieving Military objectives?
Richard English:
It's a really difficult area, Raul, because clearly in the case that you mentioned, it seems to me perfectly legitimate that Israel would want to protect itself against terrorist attacks of the kind that happened appallingly in October 2023. And it's also very difficult because for obvious reasons, Hamas has embedded itself in the community. If it didn't do it would've been wiped out very, very quickly indeed. But that means that you have a very difficult terrain to work in. Even if you do only want to attack people who are terrorist actors, it's very hard to do so without civilian harm.
That said, there are two points that I'll stress. One is that civilian harm is something which should be a really, really high priority to avoid, both in terms of the ethics of how we behave towards each other and in terms of the efficacy of counterterrorism. Quite often ethics and efficacy are aligned in counterterrorism. The more civilians you harm, the more damage you do not only to human life that's flourishing, but also to the cause in which you are doing the counterterrorism.
The second thing is that I think that it is possible for states over time to devise ways through intelligence-led containment in counterterrorism, less Militarized responses which do contain a constraint. Interestingly, in the case of the Israel-Palestine conflict, which you're referring to, it now does appear that pre-7 October, there were a considerable bits of information suggesting there was an imminent attack and that normally rather adept and agile Israel counter terrorist community decided to ignore them because they thought Hamas was not up for a fight and was not going to do it. The whole thing could perhaps have been avoided, had an intelligence acquisition been edged down in ways you prevented that atrocity and then you wouldn't have find the response. That's not to minimize the difficulties there are for Israel to go to Hamas or [inaudible 00:18:51] or their neighbor Iran who is significantly threatening them. But I don't diminish those at all. It's a very difficult thing to deal with.
I do think in the long-term what's happening now, what's happened over the past year in Gaza is likely to do immense damage to Israel's international opinion and therefore to any counter terrorist efforts that they engage in. But the main thing, as I say, is not the efficacy of counterterrorism in these circumstances and it's human suffering, it's human flourishing and it's protecting humans from all sides. So yeah.
Raul Leon:
So now I have maybe a really broad question, but maybe as a historian you could give us some patterns.
But why do you think individuals usually turn to terror? Why do these groups form in certain specific places in some countries sometimes and not in all the countries, in not in all the space of a country?
Richard English:
It's a really difficult question, but two things on that.
The first is the normal most salient aspect of it is that normal people decide that something which is a precious, urgent necessary goal can only or best be achieved through this violence. In other words, they feel nothing else is going to work and nothing else has worked. This is such a precious thing, whether it's a question of national independence, whether it's a question of a particular religious integration of society, whether it's an economically construction of society, it's something incredibly precious and the only thing that's going to work is this and that's why we must do this awful thing. I think they're normally wrong in that conception. I think it's not likely to achieve the goals of the violence it's pursuing, but that's the main reason. So it's a sense of necessity, urgency, and importance.
I think that why it happens in some places and why it doesn't happen in others? If I could answer that question persuasively, I wouldn't need the danger of as a university academic because I'd have made so much money selling it to governments. But I think that one of the difficulties is that in the blizzard of complexities that you get in each of these different settings, you do sometimes find there are terrorisms that don't emerge.
So, for example, if you look at things which are appalling oppressions historically where there has been repeated mistreatment of humans, the treatment in many societies of women by men, in most societies of gay people by heterosexuals are appalling. And yet gay terrorism and feminist terrorism have been non-emergent over women. So there are things which don't emerge.
There are some patterns which are more common. One is that around questions of national separatism and national independence, you often find terroristic violence being used. For example, in the struggles to end the British Empire, the anti-colonial struggles often had some terroristic violence and many of those movements derive quite a lot of support from populations of nationalism as well.
The other thing is that the behavior of states in a heavy-handed way, in a way which seems to close down other routes towards momentum, can be a trigger for people thinking, "If they're not going to allow us to do this politically, to do this to organizations, which is peaceful, to do this through civil resistance, we'll need to turn to violence." So states have a way of shaping the avenues of possibility, and that's one of the things which can be a predictor, but there's no neat map for it. But my advice to states should be, try to present there as being ways that people without violence can meaningfully pursue precious political change that will diminish the likelihood that most people who were involved will turn to violence.
Raul Leon:
So this is my reading from your own book, but I feel it suggests that counterterrorism strategies should focus less on warfare and combat and more on building pathways that lead to dialogue.
I think from your perspective as historian, could you provide some historic examples that try to support this argument, this approach?
Richard English:
Yeah. Your reading of what I'm arguing is exactly right, Raul. I think counterterrorism should technically try to contain violence in ways which both save life and also persuade terrorist groups that they're not achieving their central goals through violence and therefore they'll look for an alternative route. But then you need some way of producing a political momentum that's going to give them a plan B, if you like.
Let me give one example where I think this works comparatively well and one where it hasn't and I'll talk very briefly about each. In Northern Ireland at the end of the conflict, the main terrorist organizations would be not defeated, not crushed, but contained and constrained, and their leadership's decided there was a stalemate which was unproductive. Was there a plan B? Yes, there was an inclusive political dialogue, the talks which ended up producing in 1998, Belfast Good Friday Agreement were chaired by Senator Mitchell after the Institute I direct in Belfast is named.
And that meant there was an opportunity not for people to get all they totally wanted, but to get enough to feel that it was more from they were getting through violence. And I think in that context, counterterrorism tied in with political processes was comparatively successful. In Northern Ireland a very small place, only 1.9 million people in Northern Ireland even now, but over the time since the Good Friday Agreement, I think it's fair to claim that around 3,000 lives have been saved in that tiny setting and many, many more injuries would've happened. So it's a huge contribution.
The counter-example is Israel-Palestine, where in the early-1990s there was a peace person. You took that time seemed to be going very well. And then for reasons which we all know, which complicated to that actors on all sides fell apart. We're now in a situation where counterterrorism is being interpreted by the Israeli state in a more combative manner. You can understand and explain why that is, but I don't think it's producing the result which they want it to produce.
Isabella Nascimento:
Richard, a follow-up question. How do you think counterterrorism and terrorism changes by region as well? Because we were talking before starting to record this podcast that we are three Latin Americans with three different perspectives of Latin America as well and what of terrorism and counterterrorism. And you come from another perspective and we are all also talking about what is happening in Israel. So could you briefly guide me on understanding this?
Richard English:
Thank you, Isabel. Yeah, I mean three points on that briefly.
One is, it's always terrorisms rather than terrorism we're talking about, and as a historian I would say people should start with the specific context first. There are unique complexities about each conflict, which make it its own conflict. Having said that there are family resemblances between them, and I think we need to learn from those. But I think the uniqueness each will explain why there is a varied setting in different Latin American settings as opposed to Western European as opposed to Middle Eastern.
I think the second point I would make about it is the type of regime that's in governmental power and state power will make a difference. So more autocratic regimes will tend to have a different response to terrorism than the more liberal democratic ones. The constraints on the latter are not always there or the former. And there are certain methods that autocratic regimes will think necessary or legitimate or possible, which liberal democracies will not, and that makes a difference.
I think the third thing which I would stress about is that when you are looking at these different contexts, levels of violence have a self-reinforcing effect. So some of the culprits that we've been mentioning have much higher levels of awfulness in terms of violence. The numbers of lives lost, the numbers of people made, the destruction of community and of society with normal life is much greater. When you get beyond a certain point it becomes much more like a full-scale war than like a containment of a comparatively image, but awful threat.
So I think in terms of scale, in terms of regime and in terms of the complexity of regional historical context, there are great differences. Having said that, the points that I've been trying to make in this conversation about what I think is going to work best in counterterrorism, providing alternatives for people to produce political change without violence, try to align your behavior as a state with the ethical and the moral rather than the unethical immoral. Trying not to exaggerate what image or methods you'll achieve. I think those are as appropriate in those different geographical settings, those different regime settings, even though of course the way it works out historically will vary by those factors.
Natalia Zorilla:
I think you slightly touched on this topic, but I would like for you to elaborate a little bit more.
What are some of the most significant ethical dilemmas that arise in the field of counterterrorism, specifically when balancing civil liberties with security measures?
Richard English:
It's a big problem, Natalia, and it's one which keeps coming up because obviously in the wake of a terrorist atrocity, people will often think, "No, something must be done, something drastic must be changed," and so forth. I think states and populations exaggerate the need to change some of the things. In a lot of cases, there are laws on the books already which will enable you to do if you need to do. And there are things I've argued, which we know from the past, which will enable us to do things which are going to be effective. And if you look at some of the famous cases where those tensions have existed, I think it's less of a tension that people fear.
So, for example, people in the wake of 9/11, famously some people argued the scale of terrorism changed and therefore we needed to rethink how we approach the possibility of torturing terrorist suspects. Actually, the overwhelming body of evidence from a variety of different sources, academic and practitioner, suggests that torturing people is not a very effective way of producing reliable, actionable, fast, and trustworthy intelligence. It's actually a case where ethics, it's wrong to torture people, and effectiveness, how do you get information online?
And similarly with civil liberties, I think the more sophisticated counter terrorists tend to argue that the whole point of counterterrorism is to produce a kind of maintenance of normality of life. And part of that liberal democracies is that we're free to have this conversation without someone listening to it. We're free to pick up our phone without having [inaudible 00:28:18] access. I think in those ways, I think probably though there are ways in which you can make counterterrorism proportionate, accountable, not entirely transparent or it wouldn't be effective simply if it were, but I think you'd make it sufficiently transparent and accountable and sufficiently proportionate to maintain that balance.
So I would see there's probably more room for civil liberties and ethics to align with effective counterterrorism that is sometimes assumed. The media doesn't always help us. And interestingly with torture, people's perception of things through films they watch also in dramas on television or on Netflix, torture tends to work. When you interview people who've actually done interviews with terrorists, it tends not to work. And I think there's a sense that people strangely derive lessons from old sources and they're also political rules. Sometimes the politicians sounding the match or terrorism and torture in ways that are not doing anywhere any favors.
Natalia Zorilla:
Right.
Raul Leon:
So I would say that this come a bit from my experience from Peru. We had shining pasts in the 80s, 90s, so I really saw this public sentiment that often leaned toward the hard line position that says, "Fight the terrorists. These guys are bastards. They cannot be side to side to us." We cannot incorporate them into a system. So they defer that other approach recommend to seek a middle ground and find dialogue. Maybe in the region, Colombian pacification process is an exception, but even there it's highly debated both domestically and international.
So how do you see this tension between public support for Military solutions and the long-term potential of dialogue in counterterrorism efforts?
Richard English:
They are both really crucial cases, Raul, in Peru and Colombia are two of the instances where very high levels of violence meant there was appalling loss of life and also a degradation of state and society.
In the Peruvian case, it seems to me that there's an understandable desire to do something drastic against them [inaudible 00:30:19] and often in the end, partly through what happened to the leader, there was a disintegration of it.
In Colombia for all of the flaws that have been in the lengthy and jagged peace process, it does seem to me that over the long term, if we're thinking about the next 75 years, what will be the effect on different regions in Colombia? What will be the legacy of that? And I don't think in those settings, whether in Peru or in Colombia that a primarily Military response is going to be long-term satisfactory. I think in both of those cases, something which addresses the anger, which produced the awful violence in the first place is part of it.
So while it's a different set of regime norms and different levels of violence, I would still stand by my board argument that when we're thinking about long-term counterterrorism, it has to involve conceptions of politics, of society, and to some degree of respecting the diverse views that people will have, whether it be in terms of left of right, whether it be in terms of certain regions and in terms of certain voices being raised for interests that are not as they see it being addressed by the same.
Isabella Nascimento:
I now want to focus on today's world. I wanted to ask you, do you think there are specific characteristics of the world today that makes it more or less challenging to face counterterrorism as a state? I'm thinking here about social media for instance, high speed internet access, and there are places that actually have the opposite, right, that they don't have any access at all?
Richard English:
It's a good question, Isabella. In some ways, it seems to me clearly that technological changes are always going to be something which present new challenges, whether it'll be the invention of dynamite in the 19th century, the widespread access through television in 1960s, 1970s changed the capacity of people to do things against the state through violence and the enormity and the speed of change now technologically in terms of what you could do through the phone, what you could do in terms of the web means there is a very different world.
Having said that, first, none of those changes I've mentioned, now dynamite, TV, travel meant that terrorists ended up winning strategically. And I don't think that will happen with the new technology which we have courtesy of the extraordinary technological shift at the moment.
Second, over the longer term states tend to have greater capacity to use technological developments and the non-state actors. If I was running a terrorist organization, I'd be completely offline. Because once you're online and people get access to one of your people, you can see use me to you, you will see why I track you.
In other words, there are ways in which long term the state has a capacity always to use technology with greater effect because it has greater capacity, has more personnel, has more money, has more sophistication. So while people are often alarmed about the internet and when there were those awful things where ISIS beheadings were being broadcast and people could watch them on their phone, of course it's terrible. In fact, for the most part, most people observing that found that this gave high publicity for something that they found absolutely repellent, it actually worked against ISIS in the main for most popular opinion. Similarly, for the most part, if you have people who are too active in terms of communication via their phones or via email or via TikTok or whatever, the state is going to get access to the device which will enable it to be monitored. So yes, things are changing, but I think they always have.
Where I think your question hopped on something really important is that the danger that I see at the moment with some liberal democracies in terms of the freeing of a shared sense of purpose around how you organize politics and saw this to a degree with Brexit in the United Kingdom, we see this also in terms of some Western European states in mainland Europe in terms of the rise of great anger about immigration and the polarization in politics, there's a different version here in the United States with a deep polarization in political life. The more that democracies become polarized, the more difficult it is for them to see what's precious and distinctive about their democratic quality. If you lose that, the counterterrorism I'm talking about becomes much more difficult to do use of.
Isabella Nascimento:
And how do you think governments and international organizations, international NGOs can cooperate to tackle these challenges?
Richard English:
So I think states need to cooperate with each other where they share. And it isn't often the interstate collaboration is one of the main technical aspects of success rather than failure. Very many terrorisms now speak true to a degree historically have transnational identities and therefore different states have to collaborate. That's one part of it.
Often the siloing between different wings of the same state makes it more difficult. If the FBI and the CIA are not talking to each other, it's more difficult for them to do the same job effectively. So I think there are ways in which states can collaborate.
I think NGOs, businesses, civil society, need to be engaged with the state. Sometimes people, because of their understanding or concerns about some counter-terrorist policies of the state are wary of getting involved with it. On the other hand, you're not going to change what the state does if you're not in conversation, if you're not trying to be involved in dialogue with influence.
So where I receive things as being valuable, the way you've got something which you think you can meaningfully and expertly contribute to a dialogue on counterterrorism that affects how states operate, you should get in the room however uncomfortable that might be for you. And in the end, if all of the effects of international bodies, states remain the main vector of historical political power and change in the world. And I think you've seen that with the way that the United Nations often tries to affect behavior in ways that actually come up short. States still have an enormous amount of capacity for decision-making. I think it's at the level of the state that people primarily need to direct their attention to win narrative, to win people's understanding of it is in the state's interest to do what you know to be best.
Isabella Nascimento:
Fantastic. We are walking to the end of our program today, and I wanted to ask you, what is something you wish we would have asked you?
Richard English:
Goodness, you've covered a lot, Isabella, already so you've worked me hard already.
I think one thing is that I live and work in Belfast where thankfully now things are very peaceful, are much safer. City of Chicago, for example, where we're having this conversation, studying and analyzing terrorism and counterterrorism in a city and society where it's been all around you is different. Not necessarily better, not necessarily worse, but it's different from studying it in a place where you're looking at it as something that's far away. And I think conversations between people who understand these things in terms of Raul mentioned Peru, the understandings that people have from the context of Peru and living through that kind of conflict as well as studying here from a distance, I think we need people in both of those settings to be in dialogue. Quite often there is not enough conversation between people whose experience of studying it as being, studying it from afar and studying it kind stuff.
And there are advantages to both. There are deep advantages to both. If you study it from afar, you're not always thinking about everybody's in a bar or the room or the classroom, you're in the room having conversations. If you're studying it close up, you know absolutely everyone who's in the room and in the bar, and therefore you know the things that are their in industries and you know that it's something which is embedded in society. So what I would look for would be that as many of us from as many different parts of the world, for as many different contexts can end in a conversation.
One of the tragedies in the field of studying terrorism is this, most of the terrorism literature that's influential is produced by people who are living in states where there's not much terrorism. And most of the places where over the last 50, 60 years there have been high levels of terrorism, Peru, Colombia, India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan, who for reasons we can clearly understand, have not been as prominent in the literature. And I think we need to correct that because for all of the enormous work that can be done and brilliantly done from places like the United States or the UK or other places, which thankfully have experienced comparatively the terrorism set against those other places, there is also an intimacy of understanding from people who've even worked in the place where the violence is immediately happening. The more that places including the University of Chicago, the more that places can get into dialogue where there's a multi-locational conversation, the more we all [inaudible 00:38:35] by listening to each other's expertise.
Isabella Nascimento:
Thank you for listening to this episode of The Root of Conflict featuring Professor Richard English.
This episode was produced and edited by Isabella Nascimento and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Natalia Zorilla, Raul Leon, and Isabella Nascimento.
A special thanks to UC3P and The Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series.
For more information on The Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website, thepearsoninstitute.org.
Root of Conflict
10.03.24
Wealth in People | James Robinson
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Hi. This is Isabella, and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast. You're listening to the Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago. Welcome.
Welcome. Today's guest is Professor James Robinson, a distinguished economist and political scientists at the University of Chicago. He also directs the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict with a focus on Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, he has conducted extensive field works in countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria, and Colombia. Robinson is currently working on his next book, which aims to shed light on African history and its modern realities.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
My name is Mario Venegas. I am a second year Master of Public Policy student at the Harris School of Public Policy and a Pearson Fellow.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Hey, my name is Isabella Nascimento. I'm also a Pearson Fellow and a second year Master of Public Policy at the Harris School of Public Policy.
James A. Robinson:
Hello, my name is James Robinson. I'm a Professor at the Harris School of Public Policy and the Department of Political Science at the University of Chicago.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Okay, nice. James, so I would start with the first question and an introduction. So we know you have been working a lot on research in Africa and writing a new book about it. Could you share a broad picture of your work in Africa and what inspired you to continue to work there and write these articles and research on it?
James A. Robinson:
What's inspired me to work on Africa? I suppose because I find it fascinating. I have a long relationship with Africa. My father worked in Africa. He started working in the British Colonial Service in Nigeria in the 1930s, so I grew up in... He worked all over Western and Eastern Africa, so I grew up in a house full of African art and books and maps of Africa. But I never really studied it when I was younger because I just found it too complicated.
I remember when I was a PhD student, these people would go off and be studying developing countries. And I used to think, "How on earth can you study? That's so complicated. I don't know anything." I remember one of my classmates went off to Brazil to do research, and I started asking him, "So what are you going to do in Brazil? What goes on in Brazil?" And he didn't know anything about Brazil, and I remember thinking, "How can you study Brazil if you don't know anything about Brazil?" So it was too overwhelming for me. I was just focused on understanding social science and economics and economic theory and all the technical things.
But then when I finished, I realized that actually, my real passion was just trying to think about the world, and that's what really fascinated me about why the world was so different and different parts of the world were so different from each other. I guess in those days, I was very fixated on the question of why some parts of the world were more successful economically than other parts of the world. But I guess that's a question I'm less and less interested in as I get older. And I've come to appreciate much more the uniqueness of different parts of the world and the way that different parts of the world flourish in different ways, which may be different from the way that the United States flourishes or thinks of flourishing.
And I think that's one of the things that I find so interesting about Africa. I probably said this in my lecture, but when I used to... I've been teaching about Africa for 25 years. And of course, when you start, you are drawn to all of these dysfunctions. Because of my background as an economist, I was thinking about poverty and political instability and autocracy because I was very interested in the political foundations of economic underdevelopment. But actually, when you hang out in Africa, of course that's all there, but then the other stuff comes into focus, which is the vibrancy of African society and the way that the place is different from Western society. And I just found myself much more drawn to thinking about the ways in which there was different sorts of flourishing. I'm keeping using that word.
If I looked at my research trajectory, working in Africa, that goes back the first thing I did, which was sort of serious, which was 25 years ago, which was trying to work on why Botswana had been so successful economically. Again, focused on Botswana as an economic success. But what I learned from that is you couldn't even start to think about that without thinking about traditional African society in the way traditional Tswana polities were organized institutionally, and how that mapped into the post-colonial state.
I don't know what you want me to talk about, but I think I could talk for a long time about this stuff. But if you thought about the bigger trajectory, I think in many contexts, in Sierra Leone where I worked for many years, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, more recently in Nigeria, it's been unlearning a lot of the preconceptions and ideas I entered into studying Africa, dragged in by this fascination and curiosity. And trying to build a of alternative and, I think, more... I don't know what the right word is, more empowering or something, vision of Africa.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Yeah. Isa and I both had the opportunity to do an internship in Africa during the summer. I was in Sierra Leone and Isa was in Zambia. I think we both agree with what you first said about being something really complex. So personally, when I was there, I was trying to understand all of it, and it was so hard. And something that really calls my attention about your work is how you've been able to work in the whole continent, right? Understanding one country is complex enough, trying to understand the whole continent is way more complex. And as you say in most of your work, it's multicultural and cosmopolitan. And this is, in part, what will make Africa flourish. But how do you address this complexity, this multiculturality and cosmopolitan-ness in your work?
James A. Robinson:
Well, it's social science, and social science is superficial by definition. Social scientists don't have the attention span of historians or anthropologists, and so we chase after different questions. My work is very question-driven. I think if you look at all of my projects in Africa, they're always driven by a question. Botswana was driven by a question. Sierra Leone was driven by a question, which was how on earth could it be that Sierra Leoneans in their right minds voted back into office the APC, the political party of the one-party state? My work in Congo started with this question, which was about the history of the Kuba Kingdom and this comparison that Mary Douglas and Vansina made between the Kuba and the Lele. So I always start with very concrete questions, and you go wherever the question takes you.
So I think, of course, that has the benefit of recognizing that Africa is extremely diverse and there's enormous differences. And there are similarities, but there are differences. But obviously, that comes with enormous costs. I don't speak African languages the way an anthropologist would, although my Igbo friends tell me that no white person ever speaks Igbo properly, so it doesn't matter how much you try, you can never master it.
So I think there's just trade-offs and I think that's why you need lots of people at the table with lots of different skills. You need anthropologists, you need historians, or people with much more, much deeper knowledge than I have. I think I have something to offer, but I think it's very much the social science package. Relative to most social scientists, I'm much more interested in details. But still, there's enormous limitations.
When I used to teach at University of California at Berkeley, I had a friend, David Freedman, who was a very distinguished statistician, and he passed away now unfortunately. But he used to have this thing about scientific methodology and the methodology of social science. And he said, "Actually, what happens in science is you just muddle through." So that's a image I always have in the back of my mind, muddling through and just hopefully getting some insights and understanding. But everything is complicated, as you say. Very complicated.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Through our interactions with you, at least mine, I got in touch with the concept of wealth in people, that you bring a lot in your classes. When I went to Zambia, I think this resonated a lot with me. Once I was there, it was two weeks that I was living there, they already got a Zambian name for me. They started calling me Conguani, that means happiness. And everybody started calling me Conguani, and Isabella didn't exit anymore, it was only Conguani.
And I also noticed how the connections are important. It was much easier for me to get contacts in the government or in other international agencies, or even outside this world of international development, once I knew someone. So I wanted to understand... Actually, I wanted for you to explain a little bit more about this concept of wealth in people and why do you think it's important to also think about this when implementing a policy, let's say, in the international development scenario?
James A. Robinson:
Yeah. That's not a terminology I invented. It goes back to these anthropologists in the 1970s in attempt to create a kind of rubric for saying what was different about African society. That somehow personal relations and personal connections were valued above other things, above material objects. And I think I adopted that terminology just because it seemed to capture something that you just said it yourself, you just experience in Africa. There's this density of life, of social life and connections and people.
I think that's one of the things that make Africa so fun and different at a personal level. And very rewarding at a personal level compared to the isolationism, individualism of Western society. I don't know, I can't speak to Brazil or whatever, Brazil may be different, but at least in that kind of Anglo-Saxon culture where I grew up, that's extremely different. So there's that, at the human level, but I think the way I understand it is that affects the value of people, affects the way many institutions work. It affects the way you think about structuring political institutions, the way you think about structuring economic institutions.
And I think for operating as foreigners, you run into that all the time. I remember working in Sierra Leone, one of the first times I work in Sierra Leone, trying to delegate something, asking somebody to do something for you. That never actually works the way it works here because that person is in the social network, with all sorts of obligations and responsibilities, and so that person wouldn't... Somebody else would end up doing it. And I was like, "Look, I asked you to do that." And the answer would be, "I am doing it." "But you're not doing it. Your cousin is doing it." "No, no. I'm doing it." And for them, they couldn't understand what was my problem. "I am doing it. Yeah, my network's doing it."
So there's a lot of challenges you have to navigate to just collect data or just implement research projects because you have to accept that's how it is, and you have to go with the flow instead of imposing yourself on that. You have to go with the flow and you have to... But I think that's true with the outsiders coming. I don't talk too much about that because I always feel... If you look at any kind of country that's flourished, let's say, they've always done it on their own terms and under their own speed and momentum.
Nobody created South Korea or Singapore or whatever, or Mauritius, they did it themselves. That'll be true in Africa. And it won't be thanks to the World Bank or the UN or anybody else, it'll be the Africans. That's true in Botswana, it's true in Somaliland. Some of the success stories that you have, they've all done it themselves. They figured out how to do it and they reached a kind of social contract where they could move ahead. So that's true in Africa as well.
But the first lecture I give in that class, I give these examples of how you can't really help. Of course, everyone needs help, we all need help. But you can't help people unless you understand the culture and the context and how people operate. I love that example of James Ferguson's book, the Anti-Politics Machine in Lesotho. Where the World Bank come with all these stereotypes about what the problem must be based on their understanding of Western economic development, which turns out to be completely irrelevant in Lesotho because of the way that society functions. The reasons for owning cows, for example, and the role that cows play in Basotho society. And their social roles and their political roles and their financial roles, which turn out to be completely different from those roles that you think about them in Western society.
So if you want to help, or my good friend Paul Farmer used to say, accompany, if you want to accompany people, then you have to understand their society and the way things work and their values. And so little effort is put into that. That, I just find breathtaking.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
And I think that this concept of wealth in people is absolutely necessary to understand Africa in general. I also had a couple of experiences. I think the second day I was there, the car got stuck on the road, and me and the driver tried pushing the car for half an hour. And suddenly, I don't know, maybe 30 people that were just passing by got off and tried helping us. And that's something that probably wouldn't have happened in Mexico, where I'm from, and I don't think it would have happened in the US either. So it's key, trying to understand this concept of wealth in people, for me, in order to understand Africa.
I would like to touch on this thing that you said, that Africa is always a reference point or we tend to mention Africa in the West when we're talking about development and underdevelopment. But I would like to ask you, what are some common misconceptions that people in the West tend to fall into when talking about development or underdevelopment in Africa?
James A. Robinson:
I think the biggest misconception, which is a central argument in my book, is that in Western society, you kind of look at the world as if everyone was trying to achieve the same thing that you were trying to achieve, it's just that you succeeded and they failed. If you take a development economics class and they talk about Africa, it's like, "Well, we succeeded and you failed."
I used to teach in Bogota for many years, in Colombia, and I used to just antagonize the Colombian students in my first lecture by saying, "Okay, here's the way to think about the political economy of Colombia, which is you are basically just a failed version of the United States." And I put up a list of all the things. United States, good. Colombia, bad. United States, good. Colombia, bad. Just to kind of like, "Yeah, there's something wrong with this."
But that's actually how people think in political economy and [inaudible 00:18:14]. That really is not a caricature. It's actually how people think. There's something completely wrong with it, but it's not articulated. So then I used to get them to read this essay by Jose Martí, the Cuban intellectual, called Nuestra America, which is Our America, and it's all about, okay, yeah, we need to do something different. We need our own way of doing things. He never elaborated that as a constructive project or he never gave it a institutional elaboration or whatever. But I think that's a inspiring agenda. You can think in Mexico, Vasconcelos, La Raza Cosmica, or Octavio Paz. There's echoes of that.
I think for me, the biggest misconception is in the African case, let me not get on to Latin America too much, but on the African case, the Africans were not trying to achieve what the Western countries were trying to achieve, so they didn't fail at anything. In fact, they succeeded in their own terms. Meaning they succeeded in terms of creating political institutions that preserve their values, that's my argument, that were based on these notions of wealth in people and the value of the local community. And so they succeeded in doing that, so that's not a failure. They were just trying to achieve something different from Western countries.
The problem for the Africans was the way they did that and the nature of that equilibrium made Africa incredibly vulnerable to Western commercial and colonial expansion in some sense. So most of the mess that's in Africa is because of that collision with Western expansion. Nothing to do with the way that Africa itself organized itself historically. So I think if you could get away from that way of thinking, then that would give you a very different basis to start thinking about how to help Africa or how to engage with Africa.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Yeah, exactly. And I would just like to ask a follow-up question, because this, for me, is a really interesting topic. But in Freetown, in Sierra Leone, there's a lot of work from NGOs and foreign organizations, but I didn't feel like they were taking into account these common misconceptions when designing their work. So what would you recommend for an aid agencies and NGOs to do in order to actually take into account this factor of success in Africa? And also, what are the challenges they could face in order to achieve that?
James A. Robinson:
Well, I don't think that whole NGO industry is organized to take this on board. People don't have the right incentives, they're just kind of rotated in and out. There's no incentive or... I don't understand... I don't know much about the NGO world, but the World Bank or people that I have interacted with, I think it's full of extremely well-meaning, intelligent people. It's not the people, but the system is not set up to work in any real way. It's not set up to solve any of the problems. It's not organized to address the real problems.
I don't know how you do that exactly. My point, as I said earlier, is that probably doesn't really matter anyway, because it's going to be the Sierra Leoneans that solve this problem, not outsiders or not NGOs or not the World Bank or anything else. I guess that's, for me... I'm not sure it matters that much. And I think it's very difficult given my sense of the incentives and the way those organizations work. They're just not organized to cope with that because there's no incentive to engage. What they should be doing is giving resources to people like John Corker, or Sierra Leoneans who can function in the environment. And they do have the right incentives, and they do have the local knowledge-
Mario Venegas Wignall:
And they know how it works.
James A. Robinson:
Yeah, exactly.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
They understand Africa.
James A. Robinson:
Yes. Yes, absolutely.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Well, changing a little bit, but I'm still thinking about your work in progress, in the book. I have read the manuscript of your book, and I know that there is a chapter called Prosperity: What if Adam Smith had been African? Could you give a taste of this chapter to our audience and tell us about your argument on this matter?
James A. Robinson:
That's about how parochial economics is in some sense. What you learn in an economics class, it's wonderful and everything, but it's describing a particular institutionalization of an economy. There's individuals, there's markets, there's competition, there's whatever. There's private property rights. I just do this thought experiment to say, "Well, Adam Smith was sitting in Kirkcaldy, in Scotland, in the 18th century, and he looked out his window and that's what he saw. He saw markets and private property." He elaborated that into a generalization of here's what an economy looks like in all times and all places and all parts of the world, et cetera.
But if he'd been living in Makurdi, in Eastern Nigeria, and he'd looked out the window of his house, he'd have seen something completely different. He'd have seen different systems of property rights. He'd have seen markets, yeah, but lots of things were not marketized. And he'd have described a very different type of economy. And who would've been right? Adam Smith in Nigeria or Adam Smith in Scotland? They'd both have been right. They were both describing institutionalizations of... But neither of them would've had a general theory. Neither the Nigerian nor the Scotsman would've had a general theory.
So I just think the idea that the economy is like Newton's laws of gravitational motion, force is equal to mass times acceleration, in Nigeria and in Scotland, the economy's not like that. The economy is a cultural construction; property rights, markets, all of that. So that's my point.
And I think that's very important for thinking about the history of Africa and why... Again, because the way economists tend to think is, "This is the right model. And you're organizing your economy differently, so that's because of frictions or market failures, and so you need to make your economy look more like our economy." It's a bit like I was talking earlier, it's just a specific example. But no, actually, the economy was completely rationally organized, it was just trying to achieve something different. And that's something that economists don't understand.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Yeah, absolutely.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Actually, a follow-up question on research in Africa, I really wanted to understand what you have learned in terms of making research in this time, on the ground in Africa. I ask this because I know that it's totally different of making research in the UK, for instance. You face other types of challenges, you face different languages that you have never heard of, and you also have a difficulty of learning from these people that do not know you. This is for the researchers, actually. I wanted to know your ideas on this matter.
James A. Robinson:
There's always challenges. I think, yeah, there's challenges to understanding a cultural context which is so different from the one you grew up with, or there's challenges if you don't speak the language. But for me, that's just like, "Okay, great, you work with locals." Work with local academics, work with local people in civil society. I work a lot now with all these academics at the University of Nigeria, and that's a fantastic thing for me. So the collaboration is... Yeah, okay.
We were discussing earlier, obviously there's always limits to what you can understand, but I don't think that stops you having insights. You have something to bring to the table, they have something to bring to the table. You learn from each other. So yeah, it would be easier to do research in England, but you go where your passion is or what you want to try to understand.
For me, everything is always enlightening, and it's always an opportunity to understand something that you never understood before. And I think, you grew up in a society like England, you take for granted so many things that other people in the world can't take for granted about security and order and legitimate political systems. And so if you want to understand England better, you need to work in a place like Nigeria or Colombia because then stuff doesn't work, and maybe you get some insight into how it does work in some places and not in others. I don't know, was that an answer your question?
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Yes. I think basically, it's to work with people, local NGOs, and local research institutes, local researchers. I think it's a way of doing research.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
And what I found, I think this last thing that you said is very interesting, because when I first got there, my impression was nothing works here. But then as you start learning a bit about the-
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Everything works.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Exactly. They somehow make it work. Maybe not the way we're used to in Latin America, us or in the US or in Europe, but somehow people just employ themselves, find a way to make things work, and they do it, right?
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Yes.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
And in this sense, how would you see Africa in the next, I don't know, 20, 30 years to come? How do you see it thriving? How do you feel these strengths can be used, and assets, to continue promoting development maybe?
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Oh, yes. I shared with Mario that really good article of yours, Africa's Latent Assets, I think. So I think he's thinking about that.
James A. Robinson:
Yeah, that was an attempt to think about some of the latent strengths in Africa. Because I think what you see, just talking about economic growth, economic development, I think what you see is that most of these success stories are extremely surprising.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
That's true.
James A. Robinson:
I start with that example of China. I'm old enough to know, when we were taught as an undergraduate at the London School of Economics in the early 1980s, China was a kind of technologically backward economic disaster under the sway of this pre-modern ideology. And all of these other cases, Korea, Mauritius, you name it, nobody ever predicted any of them. Botswana, for example. That's something we should be humble. We should be humble. We are never good at predicting stuff like that.
And many of these... A lot of my work has been on institutions and relationship between institutions and economic development. But it's also true, in many of these cases, that growth starts or development starts with a lot of problems, institutional problems. That's certainly true in China. It's certainly true in South Korea in the 1960s and 1970s.
So I think what I'm saying in that paper is you don't have to solve all these problems. There's lots of problems in Africa, but you don't have to solve all the problems for things to get moving. And if you ask me, is there one country in the world that you could see growing at 10% a year for the next 50 years? I'd say straight away, Nigeria. It's just so much... Not Sierra Leone, sorry. And I don't know Zambia. But there's so much energy and talent and entrepreneurship in Nigeria. You just feel like if someone could just nudge this in the right place. I don't know how Deng Xiaoping figured out how to do that in China, but the place is going to explode.
There's other places like that too. Kenya, Ethiopia, South Africa. Not everywhere, but China is not everywhere too. There's parts of China today that are very sleepy. So there's a lot of heterogeneity. Any kind of these experiences, also, there's a lot of heterogeneity. The US industrialized with the slave economy in the South, for heaven's sake.
What I was trying to identify in that paper was how would you possibly believe that was possible in Africa? And what kind of advantage could they have in the global world? And I was just pointing to this social mobility, this immense social mobility, which I think you experienced that firsthand. Everyone wants to make a connection. Everyone wants to know you. You can create networks, you can create... And you're not held back by caste or social class. There's that fluidity that you don't have, even in many Western societies.
And you mentioned before, this cosmopolitan nature of African society, also, which I find... Who's going to succeed in the modern, global world? Some Nigerians who speak five languages or English people who have to get out of the European Union because they can't stand the French? The Nigerians are going to flourish, not the English.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
And just one comment, I think this... Well, it happened to me. I used to imagine Africa almost like a country, but it's huge. So when Professor Robinson is talking about Nigeria, it's totally different than Sierra Leone, and they're not even that far away. And then there's Ethiopia all the way on the east, and Kenya. And on the south, South Africa. So I think that people should be more conscious about this, right? Africa is not only a country, it's a huge and very cosmopolitan region, continent.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Continent.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Right? Yeah.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
If there was one paper or book that you could recommend for a policy student, which one would it be?
James A. Robinson:
Apart from my own, you mean?
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
No, no, no, no. Yeah, exactly. Otherwise, it will be a full list. You all read Why Nations Fail, right?
James A. Robinson:
I don't know. To learn about what? To learn about Africa? To learn about... I don't know.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Maybe about these concepts that we've been mentioning. I feel like people in the West or outside of Africa feel far from Africa. And right now, we've been talking about wealth in people, about the complexity of Africa as a continent, about the richness in Africa, about it being really cosmopolitan and multicultural. So what would be a good book or paper, as Isa said, to try to get a little bit closer to all these concepts that we mentioned, and try to begin to understand Africa?
James A. Robinson:
I'm not sure there is such a book. That's why I'm so keen to-
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
To produce yours.
James A. Robinson:
Yeah, to write it. I think I probably said this, African society is better written about in novels, almost, than in academic literature or social science. Like I always say in Colombia, if you want to understand Colombia, actually, you have to talk to journalists, not academics. The best books about Colombia are actually written by journalists, not academics. I think in Africa, it's more novelists for some reason.
I think all this wealth in people, the best thing I know about wealth in people are this novella, the money order. The money order, which is Ousmane Sembene, which is this Senegalese writer, about the guy gets a money order from his relative in France, and he has to cash the money order. And to cash the money order, you have to trigger all of these social networks and contacts, and he has to solve this problem of cashing the money order. And you see the whole thing of wealth in people in action.
I don't know, I'd have to think. There are good books about bits and pieces of specific things. But that communicates what I would like to communicate, I'm not sure.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Only your book then. We'll have to refer-
James A. Robinson:
I don't even know if that's going to do it actually, because I'm a little anxious that I spend too long talking about some of these more historical... There's different... I'm very interested in talking about these historical dynamics and trying to explain how Africa ended up the way it did today, and what explains the variation. And why is Botswana different from Congo or Tanzania, whatever. And that's probably too nerdy and too much detail and too academic. There's probably a role for something much more fun and accessible and contemporary.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Yeah, of course. I think that's good advice. Maybe start with literature and all of that besides. I think a book, it's hard to put everything what Africa is in a single book.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
And I remember you told me to read Things Fall Apart as well, so this is also a good recommendation.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Yeah. I think we are almost reaching the end of our talk.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Yeah. What was something that you would liked us to you have asked you?
James A. Robinson:
I'm not sure I know the answer from that. I think one of the things that intrigues me also, is about what we can learn from Africa or Africans. We're so busy telling Africans how to do things or how to be more like us. A couple of years ago, I went to this World Bank Africa conference. It was called the World Bank Africa Fest. And I assumed we'd be just talking about Africa and everything. And I had my little speech, I was going to talk about Africa's latent assets, actually.
And then it was just a bunch of World Bank people talking about how they'd done all these great things in Africa, and they built this project and they did that project. And I threw away my PowerPoint slide and I said, "Look, I'm not going to talk about that. I don't know that any African learned anything from me, but let me just tell you about stuff that I learned from Africans, about life and about humanity and-"
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Community in general, right?
James A. Robinson:
Yeah. So here's an example. So just to give you an example, here's something I learned, I told them, which I think is extremely different from Western society or at least American society. So there's an Igbo proverb which says, "When hanging the roof of a house, the tall man is needed. If you're looking for something on the floor, the short man is required." So there's this idea in Igbo culture that everybody's good at something, everybody can contribute something.
And this idea of what the philosopher, Michael Sandel would call contributive justice, that's very different from the United States. United States, there's winners and there's losers, basically. And if you're a loser, tough. You didn't work hard enough, you didn't study hard enough, you didn't try hard enough. But that is very different in... There's no winners and losers in Africa, in that sense. There's something, philosophically, we could learn from Africans, it seems to me.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Yeah. No, completely. I think we have a lot to learn. For me, as I mentioned, it was community. I feel like, exactly, we have all these NGOs and organizations trying to push different things and projects in Africa, but they miss what are we learning from Africa? What could actually benefit our societies? What could make us more wealthy in other ways that maybe we cannot imagine right now?
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Sometimes they miss the people part of the equation.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Yeah.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
I also didn't ask anything about witchcraft or supernatural powers. Would you like to say something about it?
James A. Robinson:
Oh, I could. I could talk about that. We're doing research on that in Congo. We're trying to write something up, finally, on that. That's an interesting... I talk about that in the context of this notion of... So one way of thinking about where does this wealth in people come from. If you were an economist, you'd say, "What's the micro foundations for that?" And the way I've come to think about it is just in terms of people's basic ontology, if I could use a more technical philosophical jargon, of ontology. That in Africa, there's this notion that people are connected to each other in a way that's... Really connected in a way that's not true in Western society. And we're connected to each other, and that's somehow the basis of this emphasis on community and people.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
In the sense that you need the other one to thrive as a whole?
James A. Robinson:
Yeah. That's we're connected by... The first person who articulated this view was this Belgian Catholic missionary called Placide Tempels, in the 1940s. So he said, "People are connected by forces." He called this force. And you're not just connected to people alive, you're connected to the ancestors, maybe the unborn. And so...
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
A spiderweb.
James A. Robinson:
A Spiderweb, exactly. He says people are connected in this spiderweb. What is witchcraft? I think the right way to think about witchcraft is you can manipulate these forces malevolently. Very typical in African society historically, but even today, as I discuss, for example, this work in Soweto in South Africa. To think that illness is caused by people manipulating... Illness is caused by people malevolently manipulating these forces. It's other people that make you ill. You may get cancer. Okay, fine. I know that the cancer could kill you, but why did the cancer start growing? That's someone's agency, is involved in that.
So I think for me, witchcraft is that sort of... It comes in as a theory of illness. Bad things happen. Why do bad things happen? In religious philosophy, there's this question of evil. Why is there evil? If God is so good, why is there evil in the world? The Catholic theologians spend a lot of time writing about that. And this is a theory of evil in some sense, of witchcraft. But it's very prevalent in people's lives. I think, again, there's a lot of variation. To me, in Sierra Leone, what's so fascinating about Sierra Leone is you don't see this in Sierra Leone so much as you do elsewhere because the way it's all organized, through these secret societies-
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Secret societies, yeah.
James A. Robinson:
Yeah, exactly. So a lot of it is just out of sight from you as a Westerner or as a Mexican, because it's done in the Poro bush or the Bundu bush or something, it's secret. People won't talk about it either. Even very sophisticated people who are used to interfacing with Westerners won't talk about it. None of my friends will talk about it. But in Congo, it's all in your face.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
It's more open. Yeah.
James A. Robinson:
And in Congo, it's very involved in politics, also. I avoided studying it for a long time in Congo, just because I felt I can't understand this. It's just like, "I won't be able to understand it." It's also something very sinister about it in Congo. So it's a little scary, to say the least. But in the end, the Congolese people we work with, they just kept on saying, "You're all in denial. You should be studying..."
And one thing which is very funny also, we were having problems with this data in Congo and stuff. I have a very good friend from Cameroon who I've been working with a lot, who's a professor at Georgia State University now. We're doing all this teaching together at the moment. So he's from Cameroon, but it's actually very... Culturally, it's sort of... It's west of where we're working in Northern Congo, but there's a lot of cultural connections.
So we had this meeting with him to talk about how should we think about... And he understood everything completely. He explained completely how to think about it and what was going on. That was mind-blowing. For him, "Oh yeah, it's the same in Cameroon. Let me explain what's happening." So I think that's very hard for a Westerner to understand. We don't have any... It's very difficult in, especially, post-Enlightenment. The Enlightenments killed off all of that stuff. It killed off superstition and whatever.
But I guess being British, I tend to be very empirical. I tend to think I look at how people behave and I look at what they say and how they think and how they explain things to me. And I say, "Okay, that's their world. That's their reality. I should try to understand that and not say, 'Oh, that must be nonsense, because that can't...'" When I teach this class to PhD students about religion, I say, "The biggest problem in the way that economists study religion is that for them, the most interesting question in religion is how on earth can people believe something which is obviously not true?"
For me, that's completely the wrong question to ask. Every observed human society has had supernatural beliefs or religious beliefs, or has practiced ritual, have had some concept of the sacred. And we should be trying to understand that. We should be trying to conceptualize it and not asking some silly question which is just driven by our paradigm.
Mario Venegas Wignall:
Of course. Of course. And I think that this was a huge insight for me while being in Sierra Leone, just the idea of it's really hard to understand this, but this doesn't mean it's wrong or it's bad. It's just something that I've never seen at this particular way. So trying to work and trying to develop yourself in an environment in which things are just not the way you think they are, or people see things completely different, well, it's very challenging, but I also think it's very enriching.
James A. Robinson:
If you look at the history of anthropology, it actually is quite funny. Economists are almost in a pre-scientific stage. So in anthropology, if you look at anthropology in the late 19th century, it was like white people read books and stuff, and they sat in their office and they imagined what must have happened in primitive society. No one did any fieldwork, nobody ever went to a primitive society, and then it was only when Malinowski basically started doing that in the first World War.
And he was almost forced to do it because he was Austro-Hungarian, and he got stuck in Papua New Guinea. And he couldn't leave because the Habsburgs were on the same side as the Germans and the Ottomans. So he got stuck in Papua New Guinea for four years, and he invented, sort of, fieldwork. And then he engaged in a completely different way with these other societies, which anthropologists hadn't done before. Before, you could call yourself an anthropologist and you could sit in your office and read books and just speculate. But a lot of work in economics is like that. You just sit in your office in Chicago and you speculate and you think that's fine, and you can write a model down, and...
Mario Venegas Wignall:
And that's what the word is.
James A. Robinson:
That's what the world is. Yeah, it's what you make it to be.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimen:
Thank you for listening to this episode of The Root of Conflict, featuring Professor James Robinson. This episode was produced and edited by Isabella Nascimento and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Mario Venegas and Isabella Nascimen. A special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website, thepearsoninstitute.org
If you found this episode interesting, we invite you to join us for the 2024 Pearson Global Forum: Negotiations and Agreement. Join us on Friday, October 18th, to hear from global experts as they discuss topics like the role of women in negotiations, speaking law to war, and other interesting panels around the theme of negotiations and agreement. This in-person and virtual event is free and open to all. You can find more information at thepearsonglobalforum.org.
Root of Conflict
09.05.24
Speaking Law to War | Kathleen Cavanaugh
Hannah Balikci:
Hi, this is Hannah and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You are listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
What are the key legal principles that govern the conduct of war and protect human rights? In this episode, we speak with Professor Kathleen Cavanaugh, the executive director of the Pozen Family Center for Human Rights and Senior Instructional Professor in The College at UChicago. Professor Cavanaugh's Scholarship, like her academic training is interdisciplinary and seeks to interrogate questions of law in its social context. She has published on international human rights and humanitarian law, theoretical as well as applied research on the use of political violence, ethno-nationalism, and more recently militant democracy and the politics of memory.
As a consultant, she has undertaken numerous missions on behalf of Amnesty International, including to Northern Ireland, Israel and Palestine and Iraq. She'll be speaking at the 2024 Pearson Global Forum in October. In this interview, we discuss among other topics, the framework of international humanitarian law, storytelling and meta-conflicts, and the difficulties of accountability for human rights violations within the international system. Now let's go to my conversation with Professor Cavanaugh. Hi, my name is Hannah Balikci. I'm a second year MPP student here at the Harris School of Public Policy and the producer of Root of Conflict and a Pearson Fellow.
And I'd like to thank Professor Cavanaugh for coming into the studio today for an interview. Professor Cavanaugh, could you please introduce yourself and your work and welcome to Root of Conflict.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Firstly, thank you for having me. I'm Kathleen Cavanaugh, I'm director of the Pozen Center for Human Rights and faculty in the college. I'm a socio-legal scholar and have come to Chicago just about four years ago today.
Hannah Balikci:
Welcome.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Thank you.
Hannah Balikci:
How did you first get interested in your work in studying conflict as it is, over time?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Sure. Well, I've specifically said I'm a socio-legal scholar, and one of the ... I think the seminal turning points for me was my time in Northern Ireland. So I went to study as an undergraduate student on a junior year abroad in Belfast, Northern Ireland where I was looking at the underpinnings of protracted social conflict. And there are a couple of things that sprung from that, that really helped to shape and form my concentration on what I call the politics of law. And three things in general, I think not just sprung from the conflict itself, but also shaped how I approach the study of human rights and also humanitarian law.
The three are meta-conflicts, storytelling and lawfare. And so, I'll circle back to those in telling a little bit about Northern Ireland because your audience may or may not be familiar with the conflict, but it was a protracted social conflict. And the interesting part when I landed in Belfast was that there were so many different versions of the underpinnings of the history that led both unionists, British and nationalists who sided on the Irish side to have this protracted social conflict. And amongst them was whether or not there was a settler colonial society, which was part of the Irish nationalist argument or whether or not this was an ancien regime, right?
Was this a natural flow of peoples from Great Britain, mainly in Scotland over to the north, and therefore these were peoples who had legitimate right to be there, right? And depending on where you started in that history, telling that story also informed how you saw any resistance to colonial role. So if you were an Irish nationalist that you saw the British government, you saw the laws and the infrastructure of the British government there, as a colonizing force that needed to be removed. And if you were Republican, you felt you could do this through the use of violence. If you were a unionist, you felt this was a lawful government and that if you wanted to change the structure, the nature of the government, you needed to do it through constitutional means.
And absolutely, everything that flowed from the use of human rights and the language of human rights to how you actually saw your ability to get a job or to live in a particular area, flowed from those lenses. And that's when I talk about a meta-conflict because a meta-conflict is not just a conflict, an actual conflict that's happening on the ground, but it's a conflict about the nature of a conflict. And that rolls into the storytelling, which is that in order for me to be able to speak and talk about what was happening in what they colloquially view as the troubles or called the troubles, I needed to be able to understand those perspectives.
And it wasn't about truth-telling. It was about storytelling because those that were involved in the conflict had a particular perspective that was born of how they've seen the past. And that kind of contemporary past, influenced how they spoke with me, influenced whether they saw the state as representing them or not, adversarial or not. And then, the last thing that got fed into this is the use of human rights because if you were a unionist who believed that the British were lawfully there and it should be considered a lawful government, then the use of human rights was something your adversary did because Republicans and nationalists could draw on human rights because most of the violations against the nationalist population were coming from the state, right?
Unionists saw this and thought, "Well, human rights really is just a tool for nationalists. It doesn't really represent us." Why? Because the violence that they were experiencing were coming from paramilitant groups. And here's the rub, international law is about states. States sign up to it, states are meant to implement it, and states are held accountable. Non-state actors. It's very difficult for human rights groups like Amnesty or Human Rights Watch to talk about this because it's not these, sorry, non-governmental groups that actually engage in this treaty making, right? So human rights became part of this human rights as well as law became the surface over which these political struggles were waged.
And all three of those things, meta-conflict, storytelling and lawfare, and the reason I call it lawfare is that the original concept of lawfare is that you take things off the battlefield, off the streets and you bring them into the courts. But what we started to see happening very quickly is that sites of power, states, or even non-state actors use the constructive ambiguity of law to actually try to shape and form how we understand what that means, right? So human rights became part of that conflict, part of that contestation, and we don't just see it in Northern Ireland, of course, we see it all over where states try to tell us and control, have the hegemonic control over how we understand what these things mean.
And I saw the very roots of it in my time in Northern Ireland as an undergraduate, and it just continued to inform how I look at conflicts, how I approach conflicts, but also how I see law as part, sometimes of the conflict, not as the neutral arbiter.
Hannah Balikci:
In terms of the non-state actors and state components of that, could you briefly explain the framework of either not just international humanitarian law, but how international law sets human rights in a way, that might not be the right way of framing it.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Sure.
Hannah Balikci:
The overview, just in case people aren't aware.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Sure. So I'll do this very quickly. The main umbrella, if I can put this for international law is public international law. And there are a lot of parts that you pull down that address very specific topics For our purpose today, I'm going to concentrate on three, international human rights law, international humanitarian law and international criminal law. And they govern specific things. We say in law, Lexis specialis, what is the specialized form of law? And the specialized form of law always is about the law that is the most relevant at the time. So human rights law, the international treaty system that makes up human rights law is applicable during times of peace.
So international human rights law is applicable now. States sign up to it and are must, when they sign and ratify it, abide by its principles, en principe, in principle. Internationally humanitarian law, also known as the laws of war, govern what happens when a state goes to war, when a state goes and reaches the level of armed conflict. It becomes the specialized law, the Lexis specialis. It doesn't mean human rights law is silent, but it means this is the law that we hold states accountable for when you're in conflict, right? And it's important because if you think about it, you as a combatant in a conflict, armed conflict situation can kill somebody, right? If they're your adversary, in a situation that is much less the threshold than if it was in a time of peace.
So if you're a police officer, you can take someone's life in a time of peace, but she must do everything before to protect that, right? You try to take them in custody, you try to do everything to mitigate that last resort. If you're in a time of conflict, a right of life lowers, because you're adversarial, that's why the Lexis specialis is important. So humanitarian law or the laws of war govern what happens during war. Criminal law governs what happens when there are violations in this middle section, violations of war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide. So once you have these violations and inevitably war is going to have them, what do you do with them?
What do you do for the victims, civilians that may have been mistreated, even prisoners of war that may been tortured? You need a place to bring that. And so, you have this last body called International Criminal Law, which is ostensibly the accountability part of it. Non-governmental actors, which is what you've asked about, in human rights law, it's very difficult to find a place because again, states sign up to it. So we've very often reached a kind of common article in the Geneva Conventions, not to get too specific, but there is a commonality that says you can't torture someone. So these are the kind basic principles that everyone regardless should be held accountable for.
It becomes much harder when you have paramilitant groups operating outside of a conflict situation to hold them accountable, full circle to why it was difficult to talk to some communities in Northern Ireland because if you're Amnesty, they're asking you why aren't you holding the IRA accountable? The mechanisms simply did not exist for that. Humanitarian law, however, has started to develop more and more because if you think about it, most conflicts are non-international armed conflicts. That is, it's a conflict between a state and groups within a state, right? So these groups are not part of a state military. These are non-state actors who for whatever reason, and across the globe, there's a variety of different reasons why people levé en masse, right? Why they take arms.
They don't have the same structure. So what do you do? Does humanitarian law just become silent? And so you have a lot of people, particularly within the International Red Cross, which is kind of the curator for humanitarian law, trying to develop ways to engage non-governmental actors to abide by the laws of war. And so, you are seeing a development of protocols, you're seeing a development of standards, and you're even seeing training of these extra groups under the laws of war so that you still are able to hold them accountable. It's not always successful. You have to have them willing to participate, but at least, to have them familiar with what the laws of war are.
Because if you think about it, if the state captures their combatants, their armed actors, then you want them to be treated the same way as they would if they were actual state-to-state combatants. So that is the second group. The third group, which is international criminal law, again, you're kind of trapped within this idea that you must hold state actors accountable and those that are fighting, but that does not preclude also being able to hold non-governmental actors accountable in that third realm.
Hannah Balikci:
Going off of that, I think the three things you said were metaconflict storytelling, lawfare on how that relates to this framework of law. Could you go into a bit more of that?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
So it can help maybe on the lawfare part of it?
Hannah Balikci:
Mm-hmm.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
One of the things ... Without going too much into the weeds of international law, one of the things to note is that a lot of the treaties that will be signed up to by states, whether it's human rights, particularly human rights treaties, but also humanitarian law, have a certain degree of constructive ambiguity, a certain degree of what I call wiggle room, interpretation that can happen. And with that wiggle room, the states and even non-state actors will try to take advantage to their benefit. So if we think about ... if I move it to this question of torture, this is actually a really good topic for illuminating why constructive ambiguity can actually move, and also this principle of evolutiveness.
So you'll have states that will argue that these conventions and treaties were set up a long time ago, right? Many of them were codified in the 50, 60, ratified in the 70s. Times have changed, right? So those who choose to use violence, those who choose to act outside of constitutional norms are now much more prepared to use these very lethal weapons that weren't existing in the past. And so, we need to be able to be responsive. And so you've heard this idea, the ticking bomb, right? So if you have somebody in custody and they have information and by extracting it quickly, you'll be able to save countless lives.
That's the ticking bomb scenario. That invites us into this world where you allow the state to lower the threshold on what is considered an appropriate interrogation method, that may actually be close to torture. So that bit that the state is able to take from a prohibition against torture, which is one of the strongest human rights prohibitions, that can be manipulated to tell you that we have to do this because we're protecting you, right? So the lawfare part of it is that they take a legal prohibition that they know is a prohibition at all times in all cases, and they try to change the narrative around it.
The narrative for why it was maybe at some point a good prohibition, but now we need to change it a little bit because no longer is it about a prohibition against you, it's a prohibition that is being applied to somebody who threatens you. So you take the human out of the person, you call them a terrorist, and then anything goes, right? And so, this is where the contestation is happening, both because the language of law allows it, it's ambiguous. If you're going to get a lot of states to sign up, something has to have a little bit of wiggle room, right? You want to get them to sign the dotted line on these human rights treaties, but it means you need to leave a little finesse.
That finesse is meant to be filled in by judges, by jurists, Opinio Juris, but sometimes it's done by states, and when states take control of it may actually erode its very value. And that is what we're seeing. We've seen it in human rights law. Torture is a case in point, but we've also seen it in humanitarian law, which goes back to this issue that we confront today, is how do we understand the principles that are involved in the laws of war and how do we apply them so that we understand when states are arguing that this is justified, what they're doing, is it justified? And there are lots of parts of the Geneva Conventions, which are the laws of war.
Geneva one through four, and its additional protocols that have been reframed by states who are asking us to understand what their restrictions are differently.
Hannah Balikci:
How flexible do you think the system is in terms of, as you're saying, judges are supposed to be filling in, but states are doing this more so now. Do you find that there's more of a degradation of rights instead of filling in the gap of the wiggle room that you mentioned? How is it supposed to be working? And if it doesn't seem to be working that way, what are the mechanisms that are lacking?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
So there are some legitimate concerns around human rights, but they're not necessarily the concerns states raise. So there are ... so I'm going to stick with human rights and then I'll go to humanitarian law. There are legitimate concerns and critiques of human rights, very often known as the tainted origins by anti-colonial scholars. I'm one of them, but it isn't to ... it is not to take away the power of human rights, it's actually to make sure that that power is equally vested no matter where you are from. So this kind of north-south divide where the north controls how we understand rights and the south simply needs to be subservient to it, needs to change.
And so, there are a lot of scholars, myself and others that are part of movements that are asking to narrate and fill in those blanks, but to give it strength, not to weaken it. Judges and jurists can either do that and sometimes they're part of their political landscape, right? So you'll find judgments by judges that you might find problematic in the human rights context, and we've seen that also globally. States have a different stake in this game. There's a wonderful quote that says, international law is not a suicide club for states. So states don't like to be restricted by supranational powers. They at all costs want to protect their borders.
And so, their critiques on human rights very often is that it's northern controlled, it's western, it's liberal, all of those things. But it's not because they actually want to make it more universal. They're not anti-colonial scholars trying to fill in the blanks, but they're trying to remove themselves from scrutiny. So there's a push and a pull, and it's a continual contestation between those who actually want to strengthen the human rights regime and those that want to weaken it, and those that want to change it for strengthening reasons and those that want to change it for weakening reasons. So there are advancements that have been made.
But I think when you have states like the United States or France or United Kingdom that are participating in this weakening, it becomes problematic because states only are going to hold their part of the human rights framework in accordance with other states. That's how you get human rights to work. You leverage state to state, but if you have most states now, trying to undermine it, there isn't very much leverage, right? You can have India look at the United States and go, well, you guys do it in Guantanamo Bay. What's the problem with us doing it, right? And that's where the battle lies now, and those that are trying to inform this space, keep trying to push back on that trend.
Hannah Balikci:
That kind of goes into one of the questions that I was going to ask about how states use human rights as a political ... in their arsenal in a way.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Mm-hmm.
Hannah Balikci:
That it becomes a discourse between countries where you can use human rights violations in one country as a way to demand change, but then the finger could be pointed back at that country and they have their own host of human rights violations. Could they be considered absolute or are they relative? I mean, I guess in reality, they're relative to cultural construction. How does that influence legitimacy of enforcing them internationally across cultures, religions and identities? And if we are looking at this from this international space?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Yeah, it's a great question. So there are parts of human rights law that are non-derogable, and there are parts of human rights law that are absolute, and there are parts that are limited and restricted. The absolute rights are things like the right to life, save for certain circumstances, torture, slavery, and you cannot be convicted of a crime if it wasn't a crime at the time you committed it. Those things are non-movable and at all times in all places, regardless of where you're from or what your religious belief is, those have to be upheld. Increasingly human rights instruments are seeing your right to hold a religion and to practice a religion to be part of that.
But then, there's a whole slew of rights, what I would call the majority of rights, that are limited and restricted, that already have that cultural relativism built into it. And this goes back to why I said sometimes you need that to get states to sign up to it, because you have different systems of law, civil and common law systems. You have different religious beliefs, you have different ways that you look at expression. You have different ways that you look at equality. And so, in this kind of human rights framework, there are lots of ways for states to be able to maintain their individuality, their cultural autonomy.
And then, there are other things that it simply doesn't matter where you're from. This has to hold. That's why the cultural relativist versus universalist debates doesn't really make that much sense to me because a lot of it is already embedded, right? I think there are other parts where that struggle becomes much more evident, but that's where you actually have the narration of what it means. So the convention against the elimination of all forms of discrimination, against women has the most reservations based on the fact that a lot of states that have signed up to it, try to make their own interpretation of what equality means.
Because for some places, equality does not mean equality between a man and a woman, they read it as equality between men and men and women and women. And that's where you see that kind of push and pull happen on cultural relativity.
Hannah Balikci:
How have recent conflicts like those in Palestine and Ukraine challenged existing legal frameworks for human rights protection?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
So they've challenged in a couple of different ways, and I'm going to pull it back not just to talk about the legal frameworks, but also the way we see and understand armed conflict and the ways in which humanitarian laws applied or not. So I think kind of in the public realm, Ukraine, when it first happened, when Russia quote-unquote first invaded Ukraine, there was a lot of public support and sympathy for Ukrainians, right? And there was a call by the international community for Russia to restrain, for it to protect civilians, for it to have humanitarian corridors. We heard the language of the Geneva Convention amplified by the international community.
With Gaza, it's been much more contested. And for there, I would say it's because in our public realm, there's a contestation that has not stopped much like Northern Ireland, but in a very different way about claims to territory and about the rightfulness of action. And I think the politics of law in that case weigh so, so heavily. So anytime you want to talk about Israel and Palestine, even how you refer to it is a signal. So calling it Palestine and calling it Israel, instead of Judea and Sumeria. Calling the occupied territories. All of this is that kind of messiness.
And this is where law fair is like up front and center, because the arguments that have been waged, and I do mean waged, within the kind of public square, but also the arguments that have been waged among international legal scholars is all around whether or not the actions that are being taken right now in Gaza are somehow justified, right? The issue for me is a lot of the justification comes from whether or not Israel had the right of self-defense. That is one part of humanitarian law, which is Jus Ad Bellum, right? Do you have the right of going to war? Once you however have engaged in conflict, the laws of war, Geneva one through three, are what applies.
It doesn't matter whether October 7 gave you justification or not, that goes silent. And then, there are a list of prescriptions that you should follow. And first and foremost is that you try to distinguish between military and civilian. So when you listen to the arguments of why hospitals are being bombed and why schools are being bombed, you will always hear because there was a Hamas person there. And that of course, can be said for any infrastructure inside Gaza, but what is failed to be pulled through is this principle of proportionality, which is that even if you only have a few fighters, you can't bomb a hospital where you know there are hundreds of people being treated and it may be the only hospital.
My point in engaging this, isn't the rightness or wrongness of what is happening in Gaza, but the ways in which humanitarian law itself has become part of this conflict and it's actually become a victim, I would argue, to this conflict. And it precedes Gaza, Israel and the occupied territories have been one of the conflicts that really has shaped humanitarian law, particularly the laws of occupation, which is Geneva IV. Why? Because you've had over 50 years of occupation and Geneva IV isn't prepared to handle 50 years of occupation. It's meant to assume that if you're on the territory of another party, you leave within the year and it's geared for that.
But if you're around for 50 some odd years, what you start to hear is that this isn't fit for purpose. Think about what I said about human rights law before. Torture was back then. Now, it's a different story. This was codified in the 1940s. Wasn't expecting, it's a Sui Generis situation. You'll hear that term. And so therefore we have to think about this differently. All the while they're thinking about it differently, but not to in some way strengthen, but to weaken. And that is what you have now going on in Gaza. So, it's a political debate. It's not a legal one.
Hannah Balikci:
Right, I think this sort of goes into this question I have of ... how does social media and the prevalence of mass communications change the perspective of what is just versus what is lawful, right? Seeing what we can see now every day, I think there's this sense of what's something may be versus what it isn't in a just sense versus what it may be ... it may be different when you look at it from those legal frameworks you've been talking about.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Firstly, I think social media has contributed enormously for understanding what is happening on the ground because there is a lot of contestation of whether or not media has been controlled, right? And whether what we're seeing is filtered. And it is true that when you're looking at TikTok or you're looking at an Insta posting or you're seeing video that's been uploaded, you have to wonder about authenticity, but it does at least fill in the blanks because otherwise, the media that's there can be controlled of what can come out of a conflict, and I'm not just talking about Gaza. So social media in some ways opened up that space.
And it's given us a lot more avenues to access truth telling. I think the question of what is just, versus what is law, is a really interesting one because I think for me, law and the rules and the principles that all players are meant to follow when and if they're followed lead to justice, but very often this doesn't happen and you don't have any justice. And very often, you can go through and you may have a very unjust outcome and justice isn't achieved. So justice for me is something you work towards, and it's not just through the laws, but it's also through civil society participation, for us to be curious about what's happening, to raise our voices.
To look for that justice that may not be available through the mechanisms that are available to the people that are seeking it.
Hannah Balikci:
One thing that I wanted to circle back on, which we were talking about in the sense of how I think the changing of war in a way, even just this idea of the context of stuff that comes through and how we're seeing media, this prevalence of AI that we've seen, things being doctored or whatnot. What are the ethical implications of thinking of drone warfare or AI related warfare that this targeting warfare. I mean, it's in Israel Palestine, but also I think more broadly. As war changes, how do modern technologies contribute to that wiggle room that we have in terms of human rights but also, the legal frameworks? I don't know if that's the-
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
It is, and it's a great question. So there are people that concentrate their entire ... I shouldn't say entire good part of their writing that are legal academics that deal with AI and more. So if you have a drone, and you're right, it's not just been ... the Americans did it in Pakistan, right? So how do you hold what is essential and artificial intelligence accountable? Well, you can because they're not acting outside of the control of an armed force or a state actor, right? And so humanitarian law in those situations can apply, so does human rights law. So it's not outside, but this is again, the arguments that I had originally talked to you about at the beginning about the evolutiveness of human rights.
I had said that there are two things that really help to frame our understanding of human rights and the reason why there's this push and pull. The first is constructive ambiguity, which is enough wiggle rooms, so states will agree to sign. And then, it's up to opinio juris, judges, jurist, court decisions to fill in the blanks. But the second is evolutiveness. So international law understands that when it's codified, it's going to change over time. And so jurisprudentially, so to can enforcing mechanisms, it can look at things differently. It can say what we thought was okay then isn't okay now, or we need to add something more to it.
So treaties very often have additional protocols to deal with these additional problems that arise from technology. And international law is always trying to keep up with these advancements. So I don't think that there are any big gaps. I think there are ways in which you have those that are looking to fill the gaps, continue to work, and those that are looking to lessen the control, continue to try to do so.
Hannah Balikci:
In looking at this concept and just in general, what gives you hope for the ongoing struggle to protect human rights and humanity in the face of armed conflict? Is there a specific thing that you can ... that's like a through line or I don't know if there's ... I know it sometimes it feels like if things are changing all the time, is there something that you see as a ... not that everything is negative, but as something as a positive force moving forward?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
I think so. I mean, this goes back to this idea of how you speak law to war. There is a wonderful article that was written just at the beginning of 2003 by Joan Fitzpatrick, and I will get to your question in a minute. And she wrote this article called Speaking Law to Power, and there she was focusing on human rights. I think for all of us who are invested in this notion that law can be both a positive and negative, a political player, and not, I believe that there's something to the wish by the international community in general, civilians as well as states, to be part of a system that moves towards states of peace.
It may not be the case for all actors, but I think for the most part, a choice between being in war and being in peace, most people would choose peace, but there has to be structures in place that help us get there and show that there's an accountability that has a rule of law quality to it, to which everybody is held accountable. And I think that the international human rights system, as well as humanitarian law was set up to move towards this kind of utopia. We may never get there, but we keep moving towards it. And I've seen enough change and enough victims and interviewed enough victims in my life to know that they believe this to be their refuge.
And certainly human rights law, both those that are enforced by courts and in other enforcing mechanisms have made changes. We have seen that, right? If we look at the death penalty, we have seen more and more states be prohibitionist states for the death penalty. That was a big push that happened under the umbrella of human rights law. So there are victories to be able to share with you, but there's also challenges. But I do believe in the promise of it, and I think that that's what we keep reaching towards. And I also think the international community more and more is willing at least to, and by international community, I'm not talking about states, to stand up to recognize that there are certain things that are happening globally and this current political landscape that has to be addressed.
I think the encampments on campuses is a way of showing that, right? It's an awakening and whether or not it's fully understood what's happening amongst the students, it is a moment which I feel a great deal of hope that the students of this generation believe in something that is better than where we're at at the moment, and also, want to challenge authority that seem to not want to challenge those structures that bring about inequality and injustice, and that gives me a great deal of hope.
Hannah Balikci:
That's great. Thank you. I guess I keep saying I want to circle back on different things, but one of the things that I wanted to just elaborate a bit on was this idea of storytelling. I think you talked about interviewing people who experienced conflict. The value of a story I think gets across much more than what we see just through numbers. And I was wondering if you have an example either of a story or what I'm really thinking of is we think of many times where stories are used for negative outcomes, right? You think of this ... I guess I'm thinking of a specific time where you can use negative stories to say we need to have something to combat bad things, but do you also have examples of good stories that can help?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
So I think I probably have to redefine storytelling because it's something different I think, than what you're thinking of, at least in an academic term. I understand what you mean by talking about individual victimization or individual stories of hope, right? Storytelling for an academic is really the ways in which you will understand as an ethnographer that people will present a situation to you that is through their lens and their lens may for you not be truth-telling, but it's how they're informed. Another way of looking at it is we sometimes call the Rashomon effect the Kurosawa movie where you have one incident in five different witnesses and you see it through each of their lens.
Their lens is informed by their history, so they see something very different than the person next to them, that is storytelling, and that's where you pick it up. The point I think I can draw back from you is in interviewing people, as I've done ... I have two hats, right? I'm an academic, but I've worked a lot with Amnesty International on missions, and there you interview victim after victim after victim. And for the most part, the stories they tell you and the stories that you then as a human rights advocate wish to share for the world will be those stories that are going to be very depressing. Why? Because it's going to get civil society in a move much more than the stats will, right?
Much more than an academic article, but what I have seen come from this is the hope, and this goes back a little bit to what I just said before, they have a hope that the human rights framework will assist them in this, because they feel where they're being violated very often by the state, there is no justice. There is no recourse. And so they have a great deal of hope that once that's lifted up outside, there will be something there that will hear their victimization and something that will be there to redress it. And that's the hope. It's a hope through very difficult times for them, but they do have that hope and they continue to, even though they're knocked back time and time and time again.
And so for me, the reason even with all of my critiques of the human rights frameworks that I stay in it is because they do, and they really do believe in something better.
Hannah Balikci:
This year's Pearson Global Forum is on negotiations and agreement, which you are presenting at in October. How do you see this concept that we've been speaking to fitting into the theme of negotiations and agreement?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
It's the precursor, I suppose, to that. I think the first thing that I would say is that all of what I've spoken about ... today about humanitarian law, about human rights law, has led and is informed by contestation, and there is a politicization of law that happens. And I think that when you get to the negotiation table, there are going to be leveraging of accountability questions, right? So you'll have states that will argue that there has been violations on the part of the other. You'll have states that'll argue that they have actually upheld their commitment to either human rights or humanitarian law.
And I think the acceptance is that they're going to come with very different perspectives because the stories that they're telling about why they went to war or why they abused particular rights are going to be very different across the table. And I think for negotiations, there's an acceptance that there may not be a point of departure that they accept together as long as at the end, there's going to be systems of accountability that take both perspectives into account. And I think that those are where you actually have the most successful outcomes. The other thing that I would say is that we often think of negotiations and outcomes of negotiations as being forms of reconciliation.
That in some way there's an acceptance and some way there's a way of accepting the same truth and moving forward. And none of the conflicts that I have ever studied, does that happen. Very often it is an agreement to have an absence of conflict and the presence of peace, that's the motivating force and to put a set of legal structures around which both parties to the conflict feel that they're protected. So in Northern Ireland, it was putting a consociational agreement around the final negotiations, which allowed for representation by both sets of actors, both nationalists and unionists. In Israel and the occupied territories when this conflict is over, there is going to have to be a move forward from Oslo.
A move forward in negotiations. There's no way out of this, but there has to be a set of legal frameworks that allows both parties to feel that they're going to be protected as they move forward. So I think law has a role to play, but it's not necessarily in the understanding of the common acceptance of the underpinnings of the conflict or who was the victims and who were the victimizers. It's making sure that when they leave that to get to their final negotiations, that they both sets however many parties to the conflict feel that they're protected.
Hannah Balikci:
I think that goes back to this idea of justice, that if people feel the sense of justice then ... or that there's a path to justice that I can continue forward.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
And this is where peace agreements. Last thing I will say, this is where peace agreements are super important. So I know I've gone back to Northern Ireland a lot, but I am going to do it because it has held, it's one of those conflicts in which we haven't gone back to the conflict. And if you read the Belfast agreement and the preamble, it is riddled with constructively ambiguous language. Basically it says everyone has a right to these claims, if you boil it down, both unionists and nationalists are both peoples, they both have claims to territory. It is so ambiguous that everyone walked away feeling not only were they heard in their own historical trajectory, but they're going to be protected moving forward.
Now, there's been bumps, but it was brilliantly done because no one accepted or was made to be the victim victimizer in this peace agreement. So peace a agreements are really important and moving processes forward as long as they reach a final agreement that both parties can sign and feel comfortable with, and then work towards a completely overt, a complete end of conflict.
Hannah Balikci:
This idea of ambiguity kind of works in both ways, right? Where you have the wiggle room, but then it also allows for people to feel heard in both ways, I guess.
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
Yes, exactly and in peace agreements, that's super important.
Hannah Balikci:
I think one question that we like to ask all of our guests is if there was one paper or book, a knowledge material that you think is important for any person studying public policy to read or to be familiarized with, what would you select?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
There are a couple of ... Maybe I can frame it this way because international law is so big and so many people have written about it. I will give a couple of authors that I think are really important to read, both anti-colonial scholars that talk about human rights in a way that allows us to reframe and capture political philosophers, legal philosophers. So Paul Kahn wrote a piece I assigned to my students in Militant Democracy that's on torture, and it is one of the most brilliant pieces to have us understand how we can go from torture being seen as barbarian and prohibitive to how we are now accepting it. And by we, I mean we, in this room, right?
Not us personally, but civil society. So that would be one author that I would say, and in this particular piece, to read. The other are scholars like Ratna Kapur who is at Queen Mary University, also University Delhi, who's written about human rights and those frameworks that I had spoken about, the anti-colonial frameworks. But again, writing about it not to tear it down without building it up and some very specific way. And those two, I guess I would leave because the works on Northern Ireland and the works on Israel and the occupied territory are vast, and there's plenty out there. I would say just read both of the storytellings on those conflicts, but those were the two authors that I would highly recommend people read.
Hannah Balikci:
Great, thank you. There's always a thing where I wish I had asked. I'll talk about something afterwards or I think the thing that I'm trying to reckon with is I guess this idea of storytelling and truth in terms of different sides. And you talked about the peace agreements and how people can come away not feeling like a victim, but is there ever a case or just in general, where doing research, you also are doing research on memory wars, which I think is something else, that's a whole other category, but how people think about conflict and the ways that they perceive conflict, and even just what we talked about with Israel-Palestine of saying if there is a Hamas person there or there's a Hamas member there that's justifiable in terms of conflict.
How do you either break apart the storytelling or get people to ... in terms of looking at humanitarian, not just humanitarian rights, but human rights and seeing the humanity of people on both sides and that storytelling coming across the lanes to each side of the conflict. I don't know if I'm explaining myself-
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
You are, and I would say that I would pull it apart in this way. I do understand your question. So there's an idea of how you want to reach peace and how much you want to sacrifice justice to get there. I think you can reach a settlement that may be an unsettled peace or an uneasy peace and not have justice. Law requires that there is a sense of empirical fact that you can get to, and the storytelling then has to be moved away to say, if this person was killed by what means were they killed? And if you're talking about a human rights situation, were all measures taken to make sure that that was the last resort, right? There are a set of facts that you can look at that will inform whether that was done or not.
The storytelling is different. This is how we understand why state security may have killed paramilitants in Northern Ireland, and it may be a backdrop that they knew at some point they were going to do something, so they killed them in advance. That's the storytelling. But law says regardless of who you think this person is, you needed to have arrested him or her. In conflict, we can look at whether or not it's difficult. I've been in worse situations where distinction and proportionality are very hard to be able to measure, but you are able to look at things like, was there a corridor civilian corridor to allow people to escape in which you had a ceasefire in place at this time.
There are some empiricisms that can be looked at, that are required for you to be able to determine whether or not these legal principles were upheld or they weren't, right? Whether or not there are perpetrators that are guilty or not, that you hold accountable in this last branch I talked to you about. There may be sacrificing you do on that because you think if you were to ever try to do that, then you would start in another cycle of conflict. And there are plenty of places in the world where peace agreements were reached and amnesties were given. And I know Louise Melander was here recently, and she is kind of the guru on Amnesties.
And she will talk about this, right? How much do you allow states and non-state actors to be forgiven and not held accountable in the interest of peace? So sometimes reaching that last point of peace agreements and the absence of conflict means that for the parties to the conflict, they give up their ability to actually hold perpetrators accountable. And we've seen this through truth commissions. There are ways in which there are systems to set up where the victim might get some sort of satisfaction by recognition of truth, the perpetrator speaks with him, but that perpetrator is never tried and convicted in a court of law. And so sometimes, as I said, moving towards peace means that there isn't justice and they're not always aligned.
Hannah Balikci:
The last question that I think I'll ask you today, what's something that you wish we would've asked you?
Kathleen Cavanaugh:
I think ... and I kind of touched upon it, is student activism. Because last year was an extraordinary year, an extraordinary year that I've never seen before in all my years of teaching. And there are a variety of different kind of rights-based discourse that have come from what's happened, right? Freedom of expression, academic freedom. The Gaza War has, in my mind, framed it, but there's been a lot of content to it that I think is the hopeful part because I think students are engaged in processes and arguments and law and human rights and humanitarian law in a way I've never seen before. I think it gives me hope rather than fear about what's going to happen in the fall.
And yeah, it's something that when you asked what gives me hope, it's that. And I think that the debates around freedom of expression and academic freedom will continue. But I think the most important thing to note is that in an academic space, in a university space, being able to raise questions and engage in discourse that's difficult is part of what we're here for. And my hope is that in a very safe environment, we'll be able to continue to do that throughout next year and for years to come. It may not be on one topic, but that this kind of igniting of this space to me was very exciting last year. Notwithstanding, I know the difficulties that it caused some, it was quite ... Yeah, it gave me hope.
Hannah Balikci:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Professor Kathleen Cavanaugh. This episode was produced and edited by Hannah Balikci and Nishita Karun. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website at thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on LinkedIn, Twitter and Instagram @pearsoninst. Inst is spelled I-N-S-T. Thank you. If you found this episode interesting, we invite you to join us for the 2024 Pearson Global Forum, Negotiations and Agreement.
Join us on Friday, October 18th to hear from global experts as they discuss topics like the role of women in negotiations, speaking law to war, and other interesting panels around the theme of negotiations and agreement. This in-person and virtual event is free and open to all. You can find more information at thepearsonglobalforum.org.
Root of Conflict
08.08.24
Amnesties, Law, and Peace | Louise Mallinder
Hannah Balikci:
Hi, this is Hannah and you are listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You are listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
How is law understood and used by different actors during political transitions to achieve peace? In this episode, we speak with Professor Louise Mallinder, a professor in the school of law at Queen's University Belfast, and faculty affiliate of the Pearson Institute. She has a longstanding and internationally recognized expertise in amnesty laws through extensive writing and the creation of the Amnesties, Conflict and Peace database. She works as part of the Peace and Conflict Resolution Evidence Platform, led by the University of Edinburgh and funded by the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office. Professor Mallinder's teaching focuses on international human rights law, human rights practice, constitutional law, and transitional justice. We discuss how amnesties can be granted without compromising justice, the intersection of law with other disciplines in academia, and Professor Mallinder's perspectives at large on the field of transitional justice.
Natalia Zorrilla Ramos:
Hi, I am Natalia Zorrilla. I'm first year masters in public policy student and also a Pearson fellow, and happy to be here.
Louise Mallinder:
Hi, I'm Louise Mallinder. I'm professor of law from Queen's University in Belfast, and this year I'm a deposing professor at the University of Chicago and a faculty affiliate at the Pearson Institute.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Hi, I'm Isabella Nascimento. I'm first year master of public policy student here at the University of Chicago, and also a Pearson fellow.
Hannah Balikci:
And I'm Hannah Balikci. I'm a second year MPP student here at Harris, a Pearson fellow and the producer of Root of Conflict for this year. So thank you for being in studio with us, Professor Mallinder.
Louise Mallinder:
Thank you very much for inviting me. I'm delighted to be on Root of Conflict.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Okay, so I will start with an introduction here. I would like first, for you to introduce yourself and your work.
Louise Mallinder:
Okay. So I live and work in Northern Ireland in Belfast, which is the capital of Northern Ireland. And as I'm sure many of your listeners know, Northern Ireland is a devolved region of the United Kingdom, but it's a place where its constitutional status is contested. There is a proportion of the population who identify as British and would like Northern Ireland to be part of the United Kingdom, and there's a proportion of the population who identify as Irish and would like Northern Ireland to be reunited with the rest of the island of Ireland. This grievance was one of the central factors in a 30-year armed conflict in Northern Ireland from 1968 to 1998, which in itself was one phase of violence in a much longer history. Since 1998, Northern Ireland has had a successful peace process. There hasn't been a return to armed conflict. There's still a lot of work to be done, but nonetheless, the progress has been really significant.
And I live and work in that space, and so I think that to a large degree, influences what I do. So I work as a law professor, but I work in the field of transitional justice, which is an area of research and practice that borrows from different bits of international law. International human humanitarian law, international human rights law, international criminal law, but also looks at how those legal regimes play out in very challenging political environments and at times where the law itself is undergoing reform and changing. So I think working in Northern Ireland, working in a space where there's a density of people in academia and in civil society who have huge expertise in this and have it as a lived experience, I think really animates how I think about many of the challenges of transitional justice.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Thank you very much. Now a follow-up question, how has your research, this means interests, areas, or disciplines evolved over time?
Louise Mallinder:
That's a great question. I think I started out at university by studying a degree in economic and social history and politics. At that point, I hadn't been grown up in Northern Ireland, I'd moved there and I was interested in learning more about the place I was in. And so I found myself drawn to modules in Irish history, but also modules in deeply divided societies and particularly the Middle Eastern politics. And so as part of my undergraduate studies, I did my dissertation on the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and I did voluntary work in the US Bank for a period of time, so I was writing about the settlements. And so I think that brought me into trying to understand much more about what happens in conflict spaces. And so then I moved into law, thinking law had practical tools for how we grapple with some of these dilemmas, that's why I did a master's in human rights law and then a PhD in law. And I think that background shapes the type of legal questions I'm interested in and the way I approach law.
So I tend to think of law from an interdisciplinary perspective. Now I'm a law professor, but I work in an interdisciplinary institute. And I want to understand ideas about how law intersects with peace, thinking about it perhaps how in transitions from conflict to peace, law shapes the types of negotiations that are had, the types of bargains that are reached, and how lawyers or legal institutions acting in those processes can shape particular outcomes. I'm also interested in how understandings of law shapes people's visions of what the piece should look like, both while the conflict is ongoing and afterwards. I'm also interested in how law shapes how people imagine what justice looks like, and what sort of harms they see and don't see during conflict periods. And in particular how law can work to both reveal or conceal different types of human rights violations that happened in the past.
And so these are the types of questions that gradually from my different degrees and then into my academic life, I've been exploring in different projects. So some of them have involved looking at particular transitional justice mechanisms like amnesty laws in different countries around the world. Some of them have involved looking at different cohorts of transitional justice actors. In recent years, I worked in a project about the role of lawyers as political actors in different transitional societies. I'm also interested in international law as well, broadly. So how these norms are formed at the international level and trickled down into different transitional states.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
So could you please define amnesties for those who are not familiar with?
Louise Mallinder:
Sure. And it's a great question because amnesties are a deeply politically loaded term, and often in contexts, you see the word amnesty being used to describe different types of measures that people are uncomfortable with or resistant to. And I think what's complicated even further is there's no international definition of what an amnesty is, and the domestic legal systems of different countries have different approaches to how they apply amnesties or how they use that term. But in my research, I tend to think of it as measures that apply before somebody is convicted and they operate generally to prevent criminal investigations, prosecutions and convictions. So that's not to say that crimes can't be investigated by truth commissions or by other mechanisms, but an amnesty blocks individual criminal responsibility.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
And now, could you give us one example of a conflict that illustrates some of the concepts can be the concept of amnesty, of your work in academia?
Louise Mallinder:
Sure. Illustrates the concept how? Just different examples of how amnesties have been used or why, or?
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Yeah, yeah. Or a conflict that this has been a debate on.
Louise Mallinder:
Well, to be honest, there are debates in most conflicts around the world. I mean, in my database... I created a database of all the amnesties I could find around the world since 1945, and I've published a subset of that, that relates to conflict settings. And I found that out of the hundreds of amnesties I've identified, about 75% of them since 1990, have been in response to conflict. When I tried to track that against states in the world that have had armed conflicts, I found that over 70% of countries that have had armed conflict have used amnesties in some form during their transition from conflict to peace. And about half of those countries have used amnesties for serious international crimes or human rights violations. And so they're a very prevalent tool in response to conflict situations.
But I think what always endlessly fascinating for me is thinking about how differently they're used in different places, perhaps because of different norms and understandings around justice, different political balances of power at the time of transition, and also the backdrop of the nature of the violations and other justice responses that have been achieved. And so I think what influences me is that a lot of the literature on amnesties, I think has been heavily influenced by the practice of amnesty laws in South America. Some of those are conflict settings. Some of them are more commonly understood as transitions from dictatorship.
But by and large, in the 70s, 80s, early 1990s, in that part of the world where amnesties were used, they were granted very broadly to cover all serious human rights violations, and they tended to be unconditional. By which I mean if you were a perpetrator of serious human rights violations, an amnesty would be declared, you would just benefit from it and you'd have to make no effort to contribute to peace, democracy, or addressing victims' rights. So they're deeply problematic amnesty laws, and I think they still shape some of the universal understandings of amnesties and their relationship with law.
But I think what's been interesting is that over a number of years we've seen particularly influenced by the South African experience of amnesty and truth, that amnesties can quite often be conditioned on trying to contribute to peace and reconciliation and victim's rights. So the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission is the best known example of this. And in this context, after the end of the apartheid regime, the new government coming in set up a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. And in this legislation, it provided that the Truth and Reconciliation Commission had the power to grant amnesty for political offenses, with political offenses being understood as including serious human rights violations.
But this was not an unconditional amnesty. So if people wanted to avail themselves of this, they had to apply, there was a formal written application process. And then many of them had to come in and give testimony for the most serious human rights violations, this was televised testimony and public hearings. And victims could take part in those hearings, they could have legal representation, they could ask questions, and they could make statements about how these violations had impacted upon them. And this was meant to contribute to not just helping your victims be able to get some of the answers they need in their individual cases, but building a clearer picture of the causes and consequences of the violence that happened during the apartheid regime. And so that's very different from a completely unconditional amnesty that completely closes the door in the past.
So there are a lot of different measures that we see. And I think today, roughly equal numbers of amnesty laws introduced during or after a conflict tend to cover serious human rights violations, and many of those are conditional in different ways, either on people contributing to security through disarmament, demobilization, non-recidivism, or through contributing in different ways to addressing victims' needs to truth and reparations.
Natalia Zorrilla Ramos:
Yeah, thank you. I think that was a great overview of your work in general terms. But how do you define the conditions under which amnesties can be granted in post-conflict settings without compromising justice?
Louise Mallinder:
That's a difficult question, and I think what I'm trying to do in my current research is investigate that more. So I think there are different positions we see today in statements about international law and in academic literature about when amnesties can be used and how far law restricts their use. So the United Nations, for example, for a long time has said there can be no amnesties for international crimes and serious human rights violations. It's written into resolutions from the UN General Assembly and Security Council, as well as a number of UN policy reports. And that position has been influential and has been echoed in the case law of some international courts. But I think what's been interesting for me is, I see that not all courts agree with that.
So in particular, in 2020, the appeals chamber of the International Criminal Court in the Gaddafi case, said international law on the status of amnesties is still in the developmental stage. So they're saying it's still unsettled. The Inter-American Commission on Human and People's Rights has said, well, there is a norm prohibiting amnesties for serious crimes, but it only applies to unconditional amnesties. So for them, they're like, "Conditional amnesties are permissible even for serious violations, it's just unconditional ones that are not." Other cases have pointed to the possibility that amnesties introduced at the time of peace negotiations need to have more flexibility around them, recognizing the difficult circumstances that those decisions are taken in. And so what I'm finding is actually, there isn't a clear answer at the moment about where amnesties can be used or what sort of restrictions there are on states. And that's what I'm trying to research.
And I think the reason we see these differences in divergences and different judicial opinions is because they're using different methodologies to identify if these legal rules exist. The key difference that you see there is how much weight they attach to what states are actually doing. So some courts tend to look at written texts, they will look at soft flow standards, principles and guidelines developed by the United Nations or UN General Assembly resolutions. They will look at treaties that require prosecutions of serious violations and infer from those that if an amnesty stops prosecutions and it must be impermissible. But what they don't do is look at what states are actually doing. And that matters because traditional perspectives to how we understand customary international law, which is one of the sources of law or how we interpret international treaties, means that state practice should be one way of thinking about that.
And so while all the other sources that courts are looking at are important and valuable, I think they should be looked at alongside today practice, but that's been missing from a lot of the jurisprudence at the moment. So that's what I'm trying to investigate at the moment, using my database and other empirical data that's out there. I think what I'm finding is that the state practice is quite mixed. The work is still emerging, I'm still halfway through writing the book. But I think it's hard to say there's a widespread state practice in terms of rejecting amnesties for international crimes.
Natalia Zorrilla Ramos:
Well, you mentioned how different international courts interpret the law, and I want to talk specifically about the ICC, the International Criminal Court. It has faced criticism from primarily prosecuting cases in Africa since its establishment with the adoption of the Rome Statute in 1998. In your opinion, what steps should the ICC take to broaden its prosecutorial reach in other regions of the world?
Louise Mallinder:
Okay, thank you very much. So I think the first thing to bear in mind when we think about the court, where the court exercises its jurisdiction is that there are constraints in the Rome Statute. Firstly, the court can only exercise jurisdiction over states that have ratified the Rome Statute or have issued a declaration to do so, or over places where the UN Security Council authorizes them to do jurisdiction. So we have those sort of territorial constraints. So there are parts to the world, including quite powerful states where the ICC does not have any jurisdictional reach at the moment. Then after we think about those contexts, there's also different triggers for cases coming before the court. So there needs to be a state referral or UN Security Council resolution, or the prosecutor needs to exercise their own initiative to investigate somewhere.
So those place some substantial constraints about where the court can look. I mean, it has a lot of jurisdiction across African countries because African countries have ratified their own statute, perhaps more than countries in other parts of the world, particularly in Asia. So I think that's one reality that we're seeing differences. And many of the African cases came before the court because those countries self-referred them. And I think there are... Or because the security council referred them as well, is another reason why some of those cases came before the court. But I think the ICC in recent years has tried to diversify its jurisdiction. So if you look at the cases where it has preliminary examinations now or open investigations, there are a number of contexts in Asia, in South America where it is actively investigating crimes. There are problems with how that's progressing. It's track record of investigating crimes against more powerful countries like the UK or the US, perhaps raises some questions.
I think at the moment, there are a lot of comparisons being drawn to how the court has responded to the situation in Ukraine and the situation in Palestine and Gaza, but that's an evolving context, and I think there are differences between the court being able to get into Ukrainian territory and work with the cooperation of the state to investigate and document the human rights violations and what's happening in Gaza, where the ICC investigators can't get in and investigate at the moment. So I think there are differences in challenges, but I think the court is trying to broaden its jurisdictional reach.
I think with the question of amnesties though, it's different issues. I think there have been a number where African countries have pushed back against the ICC at different points over the last decade or decade and a half. There's been particular issues that have animated that. Head of state immunity is one key issue that I think has been a fault line between them, but also African Union member states have talked about the risk of the ICC intervening in active peace process situations, and thinking they should hold off a little bit or think about how their interventions might influence the outcomes of peace or make peace more difficult to achieve.
That was something that was particularly discussed in relation to the ICC's investigation in Uganda during the Juba Peace Talks in 2006 to 2008. There an amnesty law had been introduced in 2000. It was an open-ended amnesty, it was being renewed each year, so it was still active, and that was designed to encourage rebel groups from the Lord's Resistance Army, and a number of other rebel groups that are active in Uganda, to surrender and disarm.
While the peace talks were happening, victims groups in Uganda who had lobbied the Ugandan government to introduce the amnesty law started lobbying the court to say, we don't want you to... We want to keep the amnesty process, we don't want the court to interrupt this. I mean, part of that I think, was animated by their desire for peace. They wanted to bring the conflict to an end. I think it was also a product of the fact that many of the people who'd fought in the LRA had been forcibly recruited, and many of them had been forcibly recruited as children and made to commit awful atrocities, and I think those communities in recognition of it, were wanting to have those people who'd been forcibly recruited returned home, and to enable them to reintegrate.
But I think also running through a lot of those discussions was a sense that the communities in Northern Uganda had their own understandings of justice that weren't criminal justice. They had traditional rituals to do with repairing harms, they were committed to do with reintegrating people when they come back. And they felt that those mechanisms could be applied to the crimes that have been committed during the conflict in ways that would help reintegrate the offenders, and help bring a sense of justice to the affected communities. And so, they were asking, could we use these forms of justice instead of criminal justice that might preclude it or might prevent people coming forwards and surrendering? At that point, the court didn't give too much weight for those situations. I mean, that's something they could consider more.
I mean, I've been interested in recent years that in a very, very different context in Colombia there, the International Criminal Court was perhaps a bit more cautious when it came to disrupting the peace negotiations that we were going on between the Colombian government and the FARC guerrilla group, leading up to the peace agreement in 2015, 2016. And there, while there's not a traditional indigenous form of justice, what has been proposed is kind of a tiered approach that allows for some forms of criminal prosecutions, but allows for prosecutorial strategies that recognize that some offenders will be prosecuted and some will not, given the scale of the atrocities, and also recognizes that where people are prosecuted and convicted, there's scope for leniency in how they're punished. So there's alternative sanctions, there's reduced sentences, and the International Criminal Court has approved those measures, has said it's closed its involvement in that site, saying that they could be in compliance with their own statute.
Natalia Zorrilla Ramos:
Thank you. I think you brought a really important point about the international system and how it actually needs states to cooperate in order to function well. So based on your research, what are key lessons or recommendations you would offer to countries undergoing political transitions and considering amnesties?
Louise Mallinder:
Yeah. Sorry, I'm just thinking at the moment I live in Northern Ireland, and we spent ages trying to give lessons to the British government over how to deal with some of these issues, and they have gone in the opposite direction and have introduced what is largely quite a broad amnesty for serious offenses committed during the 30-year conflict in Northern Ireland. It's notionally conditional, but not in much of a substantive sense, and certainly there's no guarantee that any information that's provided under that scheme will filter its way back to victims or to Northern Irish society. So it's a problematic form of conditionality. So I guess the first thing I would say is don't look at what Northern Ireland's doing right now. This instance, the UK is not a good model to draw upon.
I think that when states are approaching this, I think they should look... As a lawyer, I guess law is kind of where I started thinking about it. And thinking about the range of human rights obligations that they have under different treaties and international humanitarian law as well. And looking at those things holistically and recognizing that all of those conventions create obligations for states to prevent further violations, which is connected to the right to peace, so that is part of the conversation, and that the states have duties to investigate to repair harm. And these things can all be understood in different ways and adapted to different contexts.
And so while I think international law provides a framework that should think about what are our obligations and how do we balance them against each other, harmonize these different duties in ways that tries to be constructive in terms of delivering peace, I think also recognizing that there is scope within that for thinking creatively about what's feasible within those countries and what ideas of justice really deliver for people on the ground, in a way that's feasible at the time of the transition. So I don't think there's a one-size-fits-all approach.
And I think generally in my work, when I go to different societies and they ask me about what form of amnesty they should have or not have, I tend to answer by asking them different types of questions. Well, what is it you want to achieve? Is this about trying to get rebels to disarm? Is this about trying to get answers about the past? Is this about trying to bring different communities together? Whether an amnesty is needed at all, is a particular question [inaudible 00:25:48]. So I think there's lots of things to think through, and it's rarely a choice between an amnesty or not an amnesty, but it can be about, well, what is the capacity of the state to deliver criminal justice? How much does that resonate with the community and how do we fit that alongside the other needs that we have to achieve at this point?
Hannah Balikci:
I think that gives a good transition into talking about the conflict and peace database that you've alluded to that you're building. I have two questions. One is, could you explain the main objectives of the database and how it's structured to facilitate research and policymaking? And then maybe just building off of the last point before you go into that, is there an amnesty or transitional justice program or process that you found has been particularly effective, and could you go through what the main points of that were? And again, I understand the localization of every amnesty and traditional justice process, but was there one that you considered a success or? They're all obviously in each context, but one that you think is a good example to point out to people?
Louise Mallinder:
Okay. So I guess on that, it's a difficult question because amnesties, I think are introduced for a number of different goals. Actually coincidentally, this weekend for a conference paper I'm doing next month, I started looking through amnesty laws, picking out how those laws communicate their own objectives, what they say they're trying to achieve. And many of them talk about peace, obviously. Many of them mention reconciliation and it's understood in different ways,, like national unity or forgetting. Many of them talk about development, talk about economic reconstruction, talk about addressing inequalities, and those are quite different objectives for an amnesty process than we often see in the literature. Some of them also talk about the goal of the amnesty being to encourage competence, to disarm and reintegrate.
And so that speaks to me about these are all quite different measures. If you want to understand how successful an amnesty is in encouraging rebels to surrender and reintegrate into society, well, there might be ways of tracking that. Usually there's some sort of administrative functions that are involved in overseeing those processes, and you can have numbers and you can have a think about how this actually worked. I think in practice there's a lot of amnesties that do that. Sometimes the effectiveness is challenged by slow implementation by the state.
So they'll say, yes, we are going to... We'll get an amnesty. But also, we're going to provide you with certain measures of security or certain support to reintegrate yourself into society. And those other support structures come later or don't come at all, and those promises aren't met. And sometimes that dissuades the rest of the competence from coming forwards. And so the success of the amnesty may not be about the idea of the amnesty, but it can be about how it was implemented afterwards. Where amnesties have goals to achieve peace, the success of that might depend on how you understand peace. I think a lot of scholars, a lot of the literature that's out there is trying to measure the impact of amnesties and conflict occurrence. And so there are numbers of international relations scholars who published work on that in the last few years.
Those studies are really interesting. They'll kind of think about amnesties in slightly different ways and think about peace slightly different ways, and they've come up with slightly different results. Many of them say that an amnesty introduced as part of a peace agreement does have a positive outcome in peace. So that's one measure. Does the main armed conflict occur? And you could measure that and say, well, actually, there's quite a lot of cases around the world where an amnesty was part of a successful transition to a peaceful landscape. Last week I was teaching my students about Sierra Leone, and that's a context where there was a peace agreement in 1999 where there was a broad amnesty enacted within that agreement and a truth commission. A couple of years later, the Sierra Leonean government asked the United Nations to help them set up a hybrid court, the Special Court of Sierra Leone, to try the leaders of the main armed groups that have fought in that conflict. So that court indicted 13 individuals and convicted nine of them.
But the thousands of other offenders in Sierra Leone who had committed very serious violations, benefited from the amnesty scheme. It was part of the terms and conditions of the disarmament and demobilization program, that they would get amnesty as part of that. And I think what's really striking for me is that at the time of that peace agreement, Sierra Leone had profound challenges. It had a very weak stage, there was little confidence in public institutions. It had very little financial resources to draw upon. They were heavily indebted as a nation. The rebel groups are quite powerful within the society, and the scale of the violence that had happened is jaw-dropping. It was really, really, really brutal crimes committed against civilians.
But Sierra Leone is now the 47th most peaceful country in the world, third most peaceful country in Africa. And so whether that is to do with the amnesty or to do with the successful demobilization and reintegration or to do with the truth commission or the Special Court of Sierra Leone, often it's a combination of all of these things that can make a big difference. And political will, I think is a big part of it in many of these societies. So I think what the outcomes of an amnesty are, what a successful amnesty is, depends on what you're thinking of, what the amnesty is intended to achieve.
Hannah Balikci:
Got it. Yeah, that's very helpful. I think, going off of some things that you've already built upon in this interview, could you explain the main objectives of then creating the conflict and peace database, what you're tracking, how it's structured to facilitate your research and research of others and policymaking that comes from looking at these commissions?
Louise Mallinder:
Sure. Initially it began during my master's dissertation, because that's when I started looking at amnesty laws. The year between my undergraduate and postgraduate studies, I worked as an editorial and research assistant in Brussels, in Belgium, and my job partially involved working on an access database, so I became familiar with these tools as ways of organizing data. Then I came back to Northern Ireland and I started working on amnesties for my master's dissertation. And I was reading all these different examples of amnesties in the literature and needed some way to organize my own thoughts. So it started out as quite an elaborate table in a Word document. And then as it got bigger, I didn't expect to find as many amnesties as I did. At the end of my master's thesis, I can't remember exactly, but I probably had less than 100 and I was like, "That's loads." That must be nearly all of them. But then I ended up doing my PhD on that, and the project started getting bigger and more complicated. And so then I had to teach myself how to create an access database.
And by the end of my thesis, I think I had over 500 amnesties introduced in that period, so it really spiraled beyond what I expected. But what I was doing deliberately trying to systematically capture those things was a couple of things. And it was always intended to be public at the end of that research. It took me a while to get it online, but I always kind of wanted to put it out there. And I think the reasons were, because as I mentioned a little while ago, I think much of our understandings of amnesty laws are shaped by the experiences in South America, and then after that, the experiences in South Africa. But they are kind of two very, very different types of amnesties, but they're not representative of all the different diverse forms of amnesty that are used around the world. And so part of what I was trying to do, is trying to expose all those differences and think about the different design choices that are available to states, and to get people to start thinking about those different measures.
And I think too, also as a lawyer, what I wanted to try and understand was patterns and how states are doing this. And the reason is that international law comes from either state signing up to international treaties or it comes from states engaging in particular practices because they think they have a legal obligation to do so, that's customary international law. And the case law of the International Court of Justice says for something to be a rule of a customary international law, there needs to be a widespread state practice engaging in certain behaviors. And so using my database gave me a way to count to that, to track it, to be able to think about how this is evolving over time, whether international law allows for regional customers to exist alongside global ones? And so I could look at, oh, well, what's different about amnesties in South America compared to other parts of the world? Or are there differences around how different regimes are using amnesties? And so I could use the data to try and track all those differences and then use that to talk about what the status of international law is.
Hannah Balikci:
Great, thank you. I think you've said this before, but the idea of an international norm for amnesties, and if so, are they binding, right? If there's a norm, do the states actually stick to them? How has the database been used? Do you have any information on how it's been used either through research or by policymakers or international bodies, in shaping these responses to ongoing conflicts? Do you think there's a binding norm or is it still forming? I know different places have said different things in terms of the norms for amnesties.
Louise Mallinder:
Well, I'm only partway through the book that I'm investigating. So I don't know yet where I'm finally going to end up on that. The work that informs the database that I have written up in various ways, has been used quite widely. So I haven't looked for a while, to kind of track how people are using it, but I know when I looked before, comments I've made about the use of amnesties have their frequency, where they're used most often, have found their ways into judgments of some of the international courts or submissions to them from different actors. It's been used by the Grand Chamber, the European Court of Human Rights, and they were talking... It informed an intervention that I and others wrote in terms of the Marcus case. And it's been cited in different policy reports at the UN and other bodies.
And so that type of practical resource, I think is something that there is an appetite for among those who are working on these issues and trying to make sense of them. But I'm not sure recently what recent examples of it. When I'm framing the research questions for my book, I ask, is there a norm, and if so, is it an emerging norm of international law? Or is it a fully established legal rule that has binding legal effects on states? Or is there no rule at all? Because I think before the recent developments of the UN position and that's been taken up by a number of other actors, amnesties are prohibited, what existed before that was the rule in additional protocol two to the Geneva Conventions Article 65, that code on states or encourage them to grant the broadest possible amnesties at the end of internal armed conflicts. So that was the old rule. Now is the question about whether there's this new rule to say states are encouraged to grant amnesties at the end of armed conflict except for international crimes and serious human rights violations.
I still have to do more work clarifying in my own head, but what the significance is of saying if something's an emerging norm, is that a soft flow, something that states can do, they're not violating international law if they refrain from granting amnesties, but I think is definitely the case, of course. But whether the states feel they have a binding legal obligation not to grant amnesties for international crimes, I think it's going to be harder to find overwhelming evidence that that's the case. I can certainly find evidence that some states are moving in that direction, that have been willing to exclude international crimes from peace agreements, from domestic legislation, often because of international pressure from the United Nations or other actors or conflict mediators. But I think many states are still willing to grant those amnesties.
And what's interesting for me too, is that if something is a binding international legal norm, international law and international relations scholarship would suggest that if that breaches of that norm should be an exception, and where states violate that norm, they should expect pushback from other states. They should expect criticism, condemnation, some sort of outcome. And I think what I'm finding when I'm trying to look at that, I've been looking at where states sign up to peace agreements or the types of recommendations they give each other in the Universal Periodic Review, what I'm finding by and large, is states are quite silent about other states granting amnesties. It's not something that's triggering a huge amount of backlash. So if you look at the Universal Periodic Review, for example, in cycles one to three of that mechanism, which is a peer review mechanism run by the UN Human Rights Council, it's gone through three cycles over a number of years. And across those cycles, states have given each other 90,000 recommendations. So I thought I'd find loads about amnesties when I searched through databases, there were 13.
Hannah Balikci:
Wow.
Louise Mallinder:
Yeah. So I'm not seeing big evidence that this is something that states are really pushing back as much as perhaps... I think where there is opposition to amnesties, it tends to come much more from the human rights community and for understandable reasons, and come from the United Nations. But it's not something we're seeing states doing in terms of their relationships with each other very much.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Not even naming and shaming?
Louise Mallinder:
Not, but states are doing [inaudible 00:39:50]. Not as much, no. I mean, there are examples where it is happening. So for my own context in Northern Ireland, the Irish government has recently taken the British government to court, or to the European Court of Human Rights, complaining about the Legacy Act. So that is one example where one state is very, very clearly pushing back against what they see as a very broad amnesty. But I think those types of responses are rare.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
We wanted to understand how do you see the intersection of law with other disciplines such as international relations or economics or sociology, enhancing the understanding of transitional justice and peace building?
Louise Mallinder:
Okay. That is a very broad question. Transitional justice as a field, has always been a very interdisciplinary one. It began really, from the work of political scientists studying the transitions in South America in the 1980s and looking at the circumstances that give rise to a political transition and thinking about the different dynamics of those transitions, whether they were negotiated or regime collapsed, and speculating about what that meant as an outcome. And that work by political scientists was accompanied by the work of academic lawyers and human rights actors, trying to ascertain what the legal framework is for these moments of transition. And I think it's interesting if you read some of the historical accounts of that period, Paige Arthur has an excellent article on it, but also some of the human rights actors involved have written quite reflective pieces on it.
And one I particularly appreciated is a biography by Juan Mendez, who's a human rights actor. And he talked about how during the dictatorships, all the human rights mobilization was geared around naming and shaming. It was geared around calling on states to stop their abuses. But when the military dictatorships collapsed and the abuses did stop, then the human rights actors felt that naming and shaming didn't go far enough, given the types of abuses that happened. So they began to pivot and try and call for accountability. But there wasn't much... International criminal law wasn't as developed as it is now. International human rights law hadn't taken a turn towards criminal prosecutions that it did do in the subsequent years. So what you saw is an effort by lawyers working in this space, to try and start interpreting treaties in different ways, to try and say there are prosecutorial obligations on states where there have been serious human rights violations. And those ideas were then taken up by the different regional human rights courts in the United Nations.
And so lawyers played a very strong role in pushing for the development to the field within a particular orientation. And they did so with human rights actors on the ground in some of the South American countries who had quite a rule of law, legalistic tradition within their societies. Over the years, I think the work in transitional justice has broadened out considerably, and I think for the better. So you have many different scholars from different perspectives looking at how to understand questions related to justice, and relation to transitions. So you have criminal just springing their insights about well, what does it mean to prosecute perpetrators of serious human rights violations? How do we understand these crimes? How do we understand these actors? And does deterrence work in the same way in these settings? For example, what does retribution mean when you're talking about really serious violations?
You have sociologists trying to understand some of the dynamics around how societies move forward, ideas that collect historical memory and narrative, and thinking how does that filter into ideas of reconciliation, for example? Anthropologists will want to understand people's engagement with justice and how they envision it and what their cultural norms mean. And of course, there's a huge feminist literature running through all of it, and indigenous literature is increasing, and they're all bringing very different perspectives about what types of harms we need to see, what we need to address and what justice looks like.
So I think a lot of that literature has been quite critical of the legalistic focus in the field of transitional justice. I think it's quite narrowly focused on serious physical violence, and what's been missing from that is a lot of the structural violence that is often a root cause of conflict, and it's often aggravated during the conflict, often has much longer backdrops in different periods of victimization, including criminalization that are independent. And so they're trying to expose some of those longer term histories, and the complex structures that feed into the violence I think is really important for thinking about how do we prevent this happening again? So I think looking beyond law when thinking about transitional justice has been hugely important for giving a more complex and nuanced understanding.
Hannah Balikci:
I think that transition's pretty... I mean, no pun intended with transition, but I think that goes actually pretty well into the next question we're going to ask was, does transitional justice ever end the expansion of the field? Is there a cutoff or a norm that is in existence when looking at this? If you're looking at the situation of actors who have either died or victims' descendants looking at colonization as well, is there a sense that it ever ends or? I don't know your thoughts on that. Yeah.
Louise Mallinder:
I think when the field first began, there was definitely a lot of literature talking about transitions as really discreet moments. Short moments of opportunity where everything had to be done quite quickly because either attention would wane or become difficult to seize the moment. And usually, I think at that point, transition was sort of thought of as a period between the end of the old regime, and perhaps the first democratic elections of the new regime. But I think very quickly, really as a field of old, I think that understanding of transition as something very short-term and discreet is being questioned. I think today, we see transitional justice being used for decades after crimes had taken place.
So some of the earliest transitions were the ones in Argentina and Chile. And there I think what we've seen, is waves of transitional justice, where in the initial period after the military dictatorship holding widespread prosecutions became quite difficult and was blocked by amnesties in both settings. But as situations changed within those countries, the political outlook changed, there were legal institutions changed in terms of their composition or the constitutions were rewritten, there were various things that happened, that made it possible to reopen some of those criminal prosecutions. And so they're still going on in those contexts even now, many, many years into the transition. So I think that's a common theme, that it does go on for a long time and actually it changes as circumstances allow.
In other contexts, I think what we see is perhaps people's expectations of what transitional justice should deliver, shift as the transition goes on. So in South Africa, in the early years, there was obviously the Truth Commission with its amnesty process, there was a possibility of prosecutions for those who did not apply for amnesty or denied it, and there was meant to be reparations coming out of that, although those recommendations of the Truth Commission were never fully implemented. What there wasn't, was perhaps a broader look at the socioeconomic structures and structural inequalities in South African society as a result of apartheid. And so I think in recent years there's been much more of a pushback about that, and it's often framed as the unfinished business of the transition, things that were put to one side and people are asking for those things to be addressed.
And so you do see that in different transitions, that demands evolve as more things become possible, or perhaps the limitations earlier on become much more apparent. So I don't think it ends, and I think in many contexts actually demands for transitional justice. We know now cross generations where they're not resolved, where they're not really addressed. Spain is a very commonly incited example of this, where there was the Spanish Civil War, then the Franco regime, then a transition that was characterized by a very broad amnesty known as a Pact of Forgetting, so there wasn't really much space for looking into any of the crimes that had happened.
But since the early 2000s, there's been a push to kind of challenge some of those historical narratives, to exhume mass graves, to challenge the way that the Franco regime is remembered in the public sphere. And lots of efforts to kind of undo the past in that sense, even if it's not criminal prosecutions, but it's all still transitional justice, and a lot of that is being driven by descendants of those who were killed during the Spanish Civil War. And so if things aren't addressed, you can pretty much guarantee that those demands will not go away, that they will continue. But I think for me, it's hard to fully... I think a lot of the goals we think of as transitional justice or almost ideal types.
In the context where I live in Northern Ireland, whether we're still a transitional society, whether we're still in a peace process, is something that people debate. But I think people don't question that we still have problems, that our reconciliation hasn't gone as far as everybody would like, that our political institutions are still unstable, and that the past is one of the dividing lines there. And so I don't know what perfect reconciliation in North Ireland would look like, but I think it's something we can work towards and we can still make benefits for. And I think it's something that requires vigilance too, because you can be working towards something, but external political circumstances like Brexit for example, or other things that may arise in other societies can cause regression, can cause tensions, can make things more challenging. And so it's something that states are on a journey towards these aspirational goals, but how people imagine those goals, how they're seen, can evolve over time and the journey may not be linear.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
We are now getting to the conclusion of our podcast. So if there was one paper or book that you would recommend to students of public policy, which one would it be?
Louise Mallinder:
God, I need to think about that.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
It can be a podcast as well.
Hannah Balikci:
And you can name more than one too, if you can't pick.
Louise Mallinder:
At the moment, I don't think there's one text in the transitional justice field that really gives a how-to guide to address transitional justice. But there are some that give very practical guides for how to think about particular institutions. So I am thinking of Mark Freeman's book on Truth Commissions and Procedural Fairness, as an example of a really excellent book that kind of goes step by step between these are the things you need to think about if you're setting up a truth commission. So that's a very, very practical tool.
But if someone wanted a broader overview of the field, of where it is today, I think there is a research handbook on transitional justice that's recently been edited by my colleagues in Queens, in Belfast, Cheryl Lawther and Luke Moffett. And that's an excellent resource because it covers a whole range of topics. So if anybody wants to know quickly, how do I think about this question? Or the type of transition I'm working on is a transition from conflict or a transition from dictatorship, or I want to know how to address the involvement of women in a peace process, it would be a one-stop shop to cover all the issues that you'd want to be having a look at. So I'd recommend that one.
Natalia Zorrilla Ramos:
Great. And I think this would be the last question, it's asked to every guest that we have in the podcast. So what is something you wish we would have asked you?
Louise Mallinder:
I don't know, you've been really comprehensive, I think. I guess when I gave the talk the other week, somebody asked me what I think is going to happen next or what happens with how geopolitics is affecting transitional justice? So maybe that one. I think we're at a very interesting moment for the field of transitional justice. Since it emerged, it was always tied very much to the global legal order and an idea that there was an expansion of legal norms and institutions, that we are moving towards an age of accountability. You see this type of language being very, very clear in statements by the UN secretary-general, for example, but other actors as well. And a lot of that was premised in the sense that states were increasingly buying into these norms and increasingly supporting them. I think now we're at a moment where there's growing questioning of a lot of those assumptions.
Obviously globally, we're seeing a pushback against the international legal order in different ways. We have seen really egregious violations of human rights happening in different parts of the world, and the existence of international criminal courts sadly doesn't seem to be able to abate that suffering or to even encourage competent factions to refrain from particular types of violations. So I think that perhaps challenges some of the ideas for what is feasible and what transitional justice can really achieve in those contexts.
I think too, a lot of progress was made because of a trajectory towards more peace agreements. The conflicts were ending and there were going to be comprehensive peace agreements to be reached. That is less common today. I'm quite struck by how conflict mediators are saying we're going to see less of those big comprehensive peace agreements and more partial agreements, ceasefire agreements, humanitarian agreements, and that makes it harder to try and set up a comprehensive vision for what transitional justice should look like. So in some ways, I think that causes challenge, it causes concern that perhaps mechanisms or actors that are bolstered to push towards greater accountability aren't going to be as influential or aren't going to be as willing to act as they were in the past. And it's notable when you see democratic states turning more towards authoritarianism or turning away from international human rights norms, that's something that causes alarm within the field.
But I do wonder whether some of it could be an opportunity to address some of the challenges that people have been raising with the problems with legalism within the transitional justice field? I think in many societies where international legal institutions have not been able to intervene, what you see is a lot of energy and agency coming from civil society on the ground. You see people turning to different types of mechanisms, civil society documentation work, artistic projects, community-based justice mechanisms are creating ways of addressing these problems that are very much embedded in the local communities. And so some of that might actually, in the long term, be good for thinking about what does locally grounded transitional justice mean?
Hannah Balikci:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Professor Louise Mallinder. This episode is produced and edited by Hannah Balikci and [inaudible 00:55:05]. Thank you to our interviewers, Natalia Zorrilla, Isabella Pestana, and Hanna Balikci. Special thanks to UC3P, and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website, pearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter @pearsoninst. Inst is spelled I-N-S-T. Thank you.
If you found this episode interesting, we invite you to join us for the 2024 Pearson Global Forum: Negotiations and Agreement. Join us on Friday, October 18th to hear from global experts as they discuss topics like the role of women in negotiations, speaking law to war, and other interesting panels around the theme of negotiations and agreement. This in-person and virtual event is free and open to all. You can find more information at thepearsonglobalforum.org.
Root of Conflict
07.11.24
Human Rights in North Korea | Julie Turner
Hannah Balikci:
Hi, this is Hannah and you are listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast. You are listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
How does the United States coordinate with regional partners to promote human rights in North Korea? In this episode, we speak with Ambassador, Julie Turner, the U.S. Special Envoy for North Korean Human rights at the Department of State. Ambassador Turner is globally recognized as an expert in human rights and democracy, and has worked over the past 20 years to strengthen democratic institutions and promote human rights throughout the East Asia and Pacific region. As a career civil service employee and former Presidential Management fellow, Ambassador Turner has dedicated her career to advancing human rights around the world.
We discuss how the United States and its allies in the region play a role in protecting and promoting human rights in North Korea, how the United States balances human rights with some of its hard-line measures like economic sanctions and military deterrence, and how Ambassador Turner engages with the broader Korean-American community. A note that the acronym DPRK refers to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the country's official title, which is also commonly referred to as North Korea.
Hi, my name is Hannah Balikci. I'm a second year MPP student here at the Harris School of Public Policy, and I'm a Pearson fellow.
Myong Kun (Chris) Shin:
My name is Chris Shin. I'm also a second year MPP student, a Pearson fellow at the University of Chicago, and I'm originally from Seoul, South Korea. Welcome to Chicago, Ambassador Turner.
Levi Latoz:
Hi, my name is Levi Latoz. I am a second year MPP student here at the Harris School as well.
Hannah Balikci:
So, thank you for joining us here, Ambassador Turner. Could you briefly introduce yourself for our audience and why you're here at UChicago today?
Julie Turner:
Yes. Well, thank you for having me today. I'm excited to be on this podcast with you all. My name is Julie Turner. I'm the U.S. Special Envoy on North Korean human rights issues. And I'm here in Chicago because I am engaging with students with the Korean American community with North Korean refugees that live here in the greater Chicago area to talk about U.S. government efforts to support the reunification of divided families or separated families, as well as to talk about our policy on North Korean human rights and how people in Chicago, Korean Americans, but also non-Korean Americans, can help contribute to improving the lives of North Koreans.
Levi Latoz:
Ambassador, your position as a special envoy had, until your appointment in 2023, remained vacant since 2017. Could you briefly share a bit about what a special envoy is and the significance of your recent appointment?
Julie Turner:
I want to make a joke about bureaucratic process and the title of special envoy, but I'll try to keep myself in line here with you guys today. But a special envoy is an individual that's appointed on behalf of the U.S. government to represent a particular issue that the administration or that the government feels needs more focused attention. My particular position was created by Congress under the North Korean Human Rights Act, and I was nominated in January 2023, but confirmed and sworn into my position in October of 2023. So, I have just dove into the issue and am hoping that some of these engagements that I'm doing help to do exactly what the position was mandated to do, which is to coordinate and promote efforts in the U.S. government to improve the lives of the North Korean people.
Hannah Balikci:
And for those that don't know, when was it mandated?
Julie Turner:
The North Korean Human Rights Act originally was passed in 2004.
Hannah Balikci:
Focusing on the work you're doing, building off of what you just said, can you take a moment to walk us through the U.S. Foreign policy priorities for your position?
Julie Turner:
Yes, For my position, I have five areas that I've laid out as priority lines of effort. The first one is to work with partners and allies to raise international awareness of North Korea's human rights record. And built into that effort, I would also include increasing the free flow of information into North Korea, independent information in particular. And so, that particular effort has involved a lot of travel and coordination with partners in Europe, with the South Korean government, with the Japanese government, among others. The second line of effort is promoting accountability for those most responsible for human rights abuses in North Korea. And this has been a long time area of focus for the U.S. government. But one of the efforts that I have built into my own work has been to really amplify and lift up the voices of survivors in the conversation about accountability to make sure that the process to achieving accountability is led by North Koreans.
And so, I've been doing a lot of engagements with North Korean refugees to better understand what they hope to see when we talk about accountability. The third line of effort is pressing for concrete change in North Korea, and this is the hardest one because it involves the North Koreans wanting to talk to me about what concrete change is. Right now, they've spent a little bit more time calling me names rather than demonstrating a willingness to engage. But I will, again, put out the same message that I've said over and over again, and that's that the U.S. government, including myself, stand ready to have a conversation with the North Koreans without preconditions. But in pressing for concrete change, we are looking for things like the repeal of the anti-reactionary thought law, for the repeal of the Pyongyang dialect law or reforms to those pieces of legislation that would create space and freedom of expression that is actually severely restricted under those laws.
The fourth area is helping to advocate on behalf of North Korean asylum seekers and refugees or those individuals that are seeking protection abroad. And a lot of that has involved calling on the People's Republic of China and Russia to abide by the principle of non-refoulement and to stop forcibly returning North Korean refugees. And then, the last area of work is one that is relatively new to the special envoy's mandate, and that is to engage with, to coordinate with the divided families community to better understand what their needs are, how many there are, and then, to work together with the community to try to facilitate family reunions.
Levi Latoz:
The State Department released the 2023 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices last week. I wondered if you could talk about what are the current trends of human rights in East Asia and how do those relate to what you're observing in the DPRK?
Julie Turner:
I think a couple of trends that I would say. One, I think we've all been talking about the rise of authoritarianism for the last few years. I don't think that Asia is an exception to that. I think we've seen it with coups in Burma and just other efforts undertaken by governments that further restrict freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, freedom of association, the fundamental freedoms. And how this all relates or how it aligns with what we're seeing in North Korea, I think we've seen a lot of the similar restrictions or tightening of controls during COVID. They put into place the three, so-called "evil laws", the anti-reactionary thought law, the Pyongyang dialect law and the youth education law. Somebody's going to correct me on that last one because I know I didn't get the official name right. But those three laws, which increase penalties for viewing foreign information, for using South Korean dialect words in North Korea, now you can be punished or you can be punished for watching a K-drama. In fact, they, earlier this year, sentenced a handful of teenagers to 12 years of hard labor for watching essentially a K-drama.
But I would also say there are other things that we're seeing in North Korea that overlap with things that we're seeing elsewhere, and that's cooperation with other authoritarian governments through the transfer of technology, including specifically surveillance technology. There was recently a report that was released that highlights just increased observations of new surveillance cameras in North Korea that didn't exist pre-COVID and other things that we're seeing in places like the PRC that are now appearing in North Korea. And also increased transnational repression. Sometimes, in some cases in Asia, it's looked like prisoner swaps where one government says, "Hey, I've got somebody you want. You've got somebody that I want. We're holding them because they said something about the government. You're holding them because they illegally crossed a border. Let's just trade." The North Koreans are doing less trading, but more going to the Russians, going to the Chinese and saying, "Hey, we want these people back." And they're being sent back. And so, those kind of things that extend the types of repression that extends beyond one's territorial borders is an increasingly alarming trend that we're seeing more of.
Myong Kun (Chris) Shin:
Ambassador, you talked about the roles that United States and its allies in the region play in protecting and promoting human rights in North Korea, but sometimes, given the foreign policy approaches conflict with human rights advocacy, how should the U.S. And its allies balance some of the potential hardline policies like economic sanctions or military deterrents with continuous effort to advocate for human rights in North Korea?
Julie Turner:
So, one of the things that I am talking more and more about and that the U.S. government is talking more and more about, something that we've said at the UN on a number of occasions is the interconnectedness, the inextricable link between international peace and security and human rights. And so, these things are tightly wound together, and we see this in the form of, for instance, North Korean overseas workers who are in conditions that amount to forced labor. They're dispatched overseas, they make money, they don't see a dime of that money. That money gets sent back to the North Korean government, and that money is then being used to support the weapons program. We've seen recently reports through an organization called the Outlaw Oceans Project that highlighted North Koreans in Chinese seafood processing factories. We've seen a Reuters article earlier this year that highlighted North Korean workers making false eyelashes, beauty products that end up in U.S., South Korean, Japanese beauty markets. And all of that is being made with forced labor and all of that forced labor is generating revenue that goes to the regime.
And so, I think the international community is coming or starting to at least circle around a consensus that that interconnectedness exists. And I think that it's our responsibility now to continue to build out those examples and to underscore why it's imperative that governments around the world take action to address simultaneously the human rights situation and the security situation. To your point about sanctions versus how that impacts the people, I do also want to underscore that the U.S. government sanctions, as well as the UN sanctions have carve-outs for humanitarian purposes. None of our sanctions are targeting the people of North Korea. In fact, we very much do care about their welfare and want to protect their rights and to make sure that their needs are being met, which is why we have those carve-outs. But we also, at the same time, want to make sure that we're taking the steps necessary to help address the long-term security issues.
Levi Latoz:
In what ways is the United States coordinating with its regional partners to promote human rights in the region? And do you see any potential opportunities to partner with the PRC on this matter, specifically in the context of the DPRK?
Julie Turner:
This is a good question. We're partnering with a number of partners and allies in the region on human rights. We have a number of human rights dialogues. We have consultations on democratic governance with the South Korean government. We have similar consultations with the government of Japan. You all have seen, in the last few years, that we have had a number of summits. We had the Yoon administration here. We just recently had the Japanese government here for an official visit helping to also amplify the effort that was undertaken in the trilateral meeting through the Spirit of Camp David: Joint Statement. And so, there's a lot of work to make sure that we're coordinated, that we're speaking with one voice on North Korea policy issues, but specifically also North Korean human rights issues.
There's also an overlap in our interests here in that all three of our governments across that trilateral relationship have family groups that have been impacted by the North Korean government's repressive policies. That's for Japan, the Abductees. For South Korea, it's divided families, abductees, detainees, POWs. And for the U.S., we also have the divided families issue. And so, continuing to work together across governments to highlight how those policies, how North Korea's restrictions on freedom of movement, how their censorship and surveillance have prevented families from communicating with each other is a cross-cutting issue for all of us that we need to work together to advance.
Now, in terms of China and China's role, I think we are looking for areas and ways in which we can cooperate with the PRC on North Korea specifically. It would be great if we could partner with them on human rights issues. That could include on the refugee situation, but could also be on talking about areas in which there might be potential for concrete change in North Korea. And that may be starting in an area that the U.S., the PRC, and the DPRK can all agree, maybe disability rights, an area where we're all doing work already. And so, I will remain optimistic in that space. And the Secretary of State was just in China last week talking about North Korea, and I hope that we can carry forward some of the outcomes of that visit and make sure that we're working hand-in-hand on the North Korean human rights issue.
Hannah Balikci:
I know we have limited time with you, so we have a couple questions we ask every guest on our podcast, one of which being, if there was one paper or book that you would recommend to young public policy students to read about North Korean human rights or in advocacy or anything that you think would be helpful, what would you recommend?
Julie Turner:
This is a really tough one, and I don't want to-
Hannah Balikci:
You can say-
Julie Turner:
Endorse a particular one because, because I've read so many of them and many of the North Korean refugees are dear friends of mine. But I would just encourage students to pick up one of those books and to read about the life of a North Korean refugee, what that journey looked like from their earliest memories in North Korea to where they are today and how they got there. To be completely honest, having known some of the people whose memoirs I've read and having known them first and then going back and reading their books, it's pretty powerful stuff, especially comparing the person that I know today to this very unbelievable lived story, the obstacles that they had to overcome.
One of these individuals has talked about finding his human nature again, that North Korea, because of the competitiveness and survival mode that you have to be in at all times, had described how you almost become animal-like, and how he had to become human again once he got to the United States. Knowing him now, he's one of the most wonderful human beings I know, and it's hard to believe that he had to live through what he lived through. And so, I guess my real challenge is, read one of those books, but also spend an hour just talking to a North Korean refugee because it puts just a completely different lens on the issue.
Hannah Balikci:
We'll try and put some links in the podcast information. Our final question for you is, what's something you wish we would've asked you?
Julie Turner:
That's another good one. It's a tough one. I think it's really about what you can do now as students. And really, part of my purpose in being here and doing outreach to university students, to the Korean American community is really to push that call of action beyond governments. I definitely feel the pressure from civil society groups to do more and they give me great recommendations for things that we can pursue in the multilateral space, bilateral conversations that we're having. But I'm really here to encourage you all and the other students and Korean Americans or diaspora Korean that I'm interacting with while I'm here in Chicago to take part in the effort to promote North Korean human rights.
And you can do that by... There is a large refugee community here in Chicago. If it's tutoring a student, a North Korean refugee who's trying to learn English or helping Korean refugee get plugged into resources that they might need. A lot of them need legal assistance because they have pending asylum applications or just need to get a work authorization, which is an arduous process here in the U.S. But also, for those who are more on the policy side to get involved in a human rights NGO or to do more advocacy efforts. I won't mention any particular organizations, but I'm sure you all are familiar with some of them, and maybe you can also share some ideas in the links as well.
Hannah Balikci:
Thank you so much for your time today, really, and we'll be going to your talk at IHouse after this.
Now, let's go to a conversation between Ambassador Turner and Karl Friedhoff, who is the Marshall M. Bouton Fellow for Asia Studies at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. This program was held at the University of Chicago's International House and hosted in partnership with the Center for East Asian Studies, the Pozen Family Center for Human Rights and the Asian Policy Forum.
Karl Friedhoff:
So, continuing on in the region, we talked a little bit about the state of democracy. This is obviously a big election year. It's not only the U.S. There are, I think, 50 elections around the world this year. There are more than half of the population is going to vote. We've already seen elections in South Korea, by-elections in Japan. Indonesia had an election and India is coming up. What is the role of the United States in promoting democracy in the region? How is it pooling its partners to do that? Is there a role for alliances? Obviously, the Biden administration has focused a lot on alliances, mostly on the security side of this, but in terms of pooling alliances in to focus on democracy and how we promote that and build a stronger network, so then you can then use that influence to then turn it on in North Korea? Turn it on in North Korea is a little bit of the wrong phrase, but...
Julie Turner:
Absolutely. In terms of building upon pre-existing partnerships and alliances, we recently hosted the Japanese government for an official visit. We have, during the Biden administration, also hosted the Yoon administration for a state visit and had numerous other, both state visits, but also efforts that we've undertaken to upgrade relationships. We have an expanded partnership with ASEAN now. We also have an upgraded relationship with Vietnam now. And so, we're not just relying on the old partnerships, but also trying to build trust and confidence through expansion of new partnerships. And I think that the partnership with Vietnam and ASEAN are two perfect examples of that.
In terms of election years and how we support democratic processes, I think, one, it is support of a society because they are at the core, the ones who are going to lead the way in building democratic institutions domestically in their home countries. Also, empowering and supporting independent press. These countries can have an informed citizenry because informed citizenries are able to better engage with their governments and to really demand responsive governments, which at the end of the day is what we are hoping to see more of, and that increases peace, stability, security.
Karl Friedhoff:
So I'll pick up on two things there. You mentioned civil society and independent press. Two things which obviously are very limited in North Korea. Is there a way to promote those inside of North Korea? Are there attempts to do that or, at this point, is there more harm to be done in doing that because you put people at risk as you're trying to reach them and have them become more active in North Korea?
Julie Turner:
So, I think right now, it's very clear that there's a demand for independent information in North Korea. And I think that we can see that demand in the North Korean government's recent actions because they've been tightening control of the information space. Human Rights Watch put out a report a couple of months ago about backsliding in North Korea's human rights situation during the COVID-19 pandemic. We're talking about one of the worst human rights crises in the world, and it got worse. The unimaginable happened, and the way I've interpreted their report is that COVID was the worst thing that could have happened to the North Korean people, but the best thing that could have happened to the North Korean government because it allowed for this tightening of repression. They put in place three new laws that increased penalties for viewing foreign media. We've seen them enforcing those laws. They put in place a shoot-to-kill order.
So, without a doubt, there is real fear on the North Korean government's side of this external flow of independent information. I think from our side, one of the areas that the U.S. government has prioritized for many years through news outlets like Radio Free Asia, Voice of America, but also supporting independent refugee and defector-led groups that are based in Seoul is to increase the amount of information that's out there. And then, it's really up to the end user to decide whether or not they want to take the risk to take it. We don't want to inadvertently put somebody at risk by pushing information into hands of an unwitting end user.
Karl Friedhoff:
So, all this rising middle class, that's an intriguing idea to think about, that there is this rising middle class there. Can you talk about where it is in North Korea? Is this a regional focus? Is it all Pyongyang or is this also out into the outer regions if there's a rising middle class there?
Julie Turner:
So, I should clarify. I think that rising middle class existed, but is quickly being squashed, and particularly in recent months. The last time I was in Seoul, I had the opportunity to go to Hanawon and met with a couple of the groups that had come by sea directly from North Korea to the south last year. When I asked some of the younger generation, teenagers I guess amongst the group, they all told me food security was never an issue for them. Now granted, these were people from southern part of the country who lived close to the ports, and so, there probably was a lot more trade and other traffic going through, but they said food security wasn't an issue. They had cell phones and were living relatively decent lives. Were watching South Korean television.
But for all of them, they said across the board, in 2023, that shifted. That the risk of watching South Korean TV became too great, which is also part of what led them to make the decision to leave. "I want opportunity, I want a future. I can't have that here, so I'm going to go elsewhere." I asked one of them, I was like, "Oh, well now you're here in South Korea. What's that opportunity that you want? What do you want to do now that you're here?" She's like, "I don't know. I haven't really thought about it. I just knew that I couldn't have whatever it was if I stayed in North Korea and I'll figure it out now that I'm here."
Karl Friedhoff:
So, you mentioned Hanawon. For the audience, this is a place in South Korea where people who have left North Korea, they come in and I think they're in Hanawon about six months, and they go through things to kind of learn how to use an electronic banking system ans how daily life is going to work in South Korea. I was there about 10 years ago, and one of the things that is very obvious when you're at Hanawon is the gender disparity in the defectors that are there. You look at South Korea overall, the percentage of defectors that are in South Korea is about 70% are women. Can you talk a little bit about what drives that gender disparity and what drives women in particular to seek to cross however they're going to get out, [inaudible 00:28:48] China? Why do they seek to come South Korea and take that risk? Why does [inaudible 00:28:54]?
Julie Turner:
So, I think there are probably a few factors with why the numbers are a little bit skewed right now, but I also want to tackle the issue of what the numbers look like right now in this very moment. But I think, historically, you saw a wave of the numbers, you go way back, were much higher amongst men, and then, there was the wave of women that followed and then bringing children out after that. And so sometimes, it was just the families coming in different tranches. There's also the issue of trafficking, and many of the women are trafficked into China and then sold into marriages. And the women that are sold into marriages oftentimes have children who go unregistered in China and are then de facto stateless, which creates problems for resettlement because they don't have a nationality and can't get exit permission and sometimes can't get entry permission to a third country.
And so, there are waves of problem with the trafficking, but that also leads to a disproportionate number of women in the border area. Many of them, after being trafficked, forced into marriages, having children, it takes between five and 10 years to save enough money to be able to make the difficult journey from Northeastern China to a Southeast Asian country where they can get to South Korea or elsewhere. And so, I think we're still seeing some of that wave right now. Many of the refugees that are arriving in Seoul have been in China for [inaudible 00:30:37] right now. COVID did essentially shut down the refugee flows. When I was at Hanawon, most of the facility was empty, but it's quite possible that the border slowly reopening that that will change. The South Korean government has done an excellent job of keeping that facility up and fully functional and ready to support any number of North Koreans that may end up making their way to South Korea.
Karl Friedhoff:
So, when we think about human rights, I want to touch also on the U.S. policy side of this, not just the situation internally. In the past, if you go back, and I'm sure you've experienced a lot of ways that were negotiators at the six-party talks, that's going back a while, but when you talk to them, they're all very clear that human rights was never raised as a part of the negotiations. And they're pretty unequivocal in the fact that they think, through their interactions within North Koreans is that if human rights is raised, it's a non-starter, and North Korea will essentially get up from the table and leave. If we do enter negotiations at some point in the future, right now, there are no negotiations, no known communications ongoing, if negotiations were to restart, how does the U.S. ensure, how do you work to ensure that human rights are now on the table and are going to be a part of the negotiating package moving forward?
Julie Turner:
So, I think that the conversation around security and human rights has developed since the six-party period, in particular. And I think some of this came into light around 2014 when the UN Commission of Inquiry report was released, but also as the U.S. sought to work with partners to get North Korea's human rights situation added to the Security Council agenda. In order to have the Security Council talk or take a serious look at North Korea's human rights record, we had to build out a storyline of how North Korea's human rights record is connected to international peace and security to be able to sway the votes that we need to be able to have that discussion every year. I think, more recently, and this is something that the panel of experts have looked at or has looked at, is how North Korea dispatches overseas workers to China, to Russia, those workers all work in conditions that amount to forced labor, which is a human rights abuse.
So, the North Korean government's human rights abuse in that situation then is generating revenue that the regime is using to support its weapons program. And so, that shows some of that interconnectedness. I think we're seeing more of that now as well with Russia and North Korean military cooperation, where similarly, North Korean weapons are now in the hands of the Russians, which are then being launched into Ukraine and taking civilian lives to Ukraine. Also human rights abuse. Similarly, North Korean arms sales to Myanmar or Burma where [inaudible 00:34:13] also using North Korean-made products to kill innocent civilians in the course of their own domestic conflict.
So, the international community is beginning to see those threats connecting these two issues more and more. I think how we continue to carry that forward is continuing to build out those connections, and that requires more of the security world to be talking more to the human rights world about where these two things are overlapping. And we hope to, again, this year have another conversation about North Korea and human rights at the Security Council.
Hannah Balikci:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Ambassador Julie Turner. This episode was produced and edited by Hannah Balikci and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Levi Latoz, Chris Shin and Hannah Balikci. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website Thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter at Pearson Inst. Inst is spelled I-N-S-T. Thank you.
Root of Conflict
06.06.24
A War Later | Juanita Vélez
Root of Conflict
05.09.24
Power and Development | Raul Sanchez de la Sierra
Hannah Balikci:
Hi, this is Hannah and you are listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You are listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects.
In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC-3-P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
What is the role of narratives within the political economy of development? In this episode, we speak with Professor Raúl Sánchez de la Sierra, an assistant professor at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy and a faculty affiliate of the Pearson Institute. His research tackles problems in the economics of development, political economy, and conflict. He conducts most of his research in areas of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, DRC, where he looks at the organization of society, the economics and psychology of armed groups, the emergence of state functions and the economics of organized corruption, working closely with these actors while also gathering detailed data for statistical analysis.
We discussed Professor Sánchez de la Sierra's path to working in the DRC and later involvement in Congo calling, a documentary film that follows him and two other Europeans who work in various roles within the international development aid sector in the DRC. Later, we discuss his goals and objectives for his class power and development, which he teaches in the spring quarter here at Harris. Finally, we explore Professor Sánchez de la Sierra's perspectives on the state of the world at large, including his insights into the Free Congo Movement. And with that, please enjoy our conversation with Professor Raul Sánchez de la Sierra.
Hi, my name is Hannah Balikci. I'm a second year MPP student and a Pearson fellow.
Raphael Rony Anthony:
Hi, I'm Rony Anthony and I'm a first year MPP student and a big fan of Professor Raul.
Manda Bwerevu:
Hello, everyone. My name is Manda Bwerevu. I am a first year Congolese MPP student and a Pearson fellow.
Hannah Balikci:
And welcome professor. We're so happy to have you in studio. Thanks for coming. We were just wondering if you could introduce yourself and tell us your origin story really going right into it.
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Perfect. I'm very happy to be here. And I'm also very excited to be in your community, whether it is in the class and outside the class. I'm a Spanish citizen who was born in Spain in '84. I think it was the year before that Spain was declared no longer to be a developing country by the United Nations. Around the time, it integrated the European Union. And as soon as I was 1, my family moved to France. So I grew up with two societies. It took me a while to kind of articulate what it meant for me. Partly it was just feeling awkward in the summer, having two parts of yourself that don't really communicate with each other.
But also little by little, I would go to Spain on holidays and it wouldn't be a very poor country, but it would be a significantly poorer country that changed a lot in the '90s, and the kind of type of social life that people had had also very different values. The groups of friends that I began to have were like 30 kids. Everyone was completely different. Everyone was helping each other a lot. There were values of solidarity and of community that I didn't find as much in the other side of the border where kids were more alone. There's a lot of problems in France, but in general there's an environment of material well-being and of security where there's a welfare state.
There's a lot of problems that have to do with race that what I say is not true for certain people, but even then materially there is a safety net. Looking back at the history of my parents is what kind of motivated me to be here today probably. So my parents were born in the '50s, during the dictatorship of Franco. Different people reacted differently in the face of the pressure that this signified on people. And for the case of my father, his parents had fought or collaborated on the side of the public against fascism. And at the time in the '50s, it was a time of huge repression so there was a lot of silence at home about politics.
And so after a few years where my father was not allowed to go to school because they were low class, so they couldn't acquire education and they had to work, when he was 18, he kind of realized that his father was not kind of the bad person in this story, but rather also a victim of a system that was bigger than him. So he started to also be actively involved in trying to introduce democracy in Spain. And so Spain is a country beyond the story of my family that is hugely traumatized by the Civil War of the '30s. Hundreds of thousands of people died on both sides.
After the fascists took power, the repression continued for 10 or 15 years. It's almost like the Civil War killing continued on one side. So I've been always very moved by the lives of people who suffer in power and conflict, I guess if that's also one of the questions. So growing up in France, not only I started to be involved politically, but also I started to be interesting on this new thing called development, which had to do with all the countries that didn't have the chance that I had growing up in France. And so the rest is here.
Hannah Balikci:
Yeah, I mean you jumped the gun a bit on our questions. We were going to ask why conflict and what went wrong or right in your life for you to focus on conflict? So that kind of gets at it. Is there any more you want to talk about then?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
There's a bit more. Surely the stories of the Civil War in Spain is still something that makes a lot of us vibrate for the injustice that took place, and that has not really been talked about openly in Spain when one side has tried to open mass graves, the other side has often tried to push back saying, "This is opening wounds. We shouldn't talk about this," while often it's not even politically. It's people who want to know where their grandfather is buried in a mass grave.
And so when I started my PhD at Columbia, I focused on development and political economy, which was about why certain countries are poor and the role of power in development and also in injustice. I stumbled on the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Congo is many things. One of the things it also is, it's not the only one, is a lot of suffering in relation to conflict since the '90s especially. If you think in the big picture of conflict in the last 150 years, it has been subject to massive conflict from the outside and from political leaders in conjunction with the outside. But that kind of revived in me the interest in conflict, even though I wasn't necessarily going to be focused on conflict.
Hannah Balikci:
How did you find your way to Harris through that then?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
So when I started thinking about the questions of power and development, some of the most impactful scholars that we read when I was doing my master, one of them was Avner Greif, who is at Stanford now, and another was James Robinson. And so I happened to kind of cross paths with James Robinson when I did my postdoctoral studies at Harvard just after the PhD. And at Columbia, I also crossed paths with Chris Blattman and I found out that this new group had been formed with Oeindrila Dube, Chris Blattman, and James Robinson. It was already my community. So at the end of that, they just sent me a link and say, "We're looking for someone if you want to apply." And it was just a very natural thing to do. It's an extremely unusually creative environment where people are very open to kind of listen to the logic of societies in their own words before trying to impose a structure, whether it is game theory or whatever that can come after. But I think the inductive humble approach to research is something that characterizes this hallway on the second floor.
But having spent a decade, five years ago, for example, with a huge amount of human experiences in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, it just felt as been an extremely hard challenge to condense all the lessons in this academic writings. So now hopefully this is going to change soon. So teaching allows to convey all of the learning through that experience that doesn't fit in academic papers.
An academic paper in my field could take eight years until publication. Someone might need just three papers in top journals in order to get promoted. So one focuses on almost nothing in terms of knowledge for a very long amount of time. And teaching also has another side that is not just the experience of thinking through it, but actually what is research? Research is teaching because it's people who are driven by curiosity. They want to learn so that the world can also see. And so teaching is the same. So it's an act of generosity that fulfills someone. And in teaching, it feels so much more meaningful because there's so much more that it can be heartfelt. Whereas with research, do I really care now that this paper of 2020, there is a small group of people who read it and think differently, a little bit about something. Maybe not as much as the vast amount of human and informal knowledge that I gather through the process of doing research, yeah.
Raphael Rony Anthony:
Now talking about research, can you give a small glimpse of what research that you're doing right now to our audience?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah. So I started going to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2009 as a research assistant. I took a class called Political Economy of Development. I worked really hard so the professor said one day, "Do you want to go to Congo?" I said, "Of course." In the process of that, I also came to feel somewhat uncomfortable in the approach to development and approach to research that I was part of. And again, it took me a while to articulate it and to identify what the issues were, but there was something clearly paternalistic in the very question. People were going there saying, "We're going to bring democracy to the Africans." Because they don't know it. It's not as if they have been living there for 2,000, 3,000, 5,000 years.
So my dissertation was about when do our actors have an incentive to behave this way or that way? Now this was the dissertation. I don't know if I have enough time, but even though I was very excited about it, all of this remained part of my imagination. So this bandit that steals you, et cetera, it's kind of a mental experiment. I did do a large amount of data collection during the dissertation to show that in certain places when there is high value due to minerals, it could be due to anything else, then the armed actors have an incentive to settle and to provide protection to create custom systems, to give visas to people who enter the mining and to tax output.
In other places where output is very easy to hide, such as valuable gold, they can't really tax the production sites, but they start settling in villages where people live and they have wealth that they start spending in food and clothes. So they start taxing everything leading to more sophisticated fiscal administrations. But over the years, I also realized that this was very much based on imagination. Even though the numbers coincide, the interpretation makes sense, economists think that the interpretation makes sense, it's still part of the imagination of a European.
So over the last eight years, I started building much more personal connections with not only with the villagers, but also with armed actors themselves, getting very close to certain organizations, learning about their logic, about how they think, about how they feel about who are the people who lead the organization, who are the people who join it, what are the different functions, how does recruitment operate. So now I'm working with one of those organizations that places phone calls to my team every day. There's 160 human resource commanders that are part of a cell phone system that inform us in real time where someone joins the organization that allows us to send a team in conjunction with a civilian organization for development in the area that we work to interview those who join to understand their psychology and also to interview people in their village to understand in what ways their psychology is different from those in the village.
And now we're just following up two years after they joined to try to learn about how does joining an armed organization change the psychology. There isn't much of a difference with the US Army with regards that it's humans that go to a place where they're going to kill other humans, and there is a prosocial motivation to do so to contribute to the community. And the question then is how legitimate is the narrative that brings people to feel that it's out of a prosocial motivation? I think for example, after 9/11, the kind of motivations that people had to join the US Army included a demonization of people in Muslim countries with the idea that they were the enemy and they had to be killed for some greater cause. So the comparison is one of structure, not of content of the narrative, but yeah.
And that's some aspects of the research. We also, in 2015, worked a lot not just with armed doctors, but also with the state itself to try to understand how the state functions when it's so-called weak state. And so, we spent a lot of time preparing a study where we hired 150 people to work inside the Traffic Police Agency of Kinshasa to map every single transaction in the system that "might be called corruption" or informal revenue generation, to learn about how much is generated, how it's generated, the role of supervisors in it, which we normally presume but we don't see.
And so the takeaway is about 80 or 90% of the revenue generated by a traffic police agency is informal. That pays the wages of people. That pays gas expenses. And it's profoundly hinges on the role of supervisors and their power of their agents. It's also very distortionary. It creates a lot of problems like traffic jams. It doesn't lead people to want to respect the law because those who get arrested are not those who violate the law, but anyone who doesn't have friends in higher places. So it kind of hopefully helps understand a bit better nuancing what weak state means and how it functions. Yeah, this is some aspects on the research. Yeah, happy to-
Raphael Rony Anthony:
I found it very fascinating when professor's talking about his research keeps on referring to the group as "we." And I'm assuming what you mean by "we" is Marakuja.
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah.
Raphael Rony Anthony:
And I think we need to start talking about that. So I'm going to start with the full name of Marakuja. That is Multidisciplinary Association for Research and Advocacy in the Kivus by United Junior Academics. Now that's a huge name. We found out from the website that it's defined as our name comes from salad de fruits or fruit salad, a team-building activity that led to our group. So first of all, how the name and why the name.
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah. In July 2010, when I went there for this impact evaluation, we were tasked to train 100 surveyors for collecting data that would last two years of this evaluation. We were students, we didn't know anything, so we had to learn from the experts. One of the experts was a Congolese man who had been in the organization for 10 years and he was very good with people. And so the first kind of trainings that we did, we knew the survey and he knew management much more than we did. We did breaks and he said, "Now we're going to play fruit salad. Everyone has to pick a fruit name in a circle." And so I had just discovered that morning the passion fruit, which is called Marakuja in Congo in Swahili. And so I chose my name to be Marakuja. And so you have to stand up and call two fruits and you take their chair. And so everyone laughs because someone stays without chair and some people fall, the chairs break. It's a very fun game. So that was very early in 2010.
So what happened is people started referring to me as Marakuja in DRC. So I came back in 2012 to start my own dissertation. I arrived with almost no money as a graduate student. I said, "How many villages can we do with this?" We had discussions about with the six or seven people that I was closest with. Some people were saying, "Well, the wage must be increased. Look." And one of them stood up and said, "Look, we all know here the impact that it had on us to have two and a half years of stable employment for the first time in our lives. You got married, you had kids. You also got married, you bought a house. And after what this person has done for us, it is our turn now to thank him. We don't need to talk about the wages. Now you might not have funds. We have your back and we want to make you a professor."
Of course, it's not that I took advantage of that gratitude, but it illustrates the beginning of a very strong bond that starts to kind of breach this invisible race barrier between us and "them," despite the asymmetry of financial means that is impossible to get a around. And so it's this kind of reciprocity that created, first, one bond. So that I did the dissertation, I kept funding funds. And then the dissertation worked. And then I came back. And at that moment, one of them who you have met stood up and said, "Look, we need stability, therefore we need to create an organization. Enough with this consultancy. So can you use some of that funding to create an organization?" And it turns out that by then, it was 2015, these people for six years, whenever they refer to them, they're like, "Oh, they're with Marakuja." Others were like, "They're with John." Or, "They are with Peter." But so they were called the Marakujas or the Johns or the Peters, whoever was the employer's name, or they are the IRCs for example.
So when we decided to create the organization, of course we would be Marakuja. There were some other organizations with acronyms that were hard to follow, but Marakuja no one would forget. We then completely made up the words that constitute the acronym just to give some semblance of seriousness. Only later I realized that this was not the Pan-African name, which I thought, which we thought. It's actually Guarani and it arrived to Africa later, so did the name. But it's now a Swahili name. And so that's the origin. That's the answer to the question.
Hannah Balikci:
So what sets Marakuja apart from other research-focused organizations in the region or in the country?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah. So there are two types of organizations. There's the kind of implementers, NGOs, and there's a huge amount of them. And then there's their data collection ones. There are not that many. The two that I know emerged from the same hundred people that we trained in 2010. They learned, we learned. And so some data collection managerial skills led to that.
There's a third one that came from extremely qualified people from Benin, from the Africa School of Economics mostly, who had worked at IPA and the World Bank. They're based in Kinshasa. Typically, they don't have the local knowledge that Marakuja has. So most of their projects they need to work with Marakuja, but also so does Marakuja benefit from working with them and their skills. So often Marakuja collaborates with them.
Now, the big difference of Marakuja in terms of its principles comes in comparison with organizations such as implementers, and it emerged as the outcome of spending various years. We, the Marakujas, so the Marakuja was founded by eight people, seven Congolese and me. The seven were the surveyors, and now they're managers. They're experience working in NGOs was not good. They made money, but they experienced very racialized hierarchies where they were continuously silenced, not just the kind of inequality within the same organization was very uncomfortable. It was almost more uncomfortable for the "expatriates" than it was for them. But really the kind of silencing that operated within those organizations, people who are "locals," which in fact means, de facto means people who are Black. They could not acquire positions that are supposedly for "expats."
So often you would have a girl who would be 22, she would come from New York as soon as she finished her master and become the boss of this person who had been there for 12 years, had the number of kids, had extreme expertise. It often is not just the hierarchy and the distribution of material resources, which is important. It's also the attitude that people had towards the Congolese was very difficult to witness. So often you would have people who would come from the US and kind of treat Congolese as if they were almost like children and that they had to follow them because they were the expert.
So I was present in a lot of situations where that happened even before forming Marakuja as we were bringing people from the outside to help with the technical side. The mentality that people have when they come from the world of the NGOs is, "I'm going to be country manager. I'm going to rule here. The Congolese don't know anything." My wages, of course it's going to be eight times higher because I'm the country manager. And the Congolese are almost assumed to have no morality. They're greedy, they're trying to cheat their way through, and there is a constant environment of mistrust. That is degrading.
So Marakuja was born to try not to reproduce that. And so even after it was born, we had issues among people who came to work with Marakuja. And so we had to write these rules that made it very clear. So now any time that a European or an American goes to work with Marakuja, they're an assistant. They're not a country manager. The country manager is [inaudible 00:23:59] now, ad they come to assist them with whatever skills they have the privilege to acquire, but the expert is actually someone else.
Hannah Balikci:
So just going through the timeline, because you say Marakuja was founded after you finished your dissertation and you were back. And you became a professor and then started Marakuja?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Exactly.
Hannah Balikci:
Okay. I think this is a good transition to go into Congo Calling, which is a documentary film that you're featured heavily in, which features three Europeans who work in various roles within the international development aid sector in Congo. How did you first get involved in the production of this? What was the focus of... How did these people, how did you and the other two Europeans get selected? It's just the background of how you were involved in this program. Does this also shows the... Not the beginning, but that Marakuja is featured in the film as well, so if you could talk through that.
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah. So it all starts, I think, with the sensitivity and perceptiveness of this person who is the director. I met him in 2004 when I had just come back from spending a year in Germany. And he was a German who had just started his year in Spain. We were both studying economics. We got along well. So we wrote together an undergraduate thesis on Karl Marx labor theory of value using mathematics, which was a recent development by some economic theorists just to try to understand what would it mean today and what is missing. He left economics, he started film school in Munich. By the time I had gone the first seven months to the DRC, or even the second year again about half a year, we met in New York. He came to visit. And I was telling him about the research and the life there, and he kept asking me questions from the perspective of a human. A lot of things that I have unpacked now when I speak, I hadn't unpacked them before. I wasn't even aware of them. I was just talking about the project.
But he was very moved by the human side of this inequality, the contradictions that people have to live through when they come from a place of privilege and often motivated precisely because of equality or injustice or privilege, and they find themselves in an even stronger position of privilege. So of course the human reality that I was describing to him had a Congolese side, and he was moved by that first and foremost. But very early on he understood that he couldn't really speak to that or convey voice in a way that wouldn't be biased. However, he could try to see the world through the eyes of these Europeans to portray kind of the human side of this impetus of going outside of the bubble of privilege and how one navigates emotionally contradiction without very clear early on, so without taking a stance necessarily more to kind of unpack it and help empathize.
So then we started filming in 2015. There was a pilot in 2013, I think. He got some funding. And 2015, he came in. That's when Marakuja was about to be formed, I believe. And that's when I met back the team saying, "Thank you for the work" and I bring back the dissertation in a book. And then two years later he came back in 2017, filmed again.
So I was supposed to be a co-director. We were motivated by the same thing, which is try to illustrate that challenge in the world of aide, NGOs. But he started following me when I was doing my research and said, "Can I film here? Can I film that?" And one day he said, "Actually, you experienced the same in a perhaps different way because you want to stay there forever. The kind of relationships that you build are of course different than those of "expats" who spend one year or two, put it on their CV and leave, but it has the same kind of exploitative risk. It has the same like a mining corporation. You go there to get your publications even though you tell yourself that it's good, maybe it's good, maybe it's not. So I think it would be nice to illustrate it as a parallel."
Then he met this German humanitarian worker who had spent his whole life in Africa and who was in the verge of being kicked out of his home at one reception of the German foreign affairs ministers who is not the president. And then I had worked with a third person, the third character, Anlo. And so we had kind of met through a friend. Anlo also had gone through her process of kind of thinking through what it means to be in that industry. She had been in NGOs. She had to quit and she had a more sincere relationship with the country than how most people coming from Europe start. And so it was also an interesting story to portray. At that point, I was fired because of conflict of interest and I became a subject. And after that, I was just grateful that he chose to portray some of it.
Manda Bwerevu:
So speaking of the portrayal of and the selection of the characters, a theme that I've picked up in a lot of their responses so far as centering Africans in the development of Africa. So in resolving conflict and helping uplift and empower the DRC specifically in this context, with the selection of these three characters, obviously there are three wide characters speaking about Congo, what do you think the takeaway can be for the lens that we're using to assess the conflict in the Eastern DRC? That kind of ties in with the next question of, obviously you don't have a lot of creative control over the direction of the production, but I'm curious about what were the elements and the conversations that were had around how does this affect then the way people will digest what we're trying to convey in the Eastern DRC based on the selection, choices that were made, and the creative direction of the documentary itself?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah, we didn't always agree in the process, and I defer to him because he had much more expertise also about the artistic sides. So I learned also to defer to him. I didn't necessarily push back on his choice of characters even though I wasn't involved. I probably would've chosen Congolese to be characters. Or even in my case, there's a relationship with the Congolese called Christian. It's all my perspective. So that for example, we did have conversations like, "Why is Christian a bit silent in this relationship?" And he was always very clear. I found he had thought about it more than me even saying like, "I can try to portray their view, but I will not succeed in portraying their view. I'll portray what I think their view is. So we have to focus. Let's focus on like, we're in Europe, Europeans have the question, how can we help the world? So let's show the European audiences what happens to Europeans when they go there and what challenges themselves they have to navigate."
However, I think part of the objective was to show how people struggle. And he became a subject because he was also struggling with those questions himself about what his positionality, what his role, what is the impact of his actions by transmitting just one side, especially because the characters, especially me and certainly Peter, I have nothing to say about him, but I carried a huge amount of blind spots even then. And the director who empathized with me was very able to convey my vision, my view. Therefore, the documentary also brings the blind spots with them. That today we see the documentary to kind of illustrate those blind spots. At the time, it wasn't necessarily filmed with that objective in mind.
And so I think if we were to go back, probably we would've challenged more. I would've, and he too probably the idea of saying, "Oh, we should just take the perspective that we understand. He always says, "There's a lot of very good Congolese filmmakers. They're just much better than me in doing that." But the reality is there's just one documentary that is there about humanitarian sector and it's the European perspective.
So with those blind spots, therefore, one of the challenges is people who look at the documentary and try to make conclusions about the conflict that are going to have very limited view because it doesn't directly address it. But also there's another problem, which is because the presence of the whites in some scenes, there is a specific performativity that distorts the voice of the Congolese, even when they're accused of corruption. There's the presence which is almost a huge asymmetry of power, but also almost with a huge baggage of history of the white that's present there. So people act differently. Even when Christian, for example, is asked in private in an interview, it's not private. There's the camera. And he knows that it's as part of the relationship with Raul that he's being asked about the accusations against him.
Another example is we meet these commanders that have been hanging out for eight years, and there is this one scene that I think he's irresponsible to show even if the scene happened, because the audiences are not prepared not to interpret this as a way that kind of feeds into preconceived ideas of almost backwardness and primitiveness when they describe how they eat the liver of people or whatever. Now you need also the contextual awareness that we didn't have at the time, I think, and certainly the audience doesn't have to know how much of this was performativity as well. It was a group of young kids trying to impress the white, trying to almost bully the white into gaining his respect and vice versa. We were negotiating our position in different hierarchies. For example, when I interrupted someone, I had to apologize with the military gesture, and I was a bit scared also. And sometimes when they interrupted me, I said, "I'm a professor now, you let me talk" and they would apologize to me.
So we were constantly trying to find who we are in their relationship. They were also trying to find what they can get from it, et cetera. This is not to say that specific facts are not true, but it's like journalism. The choice of what to show has a social responsibility aspect independently of whether it's true or not and also how it's shown. And that's, I think, a problem to talk about.
Raphael Rony Anthony:
Okay, I think it's a great place to start talking about power and development because we were just talking about your dynamics with the people in Congo and you working with them and you being the white man presence in that situation. So your class, Power and Development, if we are to advertise it to the people who come into Harris, we have to ask the question like, "Why this class?" How would you answer that?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
I think there are two reasons. The first is coming from the perspective of a class on political economy of development. There is something really frustrating that even though it's called political economy, which is about power, it entirely omits the role of power at the bigger scale in explaining the evolution of societies. It's often like whether this person sends a text message to a politician to let them know that they prefer to have a well rather than a toilet in the village. And so we operate in a society where there are a lot of silences with regards to how power has been deployed, especially in the last 500 years.
So let me say this perhaps more explicitly. We just come out of two phases that were different in nature. I don't know in which phase we are now of European expansionism that a lot of reasonable historians have called European imperialism. The first wave being focused around the slave trade, the second wave in the 19th century with a different philosophical justification being based in large part in colonization of Asia and Africa.
Our generation has kind of been numbed when there was a formal devolution of power to the societies that were on the receiving end of colonization in the '60s with the Cold War that became the kind of only obsession of everyone. And we're kind of emerging trying to realize the legacies of these 500 years. A lot of the legacies are mental shortcuts that people take uncritically as granted, that have to do with essentially dehumanizing people of a darker skin that is present in our society pretty much everywhere. If you just go one block down, people look very different where we are. One doesn't need to go to another country. But it informs working relations. It informs decisions of police officers, of judges, of entire societies in support of current policies.
And so it's a look critically at the silences that have been introduced in the historical narrative with regards to the use exercise of power by Europe and later by the United States in asserting a certain type of military domination across the globe. This is not a conspiracy theory, these are the facts. But interestingly, we still don't learn about those facts in high school.
So what the class is predicated upon is we start with the development aid position. Someone goes, there's a few symptoms that are weird, those which we talked about in Congo Calling or in the paternalistic relationships of giving democracy to "Africans". And then we take a step back, go back 500 years to try to trace back the origin of the inequality of wealth in which we are born today and try to ask questions whether the exercise of military domination by the Europeans plays a role at understanding who we are today in terms of our wealth and at explaining the emergence of ways of thinking that inform how people relate to each other to today.
Something that's quite noticeable. We had a guest from the Congo a few days ago in class, and he explained that this baggage of thinking is very present among Europeans. It's less present among the Congolese, this kind of social hierarchies that presuppose that white people are superior essentially and that Africans are backward. But what makes it even more perhaps revolting and important to talk about is that he also said the Congolese also carry it with themselves. And they have internalized the relationship of paternalistic relationship where they are on the inferior end and they look up to the European as if the European is the one who invents everything rather than what might be more accurate as the one who systematically stole from their society and with a scale that might explain why they're richer today.
So we talk about these historical facts. We talk also about philosophical tools that we can use to understand some of the things I'm touching upon. For example, epistemic injustice is the idea that certain voices are silenced in the production of historical narratives and also in the articulation of their experience. In this case, the Africans' own experience, but also the concept of hermeneutical injustice, which is that society's dominant language or prevailing language makes it harder for people who are subject to a particular form of injustice to articulate and find the tools to become even aware of that experience. It's for sure those who experience it are more aware than those who do not, but they're constantly challenged by the absence of tools that they need to develop talking to each other, to identify patterns, to realize often, "It's not this thing that happened to me here. It's not my fault" or, "This thing that happened 20 years ago. Now I can understand it."
So there's a lot of con-events between questions about gender and the experience of being of a particular gender in a society and the development of a language to gain awareness as well as race. There has always been this kind of conversation between the two. Sometimes it's not necessarily a good conversation, like white people, no matter their gender, are not always aligned with people of color. But there's a lot of solidarity as well in shared experiences with regards to these process.
So the objective of the class is perhaps to jointly gain awareness of that seriously, not just postulating it, really interrogating it and asking even econometrically, how much of this can explain that? What's the research going to go to continue to answer this question?
And then the last part of the course, after having questioned these exceptionalist narratives of why Europeans are rich with the presumptions that the rest of the world are more backward with something that comes from the 19th century, we then take a step back and say, "Okay, if we are to undo, unlearn that mode of thinking, let's reconstruct political economy of development from the voices by the people who experience it themselves." So for example, we start with philosophical foundations of Igbo philosophy in one particular country, and we try to see how would political economy of development look like through their voice?
And then that's kind of the most challenging part of the course. It's also the most interesting and I think enriching because recognizing injustice also has the risk of depriving agency to the people experiencing injustice. Recognizing a symmetry of power doesn't imply transforming people into just they are defined by victims. There's much more. Just like in life in Congo is about so much more than conflict and history of oppression, it's about music, it's about solidarity, it's about extreme levels of creativity and of social ingeniousness that are obscured by just talking about injustice. But we do need to talk about it when we take seriously the question of political economy and development.
Raphael Rony Anthony:
Right. And so now when we were talking about power and development, we had the most fun framing the questions because we went through your whole syllabus, and the syllabus is a really funny concept that we need to talk about. So I'm going to take some quotations from your syllabus and I'm going to ask you why is it the way it is. So it goes like, "Instructor Raoul Sanchez. You can be mean to him. He's working hard to make your learning uncomfortable." What do you mean by that?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yes, that's in a context of I think trying to encourage people to be kind to each other, but completely frank, because we're going to talk about topics that evoke emotional reactions, often of discomfort, whether it's guilt. And I can say this as a white European man, I understand that. And so while people have to be kind to each other, it's also saying, "Don't worry about me. I've done enough emotional work that I'm not going to be offended." But I'm trying to make you uncomfortable, and that's the objective of the class. Because often, growing with regards to this question goes through a process of feeling a little bit uncomfortable. That's where some parts of our knowledge and of our growth are kind of blocked a little bit by fear. And so it's kind of acknowledging that with a little playful tone.
Raphael Rony Anthony:
Okay, the next one, it goes, "Maximum freedom of expression, including offending and uncomfortable ideas without attacks against the dignity of every anyone."
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah.
Raphael Rony Anthony:
Okay.
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
So here we're at the University of Chicago. We're also at the crucial point in time where there are topics that have been somewhat silenced. And so I want to uphold the values, the freedom of expression of the University of Chicago saying that being uncomfortable is not being unsafe, and often the feeling of uncomfort has been weaponized by misinterpreting it as being unsafe and therefore the need to silence certain speech that might be violent.
So for example, when I criticize, let's say, or when we analyze the psychology of one of the readings we have to do, is we look at the work of a psychiatrist who is Black in a white society or white-dominated society, Frantz Fanon. It's very difficult to read. It's very difficult to read as a Black person because it points fingers on a lot of difficult experiences that sometimes doesn't teach anything, sometimes helps recognize. It's very uncomfortable for a white person to see as well, to identify all the ways in which one has contributed to assert oppressive relationships, to silence the expression of the self of people who keeps telling us but we are not hearing. So that discomfort is something that kindness and compassion has to accommodate to grow, but it's not something that ever can be used to silence these conversations.
It is kind of astonishing that Frantz Fanon is often dismissed as being political, even though he's a psychiatrist who is trying to take seriously the experience of being Black in a society that constantly tells Black people that they're inferior and that they have to speak like the French in order to be more civilized. The same goes for a scholar who has spent his entire life trying to show that people in societies east and south of Europe are also human beings. They also have their logic, trying to deconstruct these myths about the Oriental that was perhaps constructed during relationships of domination in colonial times, and that kind of distorts very strongly the immediate impetus that Europeans and Americans have when it comes to relating to people outside. And that is especially important in the particular context where legitimate critique of military policies such as in the state of Israel. And we can say something that the International Court of Justice has said, "At least it's plausibly a genocide."
Raphael Rony Anthony:
So the last part of this conversation, I feel, is the most important one, is a warning that you give in the syllabus as well as in your first class where you tell the students, "If you cannot handle being uncomfortable, you may leave the class." And that makes your class one of the most unique experiences in Harris. So why do you give that warning? That's the first question. And the second question is, do you have anything to tell the students who left after the first class?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah, I think those students who left, there might be 27, let them be welcomed. They have many reasons to have left. I just encourage them to talk to the students of the class to see how they go. And even this kind of threat of feeling uncomfortable, whether it really materialize in the end, it's a very safe space where compassion is the rule. And we also spoke, for example, about how white people feel uncomfortable when so much negativity is being brought to light about the history of countries and the construction of privilege that some people call whiteness, and it's okay to feel bad. It's out of a place of love, we have a community in the class.
The other thing that you mentioned is about the... Oh, "If you are not ready to feel uncomfortable, it's better that you quit." Look, until a year ago, even discomfort was invited in the class. And the experience in the class was somewhat different in that some group of people kind of knew, but felt that they had better tools to articulate what they already kind of had a gut feeling for. And some were like, "This is new. I feel bad, I feel guilty." And so the process was really cathartic. It was one of together trying to see each other so that when you go out there, you have much better visibility in each of your relationships and interactions.
The context in which we are now also makes me unsafe, and I don't want to be in a situation where whatever topics we talk to and I really am not interested about whether it is the military policies of the state of Israel or whether it is the US or whether it is Europe, I'm not going to be silent with regards to describing those. I'm not going to give privilege to one country over another. And so in the context in which we are, it's a climate where some faculty do not feel safe necessarily. And so I want to make sure that if people are going to confuse discomfort with safety, it's better that they were not going to have a good experience at the moment. But the key point is despite kindness and compassion, freedom of expression to continue growing inquiry which is what we're here to do.
Manda Bwerevu:
So speaking about conflict, let's go back to the Eastern DRC. It's a place where the conflict has been raging on for 30 years with approximately 120 different rebel groups involved, and numerous Western and eastern agents also involved in the conflict. Because of this, it's really complicated for a lot of people who are outside of that Eastern DRC context to understand what is actually happening in the Eastern DRC. So the first question is how would you explain the issue in eastern Congo to a fifth grader interested in understanding the context? And then added onto that question is, a lot of governments have recently come out to condemn Rwanda specifically for its support of M23, which is a large rebel group contributing significantly to the instability in the East. Yet these same governments like France and the US in particular are still sending aid to the Rwanda defense force. So the second question is, how can we reconcile the cognitive dissonance there in terms of the foreign policy of these countries? And what are tangible actions you believe that the governments can make towards helping liberate the Congolese people?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Perfect. So I would start by saying that people who have studied the Congolese conflict reach always the same conclusion that it's extremely complex, that there are many causes, that it's about land, that it's about politics, that it's about ethnicity, that it's about conflict minerals, that it's about the weakness of the state. That is also not very helpful when it comes to paint a picture of what's going on.
And at the risk of being oversimplifying, if I were to talk to a five-year-old, let's say, look, if you look over the last 30 years when the first and second Congo war happened and the conflict that we have now, something happened in a neighboring country which was really bad, it's called genocide, and that resulted in 2 million people coming into the Congo as refugees including those who perpetrated the genocide. As a result, because of political reasons first, neighboring countries had an interest in coming into the Congo to hunt down these people, which they did perpetrate in a countergenocide. Another silence in the historical narrative is that this is not really spoken about. And so these political motivations of neighboring countries to either take over the Congo or take over parts of the Congo was the impetus of the first Congo war.
The second Congo war, that was also true, but they started to realize that there were also economic benefits to be had. Society had been partly militarized. There were a lot of guns, there was a lot of opportunities to use guns in a context of a weak state to achieve whatever. So one of the whatever is people realized in Rwanda military networks that minerals in Congo would be very valuable. So the second Congo war, which started politically also was in large part about facilitating the illicit exploitation of Congolese minerals. There's a 2001 United Nations report that was the first to kind of show it.
And later on, once society is militarized, once the state is weak, pretty much anything can be a cause for violence because you can use violence to steal, you can use violence to express a grievance or to negotiate with the central government. But if one were to paint a picture now, pretty much everywhere in Eastern Congo, communities have mobilized as a defense to the challenge of their territorial integrity by foreign actors, be the Rwandan government or be the enemy of the Rwandan government, who are the Hutu militias who later became FDLR, who have been terrorizing the population for a variety of reasons. They're extremely violent as well. There's political reasons because they feel unstable, and so they steal from the population, so they act like roving bandits.
But the bottom line is 120 armed groups, most of them are popular militias that mobilize to protect the community. Once again, once they mobilize for political reasons, then they realize they can tax people, they can grow, economic logics grow. So you have a mix of political mobilizations with extortion that kind of explains part of the behaviors that you see today. The common denominator is the weakness of the state.
Manda Bwerevu:
Got it. Could you speak a little bit to the cognitive dissonance there in the foreign policy between France and the US in the way that they're supporting the Rwanda defense force, yet also condemning them by [inaudible 00:54:31].
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
The first kind of hypocrisy is something that is difficult to call out because it is known but the evidence is often hidden, is the role of the French in supporting the Hutu government during the genocide in the beginning where they were arming, sending even equipment and training them in the ground. It is unclear whether they knew exactly what was going on. They say, "No, it is unlikely that they did not know," but they had a calculus, which was to maintain their influence for the Hutus of Francophone over the Anglophone Tutsis. They had a geopolitical interest to kind of turn a blind eye of how excessive the violence might be as long as they could keep control.
They lost control. It was the Anglophone Tutsis who had... Many of them were refugees in Uganda, not all of them. There's a new division now emerging within the Tutsis because of that, which the US have felt very closely aligned ever since. The reasons for the US alignment are, number one, the US felt guilty that they didn't do anything during the genocide, the Clinton administration at the time. So that has marked a lot of people who remain with a lot of power in the State Department. Two, personal relations and business relations were also built with high levels of the Rwandan government back then. The same government is in place since '94. It is Kagame.
And three, the US has found a strategic interest in supporting maintaining the Kagame government in place, in part because it might act as a buffer for, especially after 9/11 for what they perceive to be threats of Islamist groups going to areas that might be of strategic interest like the Congo. I don't know whether that this is justified or not, but I know that the US has a long history of constructing fears to justify strategic interests that are often based on falsehoods.
So now when the United Nations repeatedly, the group of experts, does reports that show the role of the Rwandan government in the armed groups in the east, which they often use satellite groups, the US is systematically involved trying to silence those reports. Often there are addendums that get cancelled and then they get leaked to the press. It is often at that moment that the US then starts to ask Rwanda, "Please behave a bit better because my name is on the line essentially." This hypocrisy is not something new. Foreign policy is not dictated by any moral principle, I believe, other than strategic calculations and at times economic interests of people who have more power. It's something that I think is very striking today when one looks at the Congolese conflict and when one looks at the genocide on Gaza in ways that are very difficult to comprehend, the level of mismatch between what society is actually able to see and the discourse of the US government trying to hide and sanitize something that is too late to hide anymore.
And the same happens for the support of Rwanda. The violations of human rights in the Congo exploitation of illicit minerals have a long history of Rwanda involvement since the '90s. Also, human rights inside Rwanda to maintain the regime. So there's a common pattern in that when a group or a regime is of strategic value for a powerful country, then they are willing to cut more slack on a variety of issues to this group so that they can remain aligned, which is a form of extracting rent from the big powers saying, "You need me, therefore I'm going to do things that other people might not like, and you can keep protecting me."
Manda Bwerevu:
And then on the note of the Free Congo Movement, that's really popular right now in huge part because of the conflict between Israel and Hamas. I'm curious why you think that the connection between the DRC and Palestine is being made and what the Congolese people can do to capitalize on this media tension to help address and spotlight some of the conflict there, because it's been a conflict that's been happening for a very long time, really large scale. Violence and lives lost, yet not really a lot of media attention. So I'm curious what you think we can do to help capitalize on the Free Congo Movement.
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
I think it's an empowering moment, and it's also a very difficult moment because the madness that is currently taking place in Gaza shadows also other conflicts that are often brought back by defenders of the madness of Gaza, by saying, "Well, if you care about them, you should also care about this 50 other conflict."
In the case of the DRC, the few studies that exist showed that within five or six years, 7 million people died as a result of the wars just between 97 and 2004, and how murderous the situation is continuous. Perhaps less intensively, but millions and millions of people have died in Congo directly or indirectly as a result of the war. So I think when people started to develop the language of, for example, genocide... Or to use genocide, it's something that resonated a lot among Congolese people who have, in a sense, it relates I think a little bit to this hermeneutical injustice who have been in the shadow of the look of the international community while suffering at a huge scale without necessarily being given the tools to put a finger of what exactly is that is happening to us.
The scale is huge. The difficulty in addition to be shadowed by the other conflict now is that in the other conflict, there's one very clear perpetrator that every day decides to destroy everything through dumb bombs. In the case of the Congo, there's 120 groups and people don't understand from the outside what would be the one logic, what would be the role of the Rwandan actually if one were able to intervene intervening at the level of the Rwandan government would be important. Also the political elite in Kinshasa, what is their role? Each of hundreds of groups typically has a political pattern. Sometimes they're in Kinshasa, sometimes they're in Rwanda. The key denominator is that the state is too weak.
And so that makes it even harder to articulate a language saying, "We have to stop, and this is the strategy." Because it seems like it's almost like conflict that has infected everything and people don't really know where to begin. So I think it has provided the language a little bit to remobilize the fight in the Congo to end the suffering. It's shadowed and it's very difficult for a lot of people to identify one solution.
Hannah Balikci:
I think starting to wrap things up a bit, we just want to know... We just have some final questions that we ask every guest on root of conflict. And one thing is that if there was a paper or book that you would recommend to a young public policy student to read, which would it be? Was there something that you read either in your studies that you found seminal or that you teach in your class that you think is something that people should be really reading and internalizing?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
Yeah. Can I give a few?
Hannah Balikci:
Yeah, for sure.
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
So I would start probably with Frantz Fanon, Black Skin White Masks, which I think is very enlightening and empowering to understand some of the issues we have been discussing. Democratizing also for people to read it. I would probably also suggest that's also a difficult book to read, but Dunbar Ortiz, An Indigenous History of the United States that kind of traces back the history of the last 300 years from the perspective of indigenous people who received the colons and who were exterminated before the word genocide even existed, to kind of position ourselves in the historical context to better understand who we are and what we do and why and to better decide freely ourselves what we want to do. This is not to dictate just normatively who we ought to do.
I think there is a recent book since we're talking about the current conflict, a a recent book called The Palestine Laboratory by Antony Loewenstein that illustrates how the Israeli military very rarely understood that they had an edge in military technology. And part of the edge became huge with the birth of artificial intelligence because military technology hinges on experimenting. And it is a society that essentially has millions of Palestinians on which new technologies are regularly experimented. That may not explain the current conflict, but I think it provides some context.
I would also provide perhaps two other last recommendations. Rashid Khalidi, The Hundred Years' War on Palestine gives good context for most people, I think, to understand, I don't want to say the Palestinian perspective. I want to actually say a more holistic perspective. As well as of course, Ilan Pappé, the Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, which is an Israeli scholar that took seriously the most taboo question in the birth of the state of Israel, which has to do with the removal by force of hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Palestinians from their historical homeland.
Manda Bwerevu:
The next question is, what advice would you give to students or people in general who are interested in working in this area and are just beginning their careers?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
I think courage. Courage to you. I encourage you to continue recognizing that if you can, you are born in a historical context of privilege that doesn't make you evil, that gives you a responsibility to look back at why you, or we, have this privilege where we can actually spend our time trying to help other people. Doing that, undergoing that reflection, taking the responsibility of perhaps historical injustices that might account for the distribution of wealth today to say how better can you use it?
And hopefully, the kind of historical introspection might also help better make sense of the relationships that you're going to build. Beware of anti-intellectual quick thinking that is very present when it comes in building relationships across different groups. It's very present today in the media when people regularly call other people human animals, for example, in a way that's almost sparks like wildfire. People are very ready to take these representations of other people as a way to justify violence. This is not about the current conflict. It is about the history of humanity. And especially over the last 500 years, it's about... I think looking at it can make us better to have the impact we want to have.
Raphael Rony Anthony:
What upcoming event in Harris that you're looking forward to and you would recommend everyone to go and attend?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
So I think there is an event in May, I believe it's May 16th, where a film is going to be showed with a producer. The film is called Israelism. And again, along the lines of what we have discussed about the class, I think it's not something that is going to be very comfortable to watch for some people. And I really don't wish people to feel uncomfortable. I watched it myself and it helped From the perspective of Jewish-Americans, explain to me as an outsider, how important is their relationship with the state of Israel after a millennia of persecution of Jewish people. How also not only important it is, but how much dissent that is also among the Jewish community with regards to if we are going to have a state for ourselves where we can be safe, should it be at the expense of other people with violence?
And it led me to realize that very early in the 19th century when people became aware that the political project of Zionist was about to remove people with violence, a lot of Jewish people became anti-Zionist of different political ideologies. Some of them have the view that today they live very safely in the United States, and maybe there is a way to have their own homeland, but perhaps not this one or not the way it has been obtained. I'm an outsider. I just found it very illustrative for me. And so part of the reason of consequence of watching this film is that yesterday I was at a Jewish celebration, a Seder by Jewish academics who are against Zionism as a political project. It doesn't mean they want to destroy the state, doesn't mean they want anyone to die, but they just interpret their cultural and religious and historical roots in a way that is more consistent with their struggle as well as the struggle of others.
So I have full respect for, and an appreciation for the complex relationships that people who have suffered so much persecution have with the state of Israel. But it also, I think, illustrates how people came out of a particular relationship by realizing that they perhaps did not agree with the political project. And I learned a lot. And maybe other people disagree, and hopefully more people come to share their views.
Hannah Balikci:
And finally, what's something you wish we would've asked? We've asked a lot of questions here. It's been a long, long episode. What's something that you would've liked us to talk about?
Raul Sánchez de la Sierra:
I run out of ideas because you had so many great questions and you asked me more than I thought you would ask, which I really appreciated too. Maybe I position myself with this discourse that we have to be critical about the role of race, et cetera, but I'm also human and I'm a perpetrator as well. Deconstructing that aura that might emerge when someone is critical would be nice. I've been very difficult to work with, with the Congolese, with people from Europe and the United States.
I do have to say that having experienced the huge injustice of the living conditions of the Congolese, there was a moment they really lost any respect for European or American students that went to work with me and had this attitude with the Congolese. Things that were important needs for them, that I consider just an expression of entitlement. And I think I've grown over the years. I've also been difficult with the Congolese before. But to kind of base everything on compassion, that's the starting point. And the work that I have done on myself is not over. It's just the beginning. But that also implies that one has to use compassion with others. And everyone starts from a place that is not malicious. A lot of people in position of privilege also start from a place of some ignorance. It's not their fault. It's also good to kind of extend the bridge to help people, including me.
Hannah Balikci:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Professor Raul Sánchez de la Sierra. This episode was produced in edited by Hannah Balikci and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Rony Anthony, Manda Bwerevu, and Hannah Balikci. Special thanks to UC-III-P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of the series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website at pearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter, @pearsoninst. Inst is spelled I-N-S-T. Thank you.
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Philosophies of Research | Austin Wright
Hannah Balikci:
Hi, this is Hannah and you are listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You are listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC-III-P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
What kind of ethical concerns should researchers think about when deciding to take on a project? In this episode, we speak with Professor Austin Wright, an assistant professor of public policy at Harris, and a faculty affiliate of the Pearson Institute. We speak about his past and current research projects in Afghanistan, dual-use infrastructure and broad US policy interventions. We also talk about his work teaching as a professor, his advice for students, and how his life journey has influenced his understanding of conflict and ripple effects.
Hi, my name is Hannah Balikchi and I'm a second-year MPP student and Pearson fellow.
Austin Wright:
Hi, I'm Austin Wright. I'm an assistant professor here at the Harris School of Public Policy and an affiliate of the Pearson Institute.
Jose Macias:
Hey everyone, my name is Jose Macias. I'm a first-generation Chicano, and I'm also a second-year MPP student and Pearson Fellow.
Hannah Balikci:
So, Austin could you introduce yourself, how you came to Harris and your work, why conflict and how you got into all this?
Austin Wright:
Sure. Yeah, so I think that how I got into conflict I think is a story about a really pivotal time in my life. So when 9/11 happened, I happened to be at a high school in San Antonio, and when the towers were struck, my school went into lockdown. Those who are listening to the podcast might know, but might also not know, that San Antonio is military city USA. You have a large number of bases, a large constellation of military infrastructure there. And so my school went into lockdown because of that and concerns of the potential that San Antonio or nearby sites might be struck during a large-scale coordinated attack, which was unclear if that was happening on that day.
And the person that I was locked down with happened to be, again, military city USA, their partner was at the Pentagon. And when they found out the Pentagon had been hit, they of course went through this period of trying to gather information. Communications were locked down, they weren't able to get in contact with them. So, I spent that day, a day of tremendous suffering in the United States and abroad, I spent that day with someone who was in a very real sense going through the phases of reckoning with the potential that they had just lost their partner. And I think up until that point, I was a young teenager. I didn't really have a sense what terrorism meant. And I think many people around that age kind of experienced it for the first time then. We weren't really thinking about the attack on the World Trade Center that had occurred before, or even necessarily the attack on the USS Cole, that really didn't strike home for a lot of young people.
But this day, that event in particular, being with someone who was processing life, just how close terror can come to individuals who are thousands of miles away, that made the stakes really clear for me. And from that point forward, I became really interested in foreign policy. I became really interested in the notion of how people use violence as an alternative means of politics. And that day really solidified for me an interest in finding ways that we might both understand what the root causes of conflict are...
Hannah Balikci:
Good plug for the show.
Austin Wright:
As well as think... Yeah, good plug for the show. But also ultimately how, if we understand, if we can understand what are the causes of conflict, what are the root causes, what are the drivers of participation, why do individuals feel the need to resort to violence in this way, ultimately generates a set of challenges. And I think a core part of what I hope the Harris School is doing is not just thinking about that set of problems, thinking about what the drivers are.
The opportunity came. So you asked out how I ended up here. When the opportunity came to join Harris, I jumped at it. In part because it was around this time that the Pearson Institute was forming, and there was a lot of excitement about the potential that that could promote both on the research front and on the policymaking or policy advocacy front. And I'm here because I'm excited about that work. And I think all of us, maybe the folks listening to the podcast, I think a lot of the folks in this room right now are thinking about, how do we not just identify what drivers are, but how we can go out and build a better, more prosperous, more just world.
A world that our kids are going to live in and my kids live in. And this is what motivates me in the work that I do and the advocacy that I do because of that. And I think that what this has enabled, I don't mean to be too long-winded, but is that when we struggle with, we're all purpose-seeking animals, and we can find purpose in any number of ways. And the purpose that I have found in my life, at least at this moment of my life, is really how to build that more just and secure and prosperous world for my children and their friends and the children that they will have. And a big part of that is not just how to we identify origins, but find solutions and how do we reinforce our relationships with strategic allies abroad, especially in the goal.
Jose Macias:
That's awesome. So thinking about your impact, and since joining Harris, you've taught about eight generations of scholars now. Could you describe what shaping a generation of policymakers is like at the Harris School for you? And if so, in addition to that, what are three things you want your graduates to remember when they leave?
Austin Wright:
Okay. Yeah, no, no, that's real, real. I feel like doing the numbers, I have the good fortune of people sometimes enjoying my lectures, and so sometimes they're a little overpopulated. That's probably at least 2000 students that I've taught that have come through that I've touched in some way, and many of which have gone off and worked in the public sector, have gone off and done important work there, have gone off and done work in the private sector, have gone off and worked in city and local government.
And look, not all of us need to study these questions. Not all of us are driven or motivated by the questions of understanding conflict. But I think all of us are driven by a core set of interests in how do we use policy as this lever? And ultimately people, I hope, lead, the courses I teach here are mostly in the core and mostly focus on how do we leverage data to generate the insights that will ultimately shape policy. And I think, yeah, so that's the aspiration. I think that we've done those programs internally with folks here at Harris. Big picture we've also expanded the offerings that Harris can provide so that we can reach beyond. Jose, you've been an instrumental part. This is kind of how we first met, and you've been an instrumental partner in enabling us to be able to take those opportunities elsewhere.
Ultimately, more recently thought about going out and not just working people who are thinking about going to graduate school, but also thinking about people who are already working for governments and enabling them to be successful. We're doing that with a strategic partner in the security arrangement of the United States, and I think that that's a meaningful thing. That goes just beyond the scope of Pearson.
Now, three things I hope students who leave Harris, who I've interacted with are ultimately thinking about. I think the first is that in order to do good work, we need to understand the settings. We need to understand the context. That I think a lot of folks often confuse running regressions with a true understanding of what's going on. But once you really understand what you can learn from the regression, you do know that in order to get the most out of this tool, in order to get the most out of data, you have to understand what generates the data. You have to understand the local context, you have to understand drivers and measurement. And that just requires a tremendous amount of institutional knowledge. And I hope that people coming through here don't get confused about the fact that just because I'm looking at a table or I'm looking at a really beautiful figure that it's necessarily telling me anything meaningful if I don't know about the-
So, that's the first thing. I think the second thing really is that I hope our students leave with the skills to both be good, hopefully be good producers, but if they can't be good producers of research that they know how to more skeptically consume research. And I mean, that's part of the first thing, but I think it's also much bigger that you know how to ask questions about what is generating the sample, what are the potential biases that are here? Part of that is understanding context, but also part of that is also understanding the method you're using or what the method other people are using.
And I think the third thing that I hope that students leave my class with an understanding of is that there are many people here at Harris that care. There are many people here at Harris that want to enable our students to be successful. As an institution, I hope that we're committed to this, but at the very least, I hope my students understand that if they ever need to come back and they want to talk about a problem that whether it's professional or personal, whatever, mostly professional, right? I'm here for talk therapy, but mostly I'm to give you advice about it like make better policy.
But I would hope that they understand they can come back. There is a home for them here. And I mean that both here in a literal sense, but there is a home for them and in intellectual sense where they can come and find me wherever I am in the world. And if they have a problem and I have the time and bandwidth to help to solve that problem, I will give them everything I have.
And we talked about this, Jose. I think that's just part of, and when we think about, for me, the true origin of the roots of my interest here intersect very closely with a lot of those drivers we were talking about earlier, which is I grew up in abject poverty in some sense. We had holes in our roof, we had holes in our ceiling and black mold, we didn't have heat, we didn't have AC. And what enabled me to be successful, it was that people were committed. And so I hope that people leave my class with the sense that I'm equally committed to their success because people in the past have seen something in me and took gambles and made flyers and they took a pass. And I hope that the gamble paid off and I'm here to pay that far forward. So, yeah. Third thing, hopefully.
Hannah Balikci:
One of the things you talked about, you teach the core classes, but there's a class you also take that's big data and development. And I was just wondering to get your thoughts on what's your definition of big data and how do you use it within your research and how do you use data, the context that you talked about and together to create research?
Austin Wright:
Yeah, that's a great question. I mean, I think that big data has no single definition in the sense that how big does it have to be? In this class, what we are focused on is a broad set of settings. We're innovating on data collection. People are innovating on measurement, people are innovating on clever research designs, all of which leverage large-scale data. And I think that one of the benefits of a class like this is I get to teach papers that I like and I get to share some of the cool things. But we don't shy away from the fact, look, we're scientists and everything, nothing I do is perfect and nothing that anyone else does is perfect. And there are always things that we can improve on. That is, that should be our mission as scientists, is to find the ways that we can improve that which we see and ensure that it's as robust as possible and as meaningful as possible.
And that class gives us an opportunity to read through papers at the bleeding edge of data science and big data as it intersects with social science and questions of interest for us in development, which is a broad spectrum. It's like political developments, it's economic development, it's development in fragile settings often which are marred by conflict. And to both think about how to do good work in those places that leverages things like remote sensing, so satellite imagery, high-frequency satellite imagery at super granular levels.
In yesterday's class, we were talking about a really nice paper on fires that crop bring in Pakistan and India and a super nice, super interesting paper. But I hope that the students understand that I really like this paper. I think this paper is excellent in many, many dimensions, but there are many things that we could do to potentially tweak it around the edges and improve it. And when they come in and they see that cool data, they see all this high-frequency information, they see the beautiful data bits. I hope that that doesn't keep them from asking skeptical questions. Just because this is great doesn't mean it can't be better.
Hannah Balikci:
Right.
Austin Wright:
Yeah.
Hannah Balikci:
I think that kind of goes into some of the projects that you worked on and you talked about context. You've been to Afghanistan before 2021. One of your projects I think was released last year was territorial control. And even just talking about non-state actors and how that creates conflict and how, I think just how the control and effective sovereignty of political entities can be measured through big data. But also just how did you, I don't know. I guess my real question with this is how did you come to that research topic and how did you use the context you had from being in Afghanistan to sort of say, okay, this is something we can measure. How do you take those results and can you apply them to other places? And what's the policy outcome you want to have from that?
Austin Wright:
Yeah, yeah, that's a excellent question. Yeah. So we had a project that leveraged some rather incredible survey data that had been sponsored by NATO. And we negotiated through Pearson early on access to this data. We had just moved to Keller and I was here, I couldn't sleep. And at that time I lived here really close to probably way too close to code. So when I couldn't sleep, I would just come to the office super late at night and I would just read. And I happened to be reading one of the reports that came alongside that survey data. Basically explains how did they collect it in the field and I was thumbing through these extremely long documents, and I get to the very end of one of them, and it's explaining something called a sampling recent. And what I was seeing in this report was this notion that the Taliban was actively blocking them from going in and collecting data in certain places. And then I was leaning back in my chair, I fell down, I hit my head pretty hard. I went uncon- No, I'm kidding. I'm joking about this part. This is my apple hitting me on the head type moment.
No, it was just like in that moment I...
Hannah Balikci:
Are you okay? It's two in the morning.
Austin Wright:
That's right, that's right. It's two in the morning. I wake up little birdies, like little birdies flying around my head. No, it's like in that moment I just kind of had this aha where it's like, okay, okay. Everything that we see is conditional to being able to go collect data and the data they're collecting is sensitive. The data they're collecting is insights into how civilians behave, what they believe, what they prefer, and insights about the operations of the Taliban. And so if you are this non-state actor and it's smart because you asked the question about generalizability and whether or not I can take this and take it to other places. And I think that in that sense, it's portable in that non-state actors, whether it's the Taliban, whether it's the FARC or former FARC or paramilitaries or armed groups or criminal groups or just criminal organizations in general, or even just regular political actors, will often have incentives to keep people from knowing information about their activities.
They want to keep that private and their ability to keep it private in a setting like this reveals something about their power. And it reveals something about the territorial integrity of what they control in a geographic sense. This is all in-person data collection. They're constantly pinging these districts trying to go in and access them. And what's happening is if there's territorial integrity, those data collectors are going to get blocked, and if they have an incentive to block them, they're going to keep them out. And so yeah, that's where that project came from. I didn't actually fall. It did not need to seek medical attention, but it was this aha moment where it's like, okay, the sampling, resampling process in these surveys is instrumental for thinking about whether or not we even see the data. And that tells us something, that gives us some insights into the battle space.
Jose Macias:
So thinking about, we were talking about this international paradigm. Austin, it sounds like you came of age after 9/11, which impacted an entire generation of scholars. What do you think now as you sit here, you do this research, you leverage different kinds of methods. What does evidence policymaking look like under strategic competition with the New York [inaudible 00:17:55] what does that look like? What is the research, but how do we articulate findings? How do we drive impact? This idea of strategic competition as we've transitioned from the war on terror to what we see today?
Austin Wright:
That's a hard one. I think that, in an ideal sense, what we would be able to do is have a line of communication to share insights from our work with stakeholders who are making decisions. And that's a difficult thing to achieve, whether it's during periods of counterinsurgency or period now something like great power competition or near-peer, or as we recently found out with the war in Ukraine, maybe not near- peer, but big picture still concerns, right? We want to take those potential threats very seriously.
So there is something that emerged that Pearson has supported that Harris School has been an active participant in, which is something called the Empirical Studies of Conflict. It's a project that was initially funded by support from DOD to create exactly this. A network researchers all committed to the same core sort of credible causal approach, or at least the approach to social science research on these questions and to give advice. And we have a seat at the table in some sense. We can share those insights. We have partners. And again, that's because you have to build out reputation. You have to build out that relationship. They need to be able to say, okay, I can reasonably rely on what you're saying because the work you do is high quality. And I can differentiate between you and someone who's just a talking head on TV.
Now, that organization was originally founded with the focus on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. These are counterinsurgency conflicts. But the toolkit that we use, the toolkit that we teach our students here is portable. I can take it from studying these sets of questions and I can use it to study questions, not necessarily questions of true grand strategy, but I can use it to think about very precise questions in the context of great power competition and near-peer competition and the threats that we face in an international setting and not just in a counterinsurgency setting. And we're beginning to do that. And in fact, one of the big projects that we're launching is focusing on that transition, is focusing on, and we're rolling up those old projects. We still need to learn the lessons of those conflicts because we invested a lot of blood and treasure in those wars. We need to learn from them to prepare for the next set of counterinsurgencies, because these wars will not go away.
These wars don't go away. And when the United States is in a position to intervene in support of a strategic ally or to intervene in a humanitarian sense, I hope that we don't shine away from our obligation to humanity as this great nation, but we also need to prepare for an eminent set of concerns at a global scale, which are not that. And we're beginning to work on those sets of projects to understand how we can prepare for that eventuality because it's better to be prepared than to be caught off guard. We're getting ready for that.
Jose Macias:
Can you give a teaser to the audience? What kind of projects are coming down the pipeline?
Austin Wright:
Yeah. So we have a series of projects on Ukraine specifically. We launched a couple of projects there. We've already wrapped up one of those big projects about how we can better inform the public during periods, during episodes of instability that we can message to them understanding how responsive they are and figuring out better systems to help our allies in a setting where Ukraine is now engaged in a near-peer competition with Russia, right?
Jose Macias:
Yeah.
Austin Wright:
That's what we're seeing. And that stalemate creates a lot of potential concerns about the civilians getting adjusted to that. So that was what that project was about.
But in terms of that sort of, I don't really see this as a tri-polar world. This is like my hot take. Russian forces are not prepared for what the United States would be able to unleash in a ground war. That's obvious. And that is not near-peer competition in a broad sense. But there is a coming conflict with another nearby nation. A rising nation that is a recognizing its place in the world that would like to reshape the world in its vision. And that nation is also facing a series of internal crises and will soon find it probably politically advantageous to engage in a large-scale military conflict or military buildup to offset a crumbling economy. And the United States needs to be prepared for that eventuality and is increasingly becoming prepared for the possibility that that state won't just harness military capacity but will harness its strategic investments in the acquisition of seaports and trade terminals globally.
And so that is the work that we're doing is to understand just what the consequences are of the massive, massive spending that they have been doing, buying up the majority of the world's most important ports, and what potential consequences that might have for global trade. And of course, if that nation only directly controls somewhere on the order between 68% of global trade, so even if they withdrew from the global economy, I mean of course it would be a massive hit in terms of manufacturing and production, but there could be strategic reallocation. But through their port acquisitions, they now control probably something on the order between 65 and 75 percent of global trade through their ports.
Jose Macias:
Wow.
Austin Wright:
And that is of grave concern at a global scale. And our project is to better understand just what the consequences are of that amount of acquisition and doing some scheming about settings where they might be able to leverage that tremendous power they now have in a commercial sense, as an extension of the states to those commercial enterprises. And the way to think about this is in the wake of World War II, the United States chose guns. We have naval assets deployed globally. We have military assets-
PART 1 OF 4 ENDS [00:24:04]
Austin Wright:
... states chose guns. We have naval assets deployed globally. We have military assets deployed globally. They have chosen butter and they have chosen to be able to control the global flow of butter. They have chosen ways of being able to influence who gets that, how much they pay for it, and they can use those means potentially to completely destabilize global trade. That represents an existential threat to the global system.
Hannah Balikci:
Right. I mean, it does represent an existential threat to the global system and especially to the United States. But looking towards the Western hemisphere, take for example the situation in Ecuador where the president has declared a state of internal armed conflict. In Ecuador and in Latin America in general, how do you get the economic situation in a place where people stay instead of coming to the US for economic opportunities? Or even also fleeing violence, there's the two sides of that. You have to do both the immediate violence and we've seen that in Bukele in El Salvador. How do you do the violence stuff? But also it's the bandaid for right now, but then also getting to the root cause of the violence.
Austin Wright:
These are many dimensional problems and if we think about gaming out a strategy that helps us resolve one thing, it might inadvertently have these second, third order effects that we have not carefully thought through.
I mean in the end, I think, listeners, if they know me, they probably know I'm a Harry Potter fan. This is like Snape turning-
Jose Macias:
What's your house?
Austin Wright:
Bro, obviously Slitherin.
Hannah Balikci:
Same.
Jose Macias:
Wow.
Austin Wright:
[inaudible 00:25:44] Bro.
Jose Macias:
That's real fake and all.
Austin Wright:
But I will say, I admit that I'm a Slitherin, but I struggle against some of these things. I made a commitment this year to be more empathetic. Snape is turning to Dumbledore, you asked too much. Have you ever stopped to think that you asked too much?
And I do think that this is something we need to think seriously about. There are a multitude of drivers, all interacting with each other that if we want a sustainable, intentional solution or a sustainable intentional intervention that we hope looks something like a solution, then it involves us thinking about all of these complexities involved in what the drivers are and the interaction between those local economic conditions and violence. And the fact that some individuals are fleeing the lack of economic opportunity, some individuals are fleeing the presence of violence, and some of them are fleeing places where these two things are very closely interconnected with one another.
Of course, we're also running up against very, very serious strategic concerns that we might have about the replacement rate in the United States, our birth rate, the extent to which we can pay for our social service commitments that have been made to an increasingly elderly population. And of course, how has the United States been able to do this over time? Because we've been significantly increasing the presence of immigrants who are paying into the system but are not yet benefited.
All of these things have to be taken together and thought about in concert with one another. But I think the tricky part is like, all right, are we asking too much of a process that can barely get the answer on a very simple set of problems? And this is a really complex one and we need to take seriously what can actually be done to address that.
Hannah Balikci:
I think of that like sometimes it feels like the US is almost doing too much. I don't know, this is just one of a personal thought that there's a lot of policy that's being done by the US to different countries around the world and does it feel like sometimes the US' policies are... I think of US sanctions of Venezuela, the secondary effects that happened from that are now not necessarily that it's only that, but that the economic situation as a result of the US sanctions of Venezuela has led to this migration throughout South America. And now with the Barbados Agreement trying to walk that back, how do you get to these?
Jose Macias:
And I think that just goes to show their shifting priorities and how do you adapt to a shifting priority? It sounds like this was probably an effort by the administration to try to offset energy crisis by introducing more oil to the market at large. But I think it goes to, is the US doing too much or how do you balance your priorities given what's going on in the shifting world or international conflict?
Austin Wright:
It is a tricky problem, because when you think about the sanctions question, when the initial decision is made, we tend to think about this as a partial equilibrium problem where it's like, can it have the direct effect that's intended on that target audience without thinking about the downstream? General equilibrium effects it might have, the externalities it might create or the second and third order effects. That's because often... This gets back to the conversation we were just having before that the policymaking process can rarely get simple problems right. And then when you think about, now I'm going to ask you to not just think about the direct effects today and try and optimize for those, but I'm going to ask you to think about what happens three congressional cycles from now when you might not be in office, when you might not reap the political benefits or face the political consequences. You don't reap the benefits of success and you don't face the consequences of failure necessarily.
Then, that creates a lot of focus on the present value of whatever you're doing. If we can't even get those right, then it becomes really difficult for us to think about these longer term strategic planning. And you have these whiplash effects where some new conflict emerges, you face an eminent concern today, you roll back an intervention that you introduced before, and it's basically just you're shifting your priorities and constantly reevaluating. And then that doesn't lend itself for the long-term planning you need to fix the problems that you were talking about earlier. To think about how do we go in and build that more just and secure and prosperous world that we were talking about before? How do you go do that? That's a really hard, that's a long-term commitment to a place. I think there are reasonable questions about like, how much should American taxpayers be responsible for the citizens of another country and helping them build their country?
Hannah Balikci:
And that goes back to Afghanistan, which what we were talking about.
Austin Wright:
That's right.
Hannah Balikci:
I was doing a bit of research on some of your current projects, and one of the things is the Refugee Repatriation Project and how really talking again about more people are on the move at any time now more than any time in human history. I think if you can go a bit into the project, it was an interesting, natural experiment of seeing people who had cash assistance versus not and the decoupling, repatriation with conflict. Is that right?
Austin Wright:
That's right. I mean, this is one of these... All credit for the initial idea goes to my coauthor Christopher Blair, who's at Princeton now, was a PhD student at Penn at the time. For thinking about this big question of how do we evaluate the impact of large scale resettlement? The movement of individuals who were previously displaced from their country back home, repatriation. That's a really hard problem because when we think about, and this is like what? The paper emphasized what you're picking up on, which is that there are these episodes throughout history, recent history, where we observe this mass relocation back to a place of origin or mass outflow away from a conflict. But crucially, it's all happening because it's endogenous to conflict.
Then when we're thinking about how do we go and we do an evaluation of the mass relocation of individuals? Is really hard because it's often embedded within a context where the driver is the very thing that we would like to be able to study the impact on. And this is so closely coordinated with one another.
This project is a nice opportunity to begin thinking about how do you go in and do that? To our knowledge, it's the very first of its kind to do effectively a natural experiment impact evaluation of resettlement at scale. And this is all coming from a shock induced by a change in cash assistance that was provided by the United Nations to individuals who relocated from Pakistan back to Afghanistan.
There's a lot of, as you might imagine in a space like this, when you're thinking about a lot of individuals, a lot of at-risk individuals, and this conflict. Sensitivities to the side, a lot of military-age males who are at risk relocating to context of ongoing conflict and that the timing of the policy was timed to, as it turns out, coincide with the beginning of the fighting season. This could have been an absolute disaster in terms of planning and in terms of the unintended harm that it could have created.
It was very serious and it was unclear whether or not it had those effects. There were a lot of conjectures and there still are a lot of conjectures about the effects of repatriation and relocation on conflict. What happens when you take a mass of individuals who have been abroad? Who have been exposed to all sorts of economic and political hardship? All sorts of insecurity. And now they're coming back home, a place they've been dislocated from for maybe months or maybe years or maybe decades? They're coming back to an origin community away from which they have drifted and to whom they might be viewed as an enemy or at least a rival, a competitor, putting pressure on that host community that they're going back to. Those are all serious concerns.
There are so many theories that one could come up with which exists that it's a tinderbox, you're about to light a match and we're going to see this whole thing light up in a way that's obviously was not the intention of a program that would lead to a wave of return.
What we do is we could take advantage of the unexpected timing of when the cash transfers were announced. And what you see is within days there's a flood, there's just a wave of individuals who are returning back to the country taking advantage of this doubling of cash assistance, which in that context is a significant sum of money, especially when you think about this like a median household scale. It's a very large amount of money in the context. You see this mass wave of return that could have had all these disastrous effects on the reemergence and intensification of the conflict or escalation of the conflict. Indeed, what we end up seeing is that either the conflict is unaffected overall, or there are some types of violence that go down.
In particular, the thing to remember is that this is one of the benefits of them not returning on their own, they're returning with this effectively a significant economic stimulus, is that that can have spillover effects across households within the affected the target communities where they go back to. Indeed, what we see is this a significant decrease in labor-intensive violence, which is consistent with the story that they're effectively increasing the reservation wage of fighting because they're coming back with cash. Of course, we can't go ask the Taliban how much were they paying their fighters. We can't find direct evidence of that wage mechanism. But all of the evidence points in this direction, especially when we think about what would civilians demand for valuable information. So we see some results there as well.
But of course, when you're in this world, you're budget-constrained, you have an interest in maintaining the production of violence, and now it becomes more difficult and costly for you to produce one kind of violence, maybe you turn to another. What we end up seeing is that there is this reduction in labor-intensive violence, and to be clear, that is the mass of violence. But what they end up substituting into are the types of violence that are insensitive to this shock or largely insensitive to this shock, which is capital-intensive roadside bombings. So what they start doing is they start investing more and that type of weaponry, that is what we see. As an additional test of that mechanism, what you see is not only are the increasing the number, but the sophistication of those attacks increases, as well. The impact that it has on the conflict is increasing.
It's a bit of a double-edged sword. In one sense, what we found is that overall violence is not really moving around that much, but that's actually masking these splits where it is moving in a way consistent with the story about reservation wages and it is moving in a way consistent with an insurgent group, having an incentive to produce violence, but now being constrained in one way. So they're going to substitute, and it turns out when they substitute, they're substituting into the most deadly form of violence. And when they substitute into that form of violence, they're making increased investments in that, it's becoming more technologically-sophisticated and they're harming even more people than they did before.
Like we were talking about earlier, it's all coming full circle. When we think about a policy intervention, you got to think about the first order effects, but then you got to think about second, third, and fourth, third, all those downstream consequences. Because what ends up happening is that Afghanistan overall doesn't become necessarily more violent place, but it comes a significantly more dangerous place, especially in the places that those individuals are going to, and not necessarily because of any fault of their own. It's becoming more dangerous because of a strategic substitution by an armed actor who still has an interest in producing violence to disrupt the state. That's what makes this so hard to think about policy interventions, because when we think about, "Well, we can put our finger on one problem, we can block off one channel." And then that starts spouting off this game. It's a game of whack-a-mole where I'm going back and forth, and now I'm stretched across all of these things. It's like that scene from Star Wars. It may have been a collab between the Asia Foundation and UNHCR.
There are some things that you have to be careful with is the sensitivities of data and how things change. When we began working on that project, there was still the democratically-elected government in Afghanistan. It is like a non-trivial thing because when we have a series of papers, now you're seeing the underbelly of academic publishing is that it takes way too long to actually get papers out. But we have papers that were submitted before the takeover, then the takeover happened and it's like when we initially submitted, we were free to release a good chunk of this data, and now we have very serious concerns about how this data might be appropriated by bad actors in bad ways.
In particular, we have a project on information operations during the war and the impact on civilian collaboration and making that data publicly available in any way, it would basically be a map to collaborators, which collaborators in the sense of they were actively supporting the provision of security in their area. They were just doing it to the wrong actor, or now. When the paper was submitted, they were coordinating with the active government of Afghanistan, but then when the paper was accepted and it was about to be published, now, they actually were collaborating with the former regime. That's the things that you have to be careful with.
I'm glad you brought up the credential program because this is, again, it's opportunities for us to be in thinking about how can we use that as a test bed or how can we think about using that to refine our ideas? Actually, Hannah, you asked this question earlier about a territorial control project, it feels like hours ago now.
You know what?
Jose Macias:
It's the magic of mixing.
Austin Wright:
The magic of editing.
You asked about a project, and actually people in this program, they were some of the first to see that data in the wild, and some of them were giving lots of feedback about how to think about the measurement strategy, how to think about that and shout out to them because this is basically... I got to use that as an opportunity to trial run an idea, to get their thoughts on wrinkles and where it might not work and under what conditions it does work. And that's all tremendously useful.
Again, to go back to those earlier themes where it's so important that we realize that there's an interplay between research and teaching, research and teaching, research and teaching. Because if you use your work to guide your teaching, you can use your teaching to inform the work that you do.
Hannah Balikci:
And then in fact, policy from there.
Austin Wright:
And then ultimately, yeah. Look, I've spent the past week thinking seriously about this. The work that we do is a three-legged stool, one of these legs is research. The core thing that drives universities, especially research universities, the production of knowledge. And that's important.
The second leg is the leg of teaching. Enabling your students to be successful in the world by recasting the way that they think about problems and giving them the toolkits to be successful and to go out and to have the impact that you hope they will, whether they go off in industry, or they go work in the public sector, local, state, federal, international. You hope that you can do that.
And the third leg is doing. The third leg is actually going out and trying to reshape the world, not just through your research and not just through your teaching, but through active policy engagement and policy consultation. I will say that to me, this is the hallmark, the place that is doing its job well. Is that we both think on our own, we train people to think, but we also do, and we train people to do.
As of late, I've been thinking a lot about this notion that there is no higher calling than public service, both in the interest of your state and the interest of your nation and the interest of humanity. And I hope that we play a small part of recasting the shape of the world in all of its multifaceted dimensions by training the people who will go do those things and make it that more just and prosperous and secure place.
Jose Macias:
Just and prosperous.
Hannah Balikci:
Absolutely. You mentioned it as a stool. Is that the stool of the university or who sits on that stool?
Austin Wright:
For me it's a three-legged stool. I don't know who actually sits on a stool, maybe Jose over here. But in some ways, it can't function if one of these is broken or banged or-
Jose Macias:
Special issue over here, let's go. Represent. Austin, where are you at?
Austin Wright:
One of these is not functioning, it's underdeveloped or it's immature. It's not stable. I don't know, maybe this is not the point of university in general because I think that maybe there are some parts of the university like philosophy departments or humanities departments or the liberal arts that should exist in a way that lives the life of the mind. But when I think about what is the aspiration of a place that would like to have an impact, that would like to have influence, this is how it happens. We can't really do that. Think about what is the difference between a public policy school and an NGO? What's the difference between a public policy school and a think tank? NGO is really focused on advocacy, it's focused on doing, and maybe there are some people inside of it that are engaged in research. In fact, many of those NGOs are engaged in research, but they're not engaged in teaching.
When we're thinking about a think tank, the think tank might be actively involved in research and it might actually be actively involved in lobbying, but it's not going to be actively involved in training people. Then, where is the one place where all of these things can collide with one another? Where you hopefully learn all of these things together. It's a university and maybe not university in general, maybe a professional school where we don't just train people to think, we train people to practice.
Jose Macias:
Which is great because it's low-stakes environment to an extent. You can fail here and still grow.
Austin Wright:
Oh, sure.
Jose Macias:
It's going to help you be a better researcher and critical thinker.
Austin Wright:
I thought that was the most dry joke I've heard all day. Low-stakes setting, no big deal, we were just talking about massive relocation of people from Latin America to the United States. No, but I think you're absolutely right. You should think about it, this is the laboratory. It's an opportunity for you to take your time at a place like Harris. In the classroom, you're not having that a direct effect. You can choose trial runs on ideas. I mean, I just did a trial run idea earlier and it...
Jose Macias:
Did it land? No?
Austin Wright:
In one sense, it landed, but it burned. That's a good thing where it's helpful to be able to bounce ideas and get a sense of what other people's priorities are and where they see that going, because then they can give you feedback about your idea before you actually go out and make perhaps a mistake.
I think that's absolutely right. But again, the reason why it's so helpful to have that low stake setting where you get to train, you get to think about these problems is so that when you go out in the real world, you've had that time to reflect. You've figured out the best practices, you know that, before I go out and I do this thing, I should assemble the smartest people I know and ask them for their sage wisdom. Get that advice. The time that you spend here at Harris, I mean, I hope... All of this is aspirational, because I don't know, because I'm not you. I don't know what the experience is, and I'm sure everyone has different experiences, but I hope that you take this...
PART 2 OF 4 ENDS [00:48:04]
Austin Wright:
... and I'm sure everyone has different experiences, but I hope that you take this time to build out your social network, that you take that time to find, oh, here are my trusted advisors that I can go to.
And maybe that's meant in a purely personal sense where I need advice on some life choice that I'm making, maybe some furniture that I'm buying. But meet it in a broader sense as well, which is that you're finding the people, you're building the network that you're going to come back to over and over and over again to seek advice. Because you've been through what I hope is a challenging experience. Hopefully it's not too stressful, but a challenging experience where you are forged in fire to think about things in a similar way.
Jose Macias:
Can confirm forged in fire.
Hannah Balikci:
Right, yeah.
Jose Macias:
Absolutely. It's interesting that you think about that you're sharing your thoughts about how we can think about each other. Like Hannah and I and the entire class here, as advisors. Because I remember I think on day one, or I forget when the kickoff was for admissions, when Regin Daniels stepped up and said, "You should think about each other as your future board members for some sort of firm or some sort of consultant agency."
I'm thinking now, "Yeah, I definitely know who to call if I need help figuring out how do I deflate this value to constant 2022, or my code's not working. Can someone lend me a hand because I don't understand why this is not working so well?" Or just picking an idea. This is definitely a place to generate social capital and then leverage for the future and hopefully to do good, try to apply and change the world using evidence-based approaches.
Hannah Balikci:
And hopefully think about those second, third-order effects too for things that you're doing.
Jose Macias:
Which I think is really a conversation about ethics. And so, I think this is a good setup to transition to asking...
Austin Wright:
I like that segue. I like that segue.
Hannah Balikci:
Smooth, yeah.
Austin Wright:
It's totally natural.
Jose Macias:
Yeah. Brought to you by Spotify.
Hannah Balikci:
Available wherever you get your podcasts.
Jose Macias:
Student discount, let's go. In the policy world, sometimes there's pressures by stakeholders, and you alluded a little bit to it in terms of the change of regime, at least in Afghanistan. Sometimes these pressures come in different forms for a type of research, maybe sometimes like a shiny object or chasing the news cycle. Austin, how do you stay true to objective evidence-based policy research? And has there ever been a project pitched to you that tested the moral boundaries as a researcher?
Austin Wright:
Earlier we were talking about how the skills that you acquire, hopefully the way that we teach you to think about the world helps you realize it's not just ways of thinking about things like counterinsurgencies. It might be ways of thinking about great power competition, near-peer competition. It might be ways of thinking about dynamics of say, population movement.
And I remember, I think most listeners who were here at the time in May-June of 2020, really thinking through a series of events that were unfolding. Both the murder of George Floyd, but the subsequent response. The mobilization of public for demands that there be changes. And of course, one can debate about the merits of those demands and in the end, whether or not they were actually effective at shaping criminal justice outcomes and the interaction between marginalized communities and the criminal justice system, their experiences of the criminal justice system.
But this was a moment of a reckoning and a very personal one for me, which is that my wife is African American, my children are tri-racial, so they're part African American, they're part Hispanic, and they're white. And there was this moment where of course, it doesn't take having to have a personal exposure, I would hope. It's part of being more empathetic. We don't need to just be thinking about things that directly affect us. But in the end, when I was thinking about this episode, what struck me is that it was getting real.
My daughter, all of my children are beautiful. All of them are brilliant. All right. I'm just glad they look like their mother. I suppose most parents would probably say that, but I genuinely mean it. These kids are great kids and I have zero responsibility for making them that way. But I look at my daughter, so she's now 10. And if one were to describe her and one were to pick a race to describe her visibly.
Jose Macias:
Yeah, expressed. Right?
Austin Wright:
They would probably pick white. She has gray-green eyes, she has brown hair, straight brown hair, and she is light skinned. Her physical appearance, one might think that she's actually only one race, not three. And then my son, my first son, his name is Simon. He's got people here know him around the Twitter know him because he's got burnt orange here, it's copper. It glows in the sun. It's incredible and it's curly. And if one were to ask, is this child at least partially African American, the answer would certainly be yes.
And as all of these things were unfolding, I had this moment. I was sitting in our backyard and I was contemplating life and I was watching my children play. And what hit me in that moment was this profound sense of concern that I had no agency to affect the world that my children are going to live in a very particular way, which is that someday Rosie and Simon will be walking down the street and Simon will be racially profiled, but Rosie will not.
And they don't necessarily look like brother and sister. They have some similarities, but he will be racially profiled and she won't be. And there's nothing that can break the heart of a parent more than the idea of their children suffering. And suffering for no fault of their own, in a way that you have such limited locus of control to effect. And again, I want to emphasize that it's like it shouldn't take it being personal for it to matter. These kinds of things just should matter. But in this moment, for me, it was very personal.
And of course, I felt like, man, what value can I have? What value do I add? I work with data, what can I do? I'm not going to affect change immediately with going to a protest. I really...
Jose Macias:
You don't want-
Austin Wright:
Generally, those are not particularly effective modes of actually achieving change.
Jose Macias:
Yeah, driving change.
Austin Wright:
But one thing that did strike me is that I was seeing news coverage of events that were authentic, events that were coordinated by and supported by Black Lives Matter and allied groups. Were coordinated just by like-minded individuals, not even necessarily tied to Black Lives Matter as an institution.
And I was reading news reports of those authentic protests being penetrated by inauthentic actors, members of the Aryan nation, members of white supremacy groups who were attempting to undermine what they were doing. And they were going to do that by engaging in acts of arson, by engaging in acts of looting or making it appear as if they're looting. And then engaging in acts of violence against the police with the intention of triggering a response from the police, which then leads to an escalation.
And then of course, the narrative of what would've otherwise been a relatively peaceful event, making very serious demands, but a relatively peaceful event that gets distorted. Basically, they can hijack the narrative of coverage and make it about something that fits into a trope.
And when I read about this, I was like, oh, finally, I'm of value because I am a data person and this sounds like an empirical question and I have an idea. And the idea is if we can find a way of estimating all of the locations of these events, of the protests that are occurring. Okay, this is going to sound a little scary. If I can then track all of the individuals who participate in this protest, and then I can look at where those individuals come from, then I can discern the likelihood that those individuals are authentic participants.
But more likely than not, the focus would be on identifying a set of individuals who are inauthentically engaging. And whether or not those protests that involved members of the public that may have been inauthentically engaging or may have only been there as agitators or saboteurs there to distract, whether or not those were indeed the ones that were more likely to escalate to arson.
And so I worked with an amazing co-author of mine. We very quickly put together a project. It took us a couple of days. Again, this is when earlier you talked about data access and things like that. This is the perk of having a lot of data, is that you can readily work on projects of interest to yourself.
And we were able to do that. We came up with a method, using cell phone trace data. GPS trace data. For all you listeners who are listening on your phone, or you should know if you don't already, because I say this quite a bit now, that your phone is just, it's a surveillance device that happens to make phone calls.
And I mean that in a very skeptical critical sense, but also in a bit of a comical sense. Because the thing that we're using is actually just marketing data. It's data that when you're on Angry Birds or what's the new thing? The TikTok, the TickyTock, the gram, you do it for the gram. Yeah.
Hannah Balikci:
All LinkedIn all the time. Yeah.
Austin Wright:
Yeah. All [inaudible 00:59:03]
Jose Macias:
Well, here at Harris. Yeah, definitely. This is a professional school, so we use the professional network now. Yeah.
Austin Wright:
That's right. Yeah. That LinkedIn premium. Shout out. Shout out.
Jose Macias:
50%.
Austin Wright:
50%. That's right. Wherever you find your podcast. That was really good, Hannah. You're very professional at that. It's almost like you've done that before. I think it's everywhere. Almost everything you do with your cell phone, you're leaving breadcrumbs, at least up until a couple of years ago. You're leaving breadcrumbs that allow me to track basically your patterns of life.
In some sense it's not as scary as it sounds, but in another sense it is absolutely as scary as it sounds. And of course, I'm a scientist, I'm not a marketer, so I'm not necessarily interested in that dimension of things. I'm interested in what I can do with that data. We figured out a way to estimate locations and protests using this data.
But in order to do the harder part, well, the real thing to be able to back out who the inauthentic participants were with high fidelity, what we would have needed is more precise information. We reached out to an organization that had this information. Had a conversation with them, they were thrilled at the idea of the project. They were willing to grant us access to this information at an extremely steep discount.
And we were trying to figure out whether or not we were going to buy it. And then the clarification came. The clarification came that one of the reasons behind this, the willingness to grant this, is because it would be of value to the organization. And not just that organization, but other entities of the federal government.
Jose Macias:
Oh. This is a public-facing institution?
Austin Wright:
Yeah. Other elements of the government that would be interested in what we find and how we found it, and the IP. I had conversations, look, as a scientist, I was torn. I mean, you all know this, I love data. And what they were about to do is keys to the kingdom in some sense. Thinking about, well, you all have seen The Dark Knight.
Jose Macias:
Yeah, I love that movie.
Hannah Balikci:
Yeah.
Austin Wright:
Okay, well thank goodness you all... Have you seen that? Okay. All right, awesome. All right. Think about this as that scene where they're using echo location to do a 3D scan of Gotham to identify the Joker. You all remember the scene? It's kind of wild. Yeah. That's the world where that started off as fiction and then it became fact. And the fact is this data that they were willing to give us access to, is you can map with extremely high fidelity the movements of the vast majority of devices in the United States.
Jose Macias:
That's crazy.
Austin Wright:
Okay. Now what that would allow you to do is to understand where there were locations where inauthentic individuals were going in to engage in bad faith behavior to undermine a movement. A movement for all the reasons that we just talked about earlier I was interested in understanding and supporting. And that has very serious ethical implications. And not in the sense of the immediate thing, although one could think about just should one be able to have access to this in general.
But in the downstream things, and this is where you can't just think about the first-order implementation of what you're doing, because that might be done in good faith. That might be done with what you think of as the best interest of the public in mind yourself. But you have to think that once you have opened this box, once you have revealed the thing and how useful the thing can be, if there is no one there to constrain bad actors who might use it, then you're responsible for what they might do with what you have produced.
And this is the point where you have to begin thinking about is this paper dangerous? Maybe not dangerous today, but maybe dangerous in the future. Or how could it be hijacked for a purpose that was completely unintended? Now, that's probably true of most research that we do. If you tell me how to rebuild an economy, you're also giving me a backwards map to how to destroy it. And if you're telling me these are ways that I can go fix the link between conflict and growth or conflict in some public policy intervention, you're also telling me, okay, how can I go enhance conflict as well?
That's probably true of most of the things that we do. But this was in a very real sense, a natural thing that one could do after releasing this thing, which would be, well, you told me the subset that were inauthentic. Let me just flip this around and I'm going to go find the authentic ones. And not just that, but I'm going to go find the repeats. I'm going to go find the leaders of the organizations behind that, the people who are showing up repeatedly at protests, who appear to be engaging in coordination given their location within the flow of individuals within a site. Yeah. That's one of these situations where we had to think seriously about where there's sufficient safeguards in place.
Jose Macias:
Wow.
Austin Wright:
And the answer was no. And so what did we end up doing? We ended up shelving the paper. We ended up shelving that paper and we backed away from that project. Now things to know, at the time, this was 2020. I was still fairly early on the tenure track. Every paper matters. Professionally, this was a costly decision to make.
And personally, I felt really invested in what we had done because this project had given me a way that I could do something. I felt powerless in that moment that I could go down the street and raise my voice. But do I actually think that that's going to have a real impact? That's not my comparative advantage. I'm not the person who goes out. I'm not the person who will go lead that movement. That's not me. I'm not the community organizer. I'm a professor. I work with data.
And so finally I had an opportunity where I felt like I could be a value. And then to realize, oh, there was this ethical challenge, a very serious ethical challenge of concern over how it could be misappropriated that dang, the thing that I thought would be my value add might actually have these unintended consequences. And so yeah, we backed away from that. And that was a hard thing to do professionally and personally, but I think it's important to be willing to do that.
Jose Macias:
When someone says, "If you're not going to do it, we're going to find someone else to do it," does even phase you. Do you just take psalm, knowing peace that, well, that wasn't you. I guess I'm thinking about Oppenheimer, right?
Hannah Balikci:
The war to end all wars, like the weapon to end all wars.
Jose Macias:
Exactly. The weapon. Exactly.
Hannah Balikci:
Which didn't work. Yeah.
Jose Macias:
Which no, exactly. That's why I'm wondering, had that guy left and not created the atomic bomb, it was a race until someone else created it. I wonder how do you feel about if you don't do it, someone else does? And someone else is going to maybe get the tenure or somebody else is going to get the praise. How do you deal with, can you deal with it? Doesn't even matter.
Austin Wright:
It does matter. It does matter. I think that if you think the thing that you're going to do is not sufficiently specialized, somebody else can't just go do the thing that you did, then well, that's something for you to weigh in your decision.
A slightly different version of this is let's just say, I think that actually what that person will do is the wrong thing. If they're going to make some fundamental error. They don't have this tweak that I thought of. Then you're like, okay, oh shoot now, now I've got to weigh, not just the idea that someone else is going to go do the thing, but they're going to do it worse than I could have done it.
Jose Macias:
Dang.
Austin Wright:
Your like oh.
Jose Macias:
That's [inaudible 01:07:28].
Austin Wright:
That weighs too. That weighs too. But I think that that's also the appeal of a scoundrel in some sense, where it's like if you can convince yourself that someone else is going to do it, that's just an appeal so that you feel better about the fact that you really wanted to do the thing and now you're using it as motivation for actually just doing the thing, for rationalizing doing the thing.
These are things to balance. It's like, okay, am I really genuine about the idea that someone else is going to go do this? If they're going to go do it, they're going to do it worse. And it's going to be wrong and it's going to be wrong in really important ways. And if that is true, then you have to take a step back and think, "Okay, am I only doing that to rationalize the thing that I want to do to begin with? Am I only doing that to rationalize the sort of benefits that I might receive from it? Or am I genuine in my belief that it could be done?"
Now, I mean what we did is not terribly difficult. The intuition is pretty straightforward. But do I actually think that other people could do it if we did? I don't know. Doubt it. I mean, we were the first ones that did it. And maybe the answer is, yeah, somebody else would've had the idea and they would've put it together. But the human capital inputs to produce that kind of thing are non-trivial, human capital, real capital in terms of data are r non-trivial to put all these things together.
And I will say, I'm ready to.... We're going to melt... I'm going to burst some bubbles here and tell you that we often have this idealized vision of all the sort of meritocratically selected technocrats who run government or meritocratically selected technocrats who work in industry who are for profit reasons all very positively selected and doing the right thing at the right time because there's either public interest or private interests that are driving.
No, no. I mean, I'm here to tell you when you go off and you're working in the real world, everything has a distribution. And there's a very real chance that you're probably overestimating the capabilities of those entities, those organizations, those groups. Even if they're like-minded, they would like to do the thing that you're doing, they're probably not capable of doing that thing.
I mean, depending on how specialized it is. But get prepared to be frequently disappointed if you go in thinking that, oh, the people I'm going to be interacting with are all...
Jose Macias:
Top notch.
Austin Wright:
The best of the best.
Jose Macias:
No, I think, so for the listeners, before coming to Harris, I had some time to work on the Hill. And I remember coming straight out of undergrad after a year thinking about who runs government. And very much to that extent of it's got to be the top people`. Because it's challenging. It's a really hard place to break into, do some really good work.
But being on the hill, this is not a reflection of the office where I was at, but you realize that fundamentally people are still people. People still need soft deadlines. People don't necessarily have the right tool set to do it. And some people just know the system well enough to put your little idea from point A to point B. And they have their win, and that's all they really care about.
Sometimes it's not even about what the bill does, what the goal is. Sometimes it's just getting a win. I think that's one of my issues with working in the Hill, it's like it became more about theater, political theater than it did and about policy. Still a good experience, got to learn a lot, met some awesome people at work, grew.
But yeah, I think it's very true that we have this imagination because we're taught, I was political science, international relations undergrad, of what the Congress is. It's the pinnacle of democracy. It is the top, but at the end of the day, it's still run by humans. Humans are imperfect. And so I think there's a lot of truth in, yeah, there's going to be some disappointment there. But hopefully you come to a place like Harris to try to change that, to take up that space, to bring your skill set that is incredibly valuable and missing because you matter.
Austin Wright:
Yeah, no, that's right. I mean, I think that earlier we were talking about legacy, we were talking about why we do the things that we do. We were talking about the fact that we're all purpose-seeking animals. And I think that you're absolutely right that a core part of what we hope we can do is that we can affect how many meritocratically selected technocrats there are. And-
PART 3 OF 4 ENDS [01:12:04]
Austin Wright:
Like, how many meritocratically selected technocrats there are, right? And that the people going into these positions of power will be taken more seriously if they have the skillsets that we like to train people to think about.
So yeah, in some sense, I want people to be constantly skeptical. In general, I want people to be constantly skeptical of what they see, the world around them, what it actually means, the relationships that are underneath it. Is it causal or does it happen to just be a correlation? And I want people to be skeptical, but also, at the end of the day, the reason why we like embed within you this inherent, hopefully, state of skepticism, is so that you do your best work. Right, that you go out and you could be a part of that change, right? But I want that, I you to know that going in, you will be surprised just how much growth there is left to achieve, right?
Hannah Balikci:
Right. Mindful of time, I just want to maybe wrap up and ask a couple just concluding questions.
Austin Wright:
Sure.
Hannah Balikci:
Related to that, you've talked about a couple papers that you recommend to your students in your classes and things that you admire. If there was a paper, or book that you'd say every public policy student, or anybody who's interested in this space, or people who are interested in conflict, or whatever your qualifier is, what paper would you recommend to people, as something to... Paper or book, yeah, what would you recommend to folks to really get a sense of what you're talking about here?
Austin Wright:
[inaudible 01:13:32]. Okay. That's a hard one. All right. So there's a paper called Aid Under Fire, published almost a decade ago now, if not a decade ago now, on a community-driven development program in the Philippines that was at least partially sponsored by the World Bank. And it's an interesting read. I think in many ways, it's an exemplar of how to write a paper. The introduction of that paper is phenomenal. I go back and I reread the introduction of that paper often.
Jose Macias:
Wow.
Austin Wright:
Because to me, it's short, it's punchy, it's to the point. It says exactly what it needs to say and it clarifies the stakes. And often, as academics, we're not so interested in like, "Oh, you're going to come up with an exact T-test or something like this." Like, "Okay. All right, bro, that's helpful." In subsets, it is meaningful. It is meaningful, it's science. It is science, it is knowledge. And I respect that work, right? But when I'm thinking about, "Okay, what is the work that I find meaningful?" It's not just about, again, thinking about the world or coming up with a better mousetrap. It is something that tells me something unique about an actual setting.
And this is a paper the introduction to which is fantastic in that sense. It's an exemplar. And so it's a teaching tool, I love this paper. It is also a paper that clarifies the stakes of the work that we do. And so the World Bank has been pretty forthright, the benefits of that program were minimal. So this community-driven development program was basically them going out, and rather than imposing a set of projects onto a community, they incentivize the community to come up with the projects that they thought would be the most helpful. So in theory, this should be the driver of change, right? I don't come in with my generally uninformed, generic theory of change or development. I'm going to go in and I'm going to ask the community, the stakeholders, "Where do you see this as adding the most value? Tell me," have a council that decides, and then ultimately the community will get to drive the development, right?
Great idea. Turns out, didn't really work. It didn't really work in generating the amount of growth. There was basically no minimal return on investment. Okay, and World Bank is pretty transparent about that, at least in that particular place, with that particular set of projects, with that scale of funding, it was less effective than they would've hoped. Okay, now what the paper does is say like, "All right, we're not going to focus on that part. Instead, we're going to focus on the fact that running a program like this, you're running in a context of an ongoing insurgency." And what is the nature of community-driven development, but winning hearts and minds by achieving community engagement? And when you're running this program, what should you have at the top of your mind? Risk potential. And because what you're having those communities do who are eligible for the program is meet and coordinate.
And at the core of what they're doing is figuring out, "Do we want to engage with the government?" And in the context of an ongoing conflict, that means that now you're putting civilians in harm's way, by making this choice public, in a way that it would not have been before, by making it high stakes and observable. And so what this paper does is take seriously this potential concern. And the nice part about the project is they've got incredible, incredible data on conflict dynamics. And what they ultimately find is that there is a surge in violence, not overall, a surge in violence in the planning period, when the villages are having to decide whether or not they take the government's money.
And the reason why this is such a well-regarded paper is that the way the aid was allocated was according to a ranking rule. So there's a running variable and there's a cutoff at which point there are some communities just inside of the cutoff who are eligible and some just outside of the cutoff who are not eligible. And your listeners, who have just been through this, you should know this is regression discontinuity. This was like a built-in natural experiment, almost like an experiment. And they find that there's a certain violence in the barely eligible communities. And so that subsides, and who pays the... They're going out, they're targeting government actors. Who's engaged in the violence? Political actors. So the ones that are actually initiating the violence against state are political organizations, not criminal organizations.
And again, it's a reminder of the stakes of the work that we do, that we cannot just be focused on the first-order effects. We must think about the fact that we are embedding an intervention within a complex setting. We're not studying something in a vacuum. When we're making real policy, there are real effects, and we need to learn from that. I'll say one other thing real quick about that paper. So I really liked that paper. That's super nice. Very well written.
Hannah Balikci:
That's Aid Under Fire?
Austin Wright:
Yeah, Aid Under Fire, Joe Felter, Ben Crost. Excellent paper. The setting, though, is super interesting, and lends itself to other research, and got some friends at the World Bank who work on these problems, who think about the Philippines, who think about community-driven development. And one day, they came across a paper that claimed that this program led to extreme deforestation.
Okay, and I will say this was a bit of a wake-up call to me about, as a reminder, right, so to go back to this question earlier about ethical dimensions, sorry, you got to think about who you're partnering with. You got to evaluate, like, "Do I actually believe in the mission of what they do?" Because when you work with someone, potentially, you're giving them a nontrivial part of your life. You only got one life and you're taking that time, that scarce time, your most scarce resource, which is your time, you're giving it to this organization. And you've got to think about, "Am I ready to back their play? Are they serious about the work that they do, or am I just doing this in a transactional way?"
Jose Macias:
Wow.
Austin Wright:
And I can tell you that when the World Bank found out about this, they came to me and they said, "Austin, you've thought about related projects quite a bit." And I was like, "Oh, I happen to know quite a bit about this context. I've read that paper way too many times." And they were like, "We want to know, is what they found right? We don't have people necessarily," to go back to the point earlier. They want to build out those technical skills, but they don't have people on their team, and that particular team who can go in and read that paper, and assess, "Is it actually credible that there's that level of deforestation?"
And so they came to me and they said, "We need your help. Could you please help us with this? Because if this is right, we will need to go in immediately. We're going to make a public statement. We're going to go issue restitution. We're going to go find a way to make those communities whole, and we will take this into consideration in future projects." Right? And that was that moment where I was like, "Oh." Like, I've been working with them. I like the work that they do. I think they're serious about the work that they do. They think about evidence. But I'd never been in a conversation like that, where a stakeholder was like, "If we messed up, it's not just, 'Oops,' it's like, we are going to go and make this right." And they were serious about this.
Jose Macias:
It's a lot of power to you. That's a lot of power, as a researcher to kind of drive that change.
Austin Wright:
Yeah, and pretty high stakes when somebody's like, "Hey, if-"
Jose Macias:
It's the World Bank.
Austin Wright:
"If you think this is right, if you think this project is right, we're going to go fix this problem. We'll fix it. We're going to allocate resources, we will take the reputational hit. But that's because we are seriously committed to change. We are seriously committed to the work of the World Bank." And it turns out, I mean, almost everything about that paper was wrong. So I had to go back and I rebuilt all the data behind this paper, and I re-estimated everything. And there were just flaws throughout. And the author had misinterpreted key elements of the regression. They interpreted the wrong coefficient. There were pre-existing level differences across these places, all sorts of things. The paper was just straight up wrong.
Jose Macias:
Oh, my gosh.
Austin Wright:
The whole thing was wrong, the whole thing was wrong.
Jose Macias:
What does it feel like when you find that out? When you just realized you just kind of... I mean, this is not a bad thing, but you kind of just destroyed a paper.
Austin Wright:
Yeah. Well, so what came of that was, and I'm glad that they came, I'm glad that they reached out, I'm glad that they realized they didn't have... Respect to them also for realizing they didn't have the technical skill to fully understand what was going on, so that what was happening. So shout out to them, and in addition to that, knowing that if it actually was valid, that they were going to do something about it. It's like, "This is important. This is a general life lesson that everybody who's listening to this podcast right now, know your limitations and surround yourself with people who can help you." And that's exactly what they did, because they knew their limitations. They went out and they found someone who could help them. And in the end, they were committed to change, if it needed to be changed. In the end, it didn't need to be changed because everything about that paper was wrong.
Now, I can tell you that they were very firm about their willingness to make restitution if something were wrong, that something that they had done did actually have this effect. But I can tell you that they applied equally zealous response when I told them that, "No, the paper was wrong," and they wanted to make it right. And this is the part where, Jose, your question is a serious one, which is like, look, there's fellow academic who made not just one error, but a series of errors, and I mean that, like every single thing in that paper was wrong.
Jose Macias:
Wow.
Austin Wright:
Every core result in the paper was misspecified, or incorrectly interpreted, or misrepresented. And in the end, I walked them back from the worst-case scenario that they wanted to engage in, to correct the record. And instead, I reached out to the researcher myself. I asked them to give me time to help guide them through the process so that they could arrive at their own decision to remove the paper from the internet. Now, yeah, so it's like, yeah, but that's tough, right? This is a hard thing. We have teachable moments, and that was a teachable moment. Those were mistakes that frankly should not have happened, right? But we all make mistakes. I have certainly made mistakes in what I've done. The work I do is incomplete. I mean, all of our work has mistakes and is incomplete, but that was one that was so profoundly wrong and profoundly wrong in a sense that it was meaningful from the policy side.
Jose Macias:
Wow.
Austin Wright:
And so it's crucial.
Jose Macias:
Yeah.
Austin Wright:
And again, so you ask, what's a paper to read?
Hannah Balikci:
Right, there we go. Yeah.
Austin Wright:
Pretty frigging awesome paper to read. And in addition, sets you up to think about a bunch of big-picture things.
Hannah Balikci:
Right, yeah. The last question we always ask in our interviews is what's something you wish we would've asked you that you want to talk about? And here's your space to... Whatever you want. What should we have asked you that we didn't?
Austin Wright:
About my sneaker collection.
Hannah Balikci:
Yeah, honestly.
Austin Wright:
Yeah. Honestly, it's the root of conflict.
Hannah Balikci:
Yeah. Go into it. Yeah.
Austin Wright:
I'm teasing, I'm teasing. No, I mean, I think that, look, the sneakers in my office are about to get [inaudible 01:26:02], I'm about to get real. Okay.
Jose Macias:
It's about $10,000 worth of sneakers and gold, just for everyone watching. They're all in case, he has level 39 security locks. It cannot be stolen.
Austin Wright:
Yeah. My door is definitely not unlocked all the time.
Jose Macias:
There's definitely not exams on the table.
Austin Wright:
Definitely. Yeah, exactly. There's definitely not the answers to the final exam. No, I'm kidding. I'm kidding. They're not there. So if you're listening to this-
Jose Macias:
This is not an advertisement.
Austin Wright:
This is not an advertisement for cheeto.com. All right, so I think that I was joking about the shoes, but I do actually think there's something meaningful that connects back, which is that, so the shoes are there in part because I needed to get them out of my house, because my kids would mess them up. But big picture, look, we all carry with us the residues of our past. We all carry with us the things that have happened to us before, and the experiences that we've had, and the things that we grew up with, and the things that I grew up with is a lack. And it wasn't because my parents didn't work hard. They worked really hard, but there were things that they could not do for me, and some of the reasons why they couldn't do that were outside of their control. But for me, those shoes are a representation of the fact that, in some ways, I've made it. Yeah, I can flex a little bit.
Jose Macias:
You can get the nice things, you know?
Austin Wright:
Yeah, you can get the nice things.
Jose Macias:
No more Payless shoes, man.
Austin Wright:
Wow. Yeah. No more Payless shoes. Well, yeah.
Jose Macias:
There's nothing wrong with Payless shoes.
Austin Wright:
There's nothing wrong with Payless shoes, shout out.
Jose Macias:
They minted this whole generation of scholars here, okay?
Hannah Balikci:
Right, yeah.
Austin Wright:
Shout out to Goodwill, keeping your boy in the flex. But I mean, real, real, for me, those shoes are a manifestation of the fact that I made it out of a bad situation. I mean, not a bad situation. Well, yeah, a bad situation, I guess that's pretty straight up, you know the situation.
Jose Macias:
Yeah, you got to own it. You got to own it.
Austin Wright:
It was a situation that I am extraordinarily fortunate to have been able to move beyond. And for me, the shoes are a very real manifestation of that fact. They're a visual reminder every time I walk into my office that you got to keep it fresh. But also, it's a reminder that with hard work and with dedication combined with luck and opportunity, all is possible, right? And yeah, I mean, to me, when I think about development, when I think about the hard questions that are behind the podcast, when I think about the roots of conflict, these are roots of economic progress, and development, and justice, and security, and prosperity, all of these things intersect with one another. And that's just a very real physical manifestation in my office. It's a visual cue to remind myself that I have, in some ways, made it. Now, there are still other very real things that are constant reminders in my life that the work is not done yet, right?
But every now and then, it's okay to also take time and say, "Look, I've worked hard and I'm going to get myself this nice thing as a reward for the fact that I work hard. And as a reminder of the fact that with hard work comes, hopefully, the fruit that your labor bears." And for me, it just happens to be Jordan 1s. And I think other things that I like about my office, I've got a lot of things. I have a bent piston in there, the arm is bent, and it's a reminder, "Don't get bent out of shape, otherwise you're going to do what? Because that engine blew up." Which for me is not just that, right?
It's a reminder that where I came from, I came from a house where I was destined to be a mechanic. And there was absolutely, shout out to my mechanics listening to the podcast, there's nothing wrong with being a mechanic. There's nothing wrong with hard, manual labor. The world revolves around people who are willing to do tasks like that, right? But it's a reminder that when I was growing up, education was not a priority, that, if anything, I was told not to take education seriously. And that was the path that I was on. It's kind of a reminder of that, in addition to being a reminder not to get bent out of shape, otherwise you're going to blow up. And I've got other things in my office that they're little tokens of the life that I've led, right? I have all these cards. I have a thesis, a bound thesis of a student that I advised ages ago who's now at Harvard in the PhD program, shout out to Maria, and she went through DPSS.
Jose Macias:
Yes, I remember, I remember.
Austin Wright:
Yeah, she was a TA, and it is a reminder of what you can enable in others. And I've had the great fortune of people who enjoy my teaching style, and I love them for it, and I appreciate the things that they shower on me. And I try and keep as many of those little things in my office as a reminder, because every now and then, you have a really bad day, right? And we all have really bad days. You have a really bad day, and you need the reminder that it's okay. There's always going to be me and [inaudible 01:31:33], and today was a bad day. But with tomorrow, with hard work, I can go and recast things and rebuild things. But yeah, no, maybe that was the thing I wanted you to ask, because I wanted to explain, because often people walk by my office and be like... Their reaction is a bit mixed.
If you're faculty, they walk by and they're like, "This is the most extraordinary unprofessional office I've ever been in. And there should be books here instead of sneakers, I don't understand." And other people will walk by and they'll be like, "Well, these are really nice sneakers. It's cool. Why do you keep them here?£ And it's like, "Okay, here's a straightforward answer." And then there are the people who are like, they realize, we lock eyes and they know, because they know my past, and they know that it's a physical manifestation of something that I get to keep there as a reminder, both that I've done hard work, and with that comes rewards, but also a reminder that I remember what it was like and I remember what it was like to be in those communities. And those are the exact place... Those are the exact people that we hope that through the work of Pearson, through the work that you all talk about on this podcast, that we can change, that we can support them, so that they realize that their outside option is not necessarily to participate in the unproductive economy.
Speaker 1:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Professor Austin Wright. This episode was produced and edited by Hannah Balikci and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Jose Macias and Hannah Balikci. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website, thepearsoninstitute.org, and follow them on Twitter @PearsonInst. Inst is spelled I-N-S-T. Thank you.
PART 4 OF 4 ENDS [01:33:28]
Root of Conflict
01.10.24
Gendered Dimensions of Conflict | Maliha Chishti
Hannah Balikci:
Hi, this is Hannah and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast. You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs and use data analytics to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
How do war and conflict give rise to gender-based violence? In this episode, we speak with Dr. Maliha Chishti, an assistant instructional professor at the Divinity School and an associate of The Pearson Institute. Her core research interests are international peace building, security and development, as well as gender and human rights in post-conflict contexts. We talk about gender-based violence in the context of war, Dr. Chishti's work in passing Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security, and the complexities of humanitarian aid implementation today.
Hi, my name is Hannah Balikci. I'm a second-year MPP student at The Pearson School.
Julia Higgins:
Hi there, my name is Julia Higgins. I'm a second-year student at the Harris School and a Pearson fellow.
Rabail Sofi:
Hi, my name's Rabail Sofi. I'm a second-year student at [inaudible 00:01:26].
Hannah Balikci:
I wanted to thank Dr. Maliha Chishti for joining us today in studio. Thank you so much for coming.
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Thank you for having me.
Hannah Balikci:
We wanted to start off the conversation by asking you to introduce yourself and your work.
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Sure. Yes. I am Assistant Instructional Professor here at the Harris School of Public Policy, but I've also joined faculty at the Divinity School, and my field of research is the intersections of religion, culture, gender and politics, specifically addressing issues of women in war affected regions with a specialization in Afghanistan.
Julia Higgins:
Great. I think we'll have an amazing opportunity to get into some of those topics today. I think a good place to start off would be your previous work and how maybe they relate to the current moment and various situations unfolding across the globe. So we know that your doctoral thesis focused on conflict analysis and post-colonial critique in Afghanistan. And according to our research, you argue that the US's intervention constructed, "An outwardly oriented state responsive to the desires and needs of the international community rather than being inwardly oriented and responsive to the needs, expectations and lived realities of the majority of Afghans." So we're curious, as a researcher, do you observe any parallels between this analysis and how scholars will characterize you as support and funding of conflicts that are still ongoing?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Well, you really did your homework. I haven't looked that dissertation in a while. Well, my work really merges two ideas together, ideas that come out, academic research and also ideas that circulate in the practitioner community. So I am an academic practitioner or a scholar activist, and half of my life has been to try and understand how foreign aid operates in war affected countries or it operates in Third World countries. And then to try and extrapolate that in the field theory, critical theory, post-colonial analysis and development of thought and development thinking to merge those ideas together. And the dissertation was a launching pad for me to do that. And then as I was thinking through the impact of war on women, for example, in Afghanistan, you see the same kind of trends happening across the war on terror in other sort of war hotspots. And so my work has been to sort of see these intersections of empire and how empire is connected to foreign aid and how that intervenes and gets resisted, gets reconfigured and remapped by communities.
So the best case is Afghan women. And so my research from that dissertation has moved on to a very specific focus on the impact of war on Afghan women and the global war on terror specifically, which has been an outstanding failure. And what I was writing about 10 years ago, it's almost haunting because when I was defending that dissertation, there was a lot of hope in the air that the goals and the intentions of the war on terror were operating, were happening, were unfolding. But as we found out for 20 years, much of what was happening, we didn't know about. The Washington Post published a series of interviews, 600 interviews called the Afghanistan Papers, that have been declassified. There were interviews with high ranking US government officials at the State Department, the DOD, international agencies, including Afghans.
And essentially, the headline, if you were to summarize the headline of the Afghanistan, was to clearly call out colossal strategic failure of the war on terror in Afghanistan and that how most Americans and Canadians, because I'm a Canadian, didn't know we were sort of shielded from the magnitude of that failure. So we kept supporting it, supporting it, and that support sort of ebbed and flowed. But nevertheless, we're here with the Brown University's cost of war project report that was just published that puts a dollar amount on that failure. And that's $8 trillion with close to 1 million deaths. Deaths of who? Deaths of civilians and combatants as well as journalists and humanitarian workers. And so we're sort of sitting here and having to come to grips with that or perhaps we've moved on.
Julia Higgins:
And I think that quantification aspect is something that we are always sort of keeping in context here at the Harris School. Really interesting to hear about that new research. I think also to continue on this vein, we're curious, have you observed a shift in people's understanding of the US's definition of the war on terror since we pulled out of Afghanistan? And how do you characterize that now?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Right. I think that the war on terror has always been this phantom, it's ambiguous. It's never quite solidified. The terrorist is this elusive figure that comes in and out. And it's very much trope that is given to sort of a singular entity, and that would be Muslim. It doesn't matter if somebody else commits those same acts of terror in other countries, there are racialized differently, et cetera. But the label of terrorists has been targeted almost very specifically to Muslims. And so I think that that trope remains, and it's useful to have, I think, because it's easy to embark on it and then validate and mobilize a war machine to go after it.
And so now, for those academic scholars, activists, organizations that are starting to come to grips with what the war on terror is, especially as we receive these kinds of reports that are coming out of Browns University that call it a colossal failure, then hoping that mainstream Americans and westerners can start to critically interrogate it and to critically interrogate the underlying assumptions, biases and ideas that are associated with them. It's not to say that the entirety of the war on terror is false, it's not. But it's to say that we have a lot of critical work to do as academics, as activists, as citizens to find out what really is at the core of it. That's a conversation that I don't think happens.
Julia Higgins:
Incredibly helpful analysis for us. And now I think we'd like to switch gears just a little bit to transition into a discussion about gender-based violence in the context of war overall. I'll start us off with maybe a question about the gendered media framing that happens a lot of the times in the context of civilian deaths. So many news outlets seem to apply what we see as an inherently gendered lens in their reporting. So for instance, commonly cited reframe in recent headlines is that, to date, two thirds of those killed in Gaza are women or children. And on one hand, this is a factual demographic statement that deserves acknowledgement, but on the other hand, it may portray female agency in a way that is less than optimal. So can you walk us through what you think about the utility of this media framing?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Sure. So maybe we can step back a little bit and talk about Women, Peace and Security. So Women, Peace and Security is framework that engages women's organizations on the ground, international organizations, the UN states, researchers, et cetera. The core underlying idea WPS is that women are disproportionately impacted by war and protracted conflicts. Since I think the 20th century, women and children and the elderly are disproportionately killed in wars. And so the context that's happening in Gaza and reporting that over two thirds are women, that's not new for those of us who research the impact of war on women. Now, I think given that idea of the Security Council Resolution 1325, which very specifically underpins the Women, Peace and Security framework, that Security Council resolution is historic because it's the first time that the UN took women seriously, frankly, and understood that there is a disproportionate impact of war on women.
And because it kind of creates the overarching framework, that piece of resolution, I think, is very important. I helped to draft that resolution, I helped to conceptualize that resolution, and I helped to push it through at the UN. Part of the significance of that resolution is to recognize that women are killed and that they are victims. So one, that they are victims, but second, they have agency, meaning that they are at the forefront in every war context since the 1990s that we have recorded that are promoting peace, that are crossing ideological, religious, tribal, whatever boundaries of difference, protracted difference, women have been sort of peacemakers, peace negotiators, bringing communities together. But their sort of roles are seldom formalized, meaning they're never really sitting at peace negotiation tables. Their voices are muted in international processes of peace negotiation and Security Council 1325 acknowledges that and their important role in rebuilding countries, so peace building and post-conflict recovery.
Back to that question, I have found it troubling. Now, despite we're in an age of sexual media, the narratives of what's happening in Gaza with women aren't coming from women in Gaza. And if they're coming, they are incredibly held in suspect, they're suspicious. They're like, "Well, I'm not quite sure if that's what all women are actually experiencing," death, displacement, hunger. And so you have an interesting sort of situation that unfold that establishment and those in the hierarchy of power at the top, mediate the voices of and start to sift through them. They're not talking to AP, they're not talking to Al Jazeera, they're not talking to CNN, they're talking to local women's organizations. They're talking to local networks and they are mobilizing and engaging in advocacy work for themselves. But we are not really hearing it, or if we're hearing it, we're not prioritizing it. And that's the tragedy, is to look at the mechanisms of power that are in place that mute, silence and marginalize these very critical voices.
Hannah Balikci:
Just one thing to go back on, would you mind just explaining or talking about Security Resolution 1325 and some of the main points and what it's done since it's been enacted? Just sort of for our audience that may not know.
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Sure. So Security Council Resolution 1325, it's considered a landmark resolution, as I've mentioned. First time the United Nations Security Council addresses women as part of their mandate, which is to promote international peace and security. The Resolution 1325 has three core frameworks. One is the protection of women in armed conflict. The second is the analysis and the understanding that women should be at the peace table, so they should be negotiating peace settlements. And the third, that women are active participants in the recovery of their society, so they're a critical role in peace building and post-conflict reconstruction. So that particular resolution has subsequently created a bunch of new resolutions on the block, so to speak, and they're addressing sort of very different issues.
Now, this resolution is important because it's coming out of women's voices and women's organizations for the decade. So the United Nations Conference on Women held these caucuses of women in armed conflict. And herein, you had women from around the world for the first time, gathering every 10 years and documenting what they were experiencing in wars. And the international women's movement, academics, et cetera, started to take notice of that because the armed conflict caucuses at the women's conference were flooded with, there were just very engaged dynamic, really. And so everybody was trying to figure out what was going on, what was going on. And we noticed that what women were enduring, we had very little idea about.
So this was coming from the global south, saying that these wars, over 114 in the 1990s, Rwanda, Bosnia, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Liberia, et cetera, these women were gathered together and they were looking at how their impact of their particular war was the same in so many ways. And the international women's movement documented those experiences. And the specific attention was sexual violence, that women were used as weapons of war, their bodies were foils of war. Their bodies, their honor was a weapon of war used to manipulate war. And so from that conversation, including 1325, was the first time that the international community recognized rape as a weapon of war and rape as a war crime.
Rabail Sofi:
I know you just mentioned sexual violence and war, and that's actually one of the sections that we're interested in learning more about, because right now we are seeing a lot of sexual violence in conflict zones across the world. We know that the use of sexual torture against Palestinians specifically, since that's really trending right now, is extensively documented since 1948, whether it's in Israeli prisons or during the midnight raids that are going on or just at checkpoints in general, we see that these are sexual violence structures of militarization. And taking this next question away from Gaza and what's happening in Palestine, could you dive a little more deeper into how war gives rise to sexual and gender-based violence?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
So violence against women and sexual violence against women particularly is one act of ethnic cleansing because it targets women's bodies as holding national honor for their ethnicity, their state, their people. And so by dishonoring women, you dishonor the nation and you virtually collapse society. So there's a lot that's been written about it in the context of Rwanda and Bosnia. In fact, what has been so courageous in world history is the testimonies that came out of Bosnia and the massive sexual assaults and rapes. And the testimonies given by those women for the international community to view and to prosecute and recognize rape as a war crime. So that's really imperative that we understand that it's not that it's just not women alone, but that the idea is intentional. It is intentional in the context of those that seek to pursue policies of ethnic cleansing. And they will target women, in fact, to kill women, to target women, to rape women, to impregnate women, to forcefully transmit aids to women. These are all sort of documented across the wars and that they happen regularly.
And now there's a lot of international attention to it. What I think I really want to say is that we're in a very difficult situation right now where we're clawing back from positioning the centrality of international humanitarian law, international human rights law, Geneva conventions, Rome statutes. So we collectively experienced in the 1990s wars I was mentioning, is a new, actually post-World War II, international apparatus of human rights humanitarian law. And we had a lot of formidable new institutions in place like the international criminal court, for example. When we willfully do not recognize violations of international humanitarian law, when we see genocide and don't call it genocide, when we see rape as a crime, as a weapon of war and we don't call it out, when we see indiscriminate killing of civilians and we don't call it out in the language of international law, but we politicize it or provincial it or even sort of ghettoize it as a foreign policy issue of another state, then we essentially crumble the very foundations that we've worked so hard to build up. And then calling out human rights violations in the world becomes hypocritical.
And here's what I'm going to say is the most, what we do when we don't call it out is we practice Western. If we don't apply the very laws that we have created in terms of a civilized society that is bounded by law, that's the whole Western post-Enlightenment project. Isn't it? So when we see it, don't call it, then what are we saying? Either we're saying that the entire international apparatus of humanitarian law, human rights isn't really real, we don't really want to put too much into it. Or we're saying that Palestinians are subhuman, they're not full human beings, their full personhood doesn't count and so it's okay to not apply international law to them. And then when you say that, I don't know, you don't say that out loud, but when you don't have uniformity, especially at the level of the United States foreign policy and statements coming out of the White House calling it a genocide. If it looks like a genocide, talks like a genocide, it's a genocide.
And it's not a genocide because out of moral outrage, it's a genocide because a genocide has a legal definition. That legal definition has been met. And South Africa has compiled 84 pages outlining what that genocide is, evidence-based, and has taken it to the international [inaudible 00:21:58]. And we know that, you look through that document, it's written by lawyers, many international humanitarian lawyers, many lawyers have already called it out. So for us to be in a context here, the year 2024, where the White House is very reticent at calling it the G-word, then we're in hot trouble. We're in hot trouble in the context of how we have become complete warmongering instead of promoting peace. And the fact that we're hesitant to call for a ceasefire, that calling for a ceasefire is becoming politicized, we're in hot waters. And I'm really nervous about what kind of messaging we're sending to the rest of the world coming out of the United States. That messaging is terrifying because we have just folded our tents, gone home and likely the charges against us as being bias, of being lawless are rightly to be considered.
Rabail Sofi:
Thank you so much for mentioning international law, giving that context. I think it's super helpful for our audience. Kind of going back to what you said about testimonials, bringing up Bosnia, Rwanda, we are seeing a lot of very violent forms of violence, sexual violence specifically. Whether it's leaked or just shared, we are of course seeing this in Palestine, we saw this happen in New Iraq, we also saw a lot of stuff leak from Afghanistan. What are your thoughts on the lack of coverage of sexual violence perpetrated by [inaudible 00:23:44]?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Sure. It's the lack of coverage in mainstream media.
Rabail Sofi:
Yes.
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
But it's solid coverage in social media and alternative media and in the media outlets of the non-Western world. And so that, to me, is a very striking look at what is going on and how our media communications, at least formally, institutionally, is implicated in war machinery. And I think that the average person knows that. I'm probably a rare breed, I'm not on TikTok, I'm not on Instagram, I'm not on whatever else there is, but I am close to other people who sort of have these perspectives and whose perspectives have changed, who have a sense of what's happening in the world because mainstream media is biased. Right? And for those who study media politics, media communications, Noam Chomsky 101. Right? So we know manufactured consent, manufactured media and how media is very closely related to government. So that's why I think that the fact that people and people grouped in social movements are aware and circulate these testimonies, who believe these testimonies, that's what's really important is that when they see women in Gaza, they don't stop and say, "Oh, who is she? And maybe she's faking her tears."
Whereas in the vetting, looking at these images and immediately holding them suspect, that doesn't happen in social media. It's actually quite democratized. So we have much more real dialogue debate that happens on these alternative media platforms than we do by institutional media. And so I don't actually even think of mainstream media as a source of credible information anymore. I don't even want to be validated in those outlets. And I don't think that I'm alone. I think that we're now increasingly looking at alternative media podcasts. I watch a lot of YouTube podcasts. And what's happening is that it's interesting because the people that are in these alternative media podcasts, they're the ones that are doing such interesting work. They would never be given hope, a guest spot on CNN or Fox News, et cetera. So in that sense, I think that as much as it's shut down in mainstream media, it's not in global media.
And I think it's very important for us here in the United States to start to peer into what news outlets are saying in other parts of the world, go on to the news sites. I actually read newspapers in Afghanistan, phenomenal news. They write about what's happening in their country that you can't get a hold of here. It's never interesting. It never makes the cut. You can find out what's happening in Palestine by engaging in news outlets in Jordan, in Egypt. And many of them are circulating in English. And so we do have spots of credible news stories and these atrocities being understood, validated and circulated.
Julia Higgins:
Thank you. I think one of the things that we wanted to ask you was just related to that, what sort of people and or news outlets would you recommend, people want to get more news directly from, as you say, Egypt or Jordan? Is there anything that comes to mind? I think the direct news, I also find that, and especially reading the news in the language is really a helpful way, which not everybody can do, but now there's so many translation services that people could use. Is there a way that we could add, that we could uplift voices directly from these places of war or that any sort of... Are there specific organizations and/or media sources that you think are doing good work in terms of uplifting these voices in a way that isn't making it to mainstream media? And how does the democratization of media in terms of social media either enhanced or detract from uplifting these voices?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Sure. So in the context of women's voices, I would suggest that people look into local women's organizations. And every major women's organization across the world has some kind of a website or some kind of a platform where they circulate ideas. Like for example, in Afghanistan, RAWA, which is Revolutionary Association of Women in Afghanistan, it's the largest national secular organization in the country. It repeatedly posts these really impressive press releases that nobody but me reads, but right.
Hannah Balikci:
Right, yeah.
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Nobody reads in the west. And I always look and I look at the analysis and I find it so engaging and so refreshing. And I think when we de-center the analysis from Western outlets and we earnestly look to see what the majority of the world is thinking about it, then we'll be intrigued and we can have engaging analysis and you can really help to have a more comprehensive understanding.
So looking at women's organizations and you can just do basic Google searches for local women's organizations and go navigate on their websites. You can do that with local headlines in different countries, they all pop up. It's really easy to get that information if you are interested in it and you're interested in reading about. And also I would say to read authors that are based in those countries. If you're interested in feminist writings, for example, I read their works, their understanding, their analysis. And what that tells us is it almost opens the world's, what the real perspective is on issues, that it's just not us in our little silo conversations, we're just talking amongst ourselves. But when you kind of have a conversation, and by conversation I mean when you hook into these perspectives from around the world, you get a really good sense. They're just enriching and they're important to read. And I'll give you an example. You've had Professor Amal Hamada on, right?
Hannah Balikci:
Yeah.
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
She is so brilliant. I had a meeting with her. We both teach the same course. I teach women peace and security here at the University of Chicago. She teaches a similar course on gender insecurity at the University of Cairo. And we were talking about 1325. And I just started talking about, "Oh, my students engage with 1325 in this way and that way." And do you know what she said about Egyptian women in her classes? They said, "We don't care about it." And I was kind of held back by it. I'm like, "What? It's such an important landmark resolution."
And she said, "No, they don't care because they say that the western world infringes on human rights, international law, on all of these resolutions, they themselves push them through and are the first to walk away. So why should we even think about it? Why do we have to frame our conversation as era of women on the context of a western instrument that is flagrantly violated at every point by those same powers that push it through and promote it?"
And I thought, "Huh, well that's really interesting. And wouldn't it be interesting if our students got together and had a conversation about it?" So imagine how enriching that is for us to get a sense of how other people perceive what we value. Where I'm thinking the only pathway out of this situation is international humanitarian law, there's a pushback from a group of Egyptian women at a university that's like, "No, that's not our only pathway." And so I'm intrigued. Well, what's your pathway? How do we get out of this mess? And they might have something very intriguing to say.
Hannah Balikci:
Yeah, absolutely. She was our last guest on the podcast. So when looking at these questions, noticing a similar pattern in terms of the work that we would be talking about. And one similar, something on the same lines as Dr. Hamada's work is how do gender dynamics, cultural norms and societal expectations shape the experiences and roles of women in longstanding conflict, whether that's Palestine, Afghanistan, sort of global?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Sure. I think in the context of conflict, there are multiple competing roles that women take on. We know that. We know that know that most women become female headed households overnight. 10,000 children in Gaza have no fathers right now, since October 7th, that number has increased, but the last time UN Women reported it. And so that thrusts women into roles of mothers and mothers as providers and managing resources and maneuvering already shortages of humanitarian aid, taking on the toll of displacement. What does displacement do of 82% of people in Gaza right now? I mean, just one conflict that's right in front of us. These families are displaced and women are at the forefront of having to take on multiple roles just for survival. So the survival, the resilience and taking on multiple roles and also claiming victimhood too. That's a profound role to be in where you are yourself a victim, but you have no choice but to be resilient and strong and be an income provider or a primary caregiver for the most vulnerable and the weakest in your household.
Hannah Balikci:
Yeah, just related to migration, according to UN Women, the conflict has resulted in close to 493,000 women and girls being displaced from their homes. And related to that, how can we begin to think about the generational ripple effects of forced migration on women and girls in the generations to come.
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
The trauma that is happening and the implications of that trauma. There's been such important documentaries actually that came out of Palestine over the last wars in Gaza in 2014, I'm thinking about, and I saw a really interesting film, short film documentary. A young woman who every day woke up in terror because of the bombs that she experienced and the deaths that were happening around her in 2014. And this was years later. So imagine that one documentary was just tracking the life of one woman and you compound that with a population of two million. And what are the implications of that trauma? How does that trauma implicated impact women in their everyday roles? Dreams that were squashed, lives that were killed, identities that were dismantled. And sort of like a quandary, how does a population in such a confined area then rebuild, restore, recover? There are people that specialize in that. I certainly don't know. But I can imagine that we were so caught in the conflict right now, but implications and the reverberations of this conflict are many years going to be unfolding very specific lives, lives of children, women and men.
Julia Higgins:
Right. And just continuing that thread and maybe continuing on specifically using Gaza case studies, since we've gotten into it a bit, we've seen that each day there are 180 women approximately giving birth without water, painkillers, anesthesia for C-sections, electricity, medical supplies. We also know that mothers have been reported to mix baby formula with contaminated water and to go without food for days on end so that their children can eat. And so situations like this really necessitates a need for humanitarian aid. So we're curious, and I know this touches on a bit of your work more broadly, what role do you think the international community plays in ensuring that humanitarian aid reaches women and children in conflict settings and how we increase it?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Right. The compounding tragedies here is the inability of the ceasefire. And that ceasefire is so critical because it's the pathway for humanitarian aid to come through and for international humanitarian actors, well established in the international community, meaning that when there is a war and an emergency, they are deployed and they get there. And I understand that humanitarian aid and humanitarian emergencies are just fraught with other kinds of complexities. Now putting that aside, I do believe a hundred percent that local actors are able to get needs that are being deprived, like basic water, access to water, access to medicine, access to food that has to come in. And the fact that we haven't had, the United States has blocked that is just devastating. It's devastating. And the fact that journalists and humanitarian, UN workers have been killed.
I don't know, but I did read that the death of humanitarian workers has been quite alarming in the Gaza conflict. And so the international community should be alarmed at that. That means that if humanitarian aid workers are not safe in a place, nobody's safe. And that if humanitarian aid workers cannot move their work forward to helping the most desperate and the most vulnerable, then that is a real emergency. And I just feel like, how much more do we have to say about it? At every corner that you go, why are we even having that kind of a conversation? Right? Why is a ceasefire so politicized? Why is access to humanitarian aid so complicated? We have the international instruments, we have the resources, we have the money, we have the people. That can happen in a second. It really can. And so to make a claim for it, to now have to rationalize it, pull out numbers and red flag it, to me, it's really heartbreaking actually.
Rabail Sofi:
I don't have the data on hand at the moment, which I should have prepared, but I know that humanitarian aid workers are being killed or are dying at an increasing grade in conflict zones just around the world. And whether or not humanitarian aid is a human right, I believe that humanitarian aid shouldn't be politicized in that sense. It should just be a neutral thing that should be provided. Do you think that there's, whether or not it's the western institutions that are surrounding humanitarian aid and/or the multilateral institutions like the UN, is there some sort of, I don't know if you've seen this in your research, is there a shift in perspective of these organizations that either their legitimacy or the perspectives of the people on the ground have changed that results in politicizing them more? Or I don't know, is there a way that you think perspectives have changed of western institutions that are resulting in this change in humanitarian aid, the politicization of humanitarian aid?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Right. So yeah. That's a very distinct conversation and there's a lot to say about that. Humanitarian aid has always been politicized. You had, for example, what's called the CNN, [inaudible 00:40:46] nurture. So you have where there is greater media attention, all of a sudden that particular conflict or that humanitarian disaster receives an inflow of resources. But there could be the exact same conflict somewhere else that doesn't receive, either it's completely ignored or it receives a trickle amount. And so many who kind of talk about the politics of humanitarian aid, look at how humanitarian aid isn't always equal or fair across conflicts or across disasters. And we know that because so much money went into Kosovo, but nothing went to Rwanda during the genocide, oh, until much later. So that often becomes the case study of comparing the politics of humanitarian aid.
But to speak sort of loudly, not loudly, to speak generally, and loudly, about international organizations generally. So there is the politics of international development organizations or humanitarian organizations or human rights organizations. They have in different countries a reputation. And much of how they operate often is related to the kind of politics that they're part of in the context of that war or that conflict. In Afghanistan, for example, we know for certain that a majority of Afghans wanted to keep a distance from international organizations. International organizations and the international community, in Kabul, when I was there, they were often referred to cows that drink their own milk, meaning there was a sense that these organizations were just here for their advancements of their careers, were just kind of throwing money here and there, willy-nilly. There wasn't sort of well-thought-out, there was a sense they duplicated and replicated work, didn't engage Afghans or had considered Afghans as just passive recipients instead of active agents in the recovery of their own society.
So that kind of sort of stuck. And we had a Kabul bubble where you had really a paradise for international aid workers coming in, staying at the best hotels, having the best salaries, really coming in for a year and then moving on to the next war zone because it was all about climbing the career ladder. And people notice that. People recognize that this kind of community that's coming in to support us, strengthen us, rebuild us is actually in it for themselves, perhaps more so than us. And we know that clearly from the Afghanistan Papers that were published by the Washington Post, where the United States government officials were actually saying explicitly that, well, we really didn't know what we were doing. We had no stated goals and we were a self licking ice cream cone, meaning money just came in, we have to spend it. We really didn't care about evaluating what we were doing. We were sort of building this, rebuilding that, and there was no accountability. And we know that as a fact, by SIGAR, the inspector general for the reconstruction of Afghanistan, that millions of dollars were wasted. And the end of that is a country, does it look any different than it did in 2000? 20 years, billions of dollars of aid, so many deaths. And if you go right back to Kabul and you were there at 2000, maybe better buildings maybe. Maybe one or two, if they haven't been blown apart. That's telling, that's really telling
Julia Higgins:
I think on this thread of sort of what you're characterizing as the misdeeds and mistrust of these institutions and some of your previous work as well in the context of post-coloniality could be an interesting place to go forward from here. From our view, calls for decolonization include neocolonialism. And for me, the actions of these multilateral institutions, whether that be the UN, the IMF, the World Bank, fall under that scope. So I'm curious from your perspective, what does a better vision for the redistribution of wealth from the global north to the global south look like? And can we talk about that bit?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
Sure. Well, if we go back to Afghanistan, let's establish one very important fact. And this was marked Montgomery and Rondinelli in a report, that published report that came out really early 2003, 2004. They said that the international community [inaudible 00:45:55] in Afghanistan with 50 years of institutional knowledge of how to do peace building and development [inaudible 00:46:06]. And they applied none of it. So we need to have a conscientious pause, why foreign aid organizations and actors arrive in a country they know nothing about and start to rebuild it without drawing from 50 years of institutional knowledge in the knowledge banks of these institutions, World Bank, USAID. We have the toolkits, we have the tools, we've been doing this for 50 plus years. And so I'm not saying you're not supposed to make mistakes, of course you're supposed to mistakes, but we were making mistakes of lessons that we already learned in other places that we kept making those mistakes over and over and over again without any accountability or transparency.
And so that lackadaisical approach to doing development, just kind of like, "Oh, let's see," that is clearly conveyed in the work, testimonies, US officials. So when that sort of happens, then you have a clear idea that there is continuity of what we would call colonial modalities, which are hierarchical relations of those who know and those who do not know, those who are experts and those who are just beneficiaries and they're passive. And so if foreign aid is built on a hierarchy of us and them, and us are always the ones that know everything, we have all the money, we have the discourse, we have the language, we have the funding, the programs, plans, and they are merely recognized as empty passive vessels. And so when you have any aid relationship that is situated in that kind of binary, that is neo-colonial, that is clearly a colonial modality.
And so if you operate on the basis of relationship where Afghans do not contribute to the thought process, imagining, interpreting, understanding their social, political, economic recoveries for themselves on their land, in their country, and foreigners who have no training, who are hopping from conflict to conflict arrive and have the power to create the pathway, this country's politics, economic, social structure and then we want to peer into changing culture, that, you don't sort of look at it in that framework. And if you don't have an understanding of coloniality as a concept, then you would be wondering, "Well, this is just the way aid is done." It's not the way aid is done, it's how aid is appropriated within this colonial matrix of power. And it doesn't have to be because every community that I've worked in the world is open to a collaboration with the international community.
It's not that they want to collapse that collaboration, but they are all incredibly wary and suspicious of the kinds of relations that are fostered, and those relations are not equal and those relations are not liberal. And those relations don't allow for the autonomous, sort of intellectual and social political development of societies on their own terms, using their own language, using their own discourses. Right? We enter Afghanistan, enter any part of the world, and we roll out the carpet of our discourse.
For example, I do gender work. In all of the countries that I work with, there is no equivalent word of gender. Gender isn't in the language of Afghanistan, we have to make it up. In Arab countries, in Ordu, Pakistan, everybody's like, "Okay, let's just use your word. Let's just use your terminology." And so if we can conceptualize an idea of a collaboration where it's truly based on solidarity, it's based on equity and it's based on democratizing conversations, then the international interventions that are happening in Afghanistan will look very different from Gaza, which will look very different from Somalia, Bosnia, Latin America. But the fact that aid organizations treat all of these countries the exact same way, I can take a program, conceptualize a program and roll it out in all of these countries without changing anything, that should be politicized. And that is what we call neocolonialism.
Hannah Balikci:
Thank you so much for that. So we will just conclude now, if there was a book, a paper or a website that you recommend public policy students can take away, what would you recommend?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
All right. So when I was a graduate student at the University of Toronto, I was fortunate because I learned from a number of amazing scholars that were born and raised and had their education outside of the western world. And Professor George Day had a very strong influence in cultivating my understanding of the need to constantly triangulate, situate, engage and negotiate my thoughts with scholars from the global south and to read them because they're rarely published in western peer review journals. And so he made that comment that if you're just reading what western educated scholars prioritize, then you're really missing out, and especially if your intent is to understand what's happening in the world. And so he encouraged us to read the work of scholars based in Africa that were having a conversation amongst themselves. And many of them are published in western peer review journals, but many of them are not.
And they meet regularly and they publish online. And you kind of get a sense of what conversations or issues are happening on that continent in ways that we sometimes don't have access to. So the website is CODESRIA, it's the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. And I'm looking at the website right now, it is so much better, more accessible, user-friendly than, they sort of publish a newsletter called Africa Development. And there's a lot of interesting ideas and physicians around women, peace and security as well [inaudible 00:53:03] find and engage with these scholars that are writing it.
Julia Higgins:
That's great. We'll be sure to plug that for our listeners. Thank you. And then lastly, to close out in the spirit of learning from our previous work, what is something that you wish we would've asked you in today's conversation that we didn't?
Dr. Maliha Chishti:
I think the centrality of ethics, which is something that I am increasingly finding we're not talking about. We're moving towards politicizing and a lot of ideology in our understanding of what's happening and what's unfolding the world. And I really feel that ethics has been lost and I've lost it myself because I have realized I'm not trained in. And what I'm positioned into right now is to understand development or politics or war in the context of ethics and morality. And these are conversations that probably now that I'm attached to the Divinity School, they are circulating more in the Divinity School than they are in public policy. And I think a bridge between those two schools, and where I probably think I too can benefit being in both schools, is to start to really deeply engage this beyond theory and into sort of an ethical, moral framework of understanding of war and peace. And in doing so, I think that maybe I'm going to try and find some answers as to why peace has become so problematic.
Hannah Balikci:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Dr. Maliha Chishti. This episode was produced and edited by Hannah Balikci and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Rabail Sofi and Julia Higgins. Special thanks to UC3P and The Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on The Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website, thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter, @PearsonInst, Inst spelled I-N-S-T.
Root of Conflict
12.07.23
Mothers and Peacebuilding | Amal Hamada
Hannah Balikci:
Hello, this is Hannah and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago. What is the role of mothers and counter-terrorism efforts? Within conflict, women have traditionally been viewed as victims that need protecting. However, their involvement is much more nuanced than that. In this episode, we speak with Professor Amal Hamada, professor of political science and gender studies at Cairo University. We talk about the role of gender when discussing conflict, the women's movement in Iran, and Palestinian mothers today.
Jordan Enos:
My name is Jordan Enos. I'm a second year master in public policy student and a Pearson fellow.
Raphael Rony Antony:
Hi, I'm Raphael Rony Antony and I'm a first year MPP student and a first time podcast recorder.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Hi, I'm Isabella Pestana. I'm a first year MPP student and a Pearson fellow.
Jordan Enos:
It's an honor to have Dr. Hamada at the University of Chicago today. Dr. Hamada, welcome. Thank you for being here. Can you tell us about yourself and your work?
Amal Hamada:
Okay, thank you very much for the invitation. My name is Amal Hamada. I'm an associate professor of political science in Cairo University and the director of women's studies unit at the university. I'm trained as a political scientist, but for the last maybe two decades been working more interdisciplinary approaches to see different angles to what I believe everything is political. I felt the need that I need to understand more about different approaches in sociology, anthropology, et cetera. I work on gender issues. I'm [inaudible 00:02:24] of formal politics, meaning the formal, more traditional forms of political participation of youth, women, even citizens. For the last 10 years or more, I've been working on the less formal dimensions of political participation, how ordinary people see, practice politics on their daily life. This is me.
Jordan Enos:
Thank you. Yesterday, you gave a talk on the role of mothers in counter-terrorism. How does the way women are depicted in the media and public discourse influence the public's view and government decisions regarding counter-terrorism?
Amal Hamada:
Okay, this is a very complicated question, because on the one hand, women are portrayed in the media as the sweet, feminine, need protection kind of individual. But at the same time, they're expected, especially mothers, to do miracles. When it comes to portraying women in conflict, the mainstream used to portray women in conflict when they saw them. Because a couple of decades ago, they didn't see women in conflict. When they saw them, they only saw them as victims, victims of rape, victims that need protection, et cetera. Later on, we discovered this is not the case. Women have agency and sometimes bad agency. Sometimes they become terrorists themselves and they are warriors. They are peace builders. But the perception changed a little bit again to build on the expectation of the ability to make miracles, that okay, so you're not a victim, so you are a hero. You're expected to act as a hero.
I think this is unfair, because not all of us are heroes. We're all human. Some of us are heroes. Some of us are victims, and even the same person can be a hero, a victim, and an average person, depends on the context. For the way the media and the policies are categorizing women, it's just too flat. It doesn't see the complexity of the situation. I can be violent at the moment because I feel that violence is the only way to protect my right. But this does not mean that I'm a violent person. Or the whole discourse about survival, a victim of rape, are we victims of rape or survivors of rape? You are taking agency from the woman, deciding that for a moment, I'm a victim. But this does not describe me as a person for the rest of my life. This is why I don't really engage with how the media is portraying women, because it's too flat. Living realities of women everywhere is too complex. It's not that one dimension.
Jordan Enos:
Theme of women's role in the resistance, I hear you, is nuanced and complex and probably depends a lot on context.
Amal Hamada:
Yes.
Jordan Enos:
Yesterday, you talked about equipping women with the tools, and mothers especially, with the tools to support their family and maybe guide them against terrorism. Can you talk about the tools women need to be able to support their families?
Amal Hamada:
Knowledge. Knowledge, because one of the things, maybe specific talking about radical groups, radical/terrorist, while I know the term is very controversial, so let's go with all the meanings. They propagate an absolute version of truth. They have the version of truth, and it's a very difficult time where the youth, very skeptical about everything. They have doubts about everything. When someone gets to them with an absolute definition of truth, and no one can counter this, it becomes very hard to resist. Imagine a mother living in a small village anywhere with her kid, usually means, it's unfortunate, coming up to the mother to tell her that what you're doing is forbidden, haram, and you're going to be punished by Allah. You're going to burn in hell, okay? And I have the way to save you and to save the rest of the world.
If she doesn't have the knowledge, it's not only that she cannot save him. It's she's going to join. If you provide women with knowledge, specifically what I'm working on, religious knowledge, different understanding of religion, different interpretation of knowledge, counter discourse to the religious discourse, terrorist, this would make a huge difference. She will be able to protect the child herself and the rest of the family, because it's kind of we're losing one by one to the terrorist groups. My main focus is, how can we educate? Yesterday, there was this lady who was a little bit skeptical about me blaming women for their kids becoming terrorists. God forbid, you don't intend to blame women for anything, but just can we equip them with tools to fight back, to know their limits, to know their potential? I think this is the case. So yes, economic empowerment is important. Definitely, it's important. Political empowerment is. Without this knowledge, it's not going to take us anywhere.
Jordan Enos:
Your research includes studies of women's group around the world, women in Russia, Women in Black, Code Pink. Do you think those groups are the best avenue for knowledge that you're talking about for women? Or how do you disrupt a culture in which that underlies in the absolute truth that may lead to terrorism or radicalization?
Amal Hamada:
Well, they might not be the best, but they're there and they are appealing. It depends on what you need. So if you are looking for activism, anti-war, Women in Black would be the perfect venue for you. But if you're looking for a knowledge, abstract religious knowledge, maybe Women in Black wouldn't do anything, wouldn't provide any answers, or other groups which I didn't have the chance to talk about. Islamic feminist groups in the Middle East in general and even in the US, they have very, very interesting, liberating, challenging, controversial kind of discourse regarding religion and religious knowledge.
These might be helpful, but having said this, maybe even them are not appropriate for a woman living in a very distant village. Maybe we need to bridge, because this is a very sophisticated knowledge, not applicable to anyone, not convenient to anyone. So maybe we need new form of groups that can kind of explain and make it more [inaudible 00:09:50] to the average women. But what I'm trying to do is just to highlight the ability and the potential that these groups have. Maybe it's just an example and we can build our more convenient examples depending on the context.
Jordan Enos:
During your talk, you also talked about how mothers around the world share this deep love for their family and commitment for their family and their children, regardless of where they're from. I think another theme mothers experience across the world, especially in times of conflict and strife, is they're often the ones responsible for keeping their families together. You even mentioned that women would do anything to get food on the table for their family if that's the most pressing need. How do you respond to women who may think my goal right now is to keep a roof over my family's heads at night, to keep food on the table? How do I prioritize learning or seeking out knowledge may prevent my children going down a path of radicalization?
Amal Hamada:
But I think this would require women to reflect a little bit about what does it mean to be a good mother, okay? Because shared that I'm a mother myself and I have three children in my eye, but my eldest is 29 and my youngest is 26, so they're not kids. But they're kids, and I think throughout the journey, and I don't want to generalize my experience, but living especially in the last decade or so, it takes a lot of reflection. What does it mean to keep a roof on top of my kid and over their head and food on the table? And how am I helping them face [inaudible 00:11:48]
Because if I'm not equipping them with knowledge and the skills and capacity and trust, it's not about the food and the roof. It's different. In this difficult time, it's even become more meaningful about dignity and food [inaudible 00:12:10] We're not animals. We're human, and human have dignity. Is it only about having food and roof, no matter how do you get the food and the roof? Or as a mother, I need to tell my kids that it's you. You have to live in dignity, even if you are eating a potato fried on wood.
Jordan Enos:
Thank you. Your research interests include gender issues in the Middle East with a special focus on women's daily strategies for their lives and conflict related issues. What are some of these daily strategies? How do women in the Middle East face conflict differently than their male counterparts?
Amal Hamada:
Okay, this is a very good question. I used to believe that maneuvering is not resistance. Resistance is clear resistance. You have to stand up and fight physically or with words. But I discovered from listening to stories of women about their daily little struggles, how they survive and make a living and make a meaning out of their life, that sometimes maneuvering is resistance. Building alliance with other women in the family or even other men is resistance. But I cannot list the strategies. It's different. Maybe sometimes, I know some of my colleagues would hate maneuvering, because they think it's a sign of weakness. But for me, understand the structure. Sometimes the cost, open resistance, is very high and women cannot really ... Because of this structure, they cannot really pay the price.
How do they maneuver, for instance domestic violence? Okay, well the easy way out of domestic violence for a middle class liberal western woman would be walk out of the relationship. Leave. Get the divorce. But this is not the reality of an uneducated woman or even educated, but she doesn't have a job. Or she has a job, but it doesn't pay enough. Or she has kids she needs to protect, and she cannot simply walk out of a relationship. Does this mean that she's happily living, enjoying being beaten and insulted? Definitely, no. Does she resist? Yes, she does. She maneuvers sometimes, different techniques. I think if we pay respect to these forms, maybe we can help her, rather than blaming her for staying. Why are you staying in such a bad relationship? You should respect yourself and leave. But when we listen to her stories, maybe we would as scholars, as professors, we would learn that her experience is teaching us. It's not us telling her what to do.
Jordan Enos:
October in the United States was Domestic Violence Awareness Month, and I think there is a misconception that, why don't women just leave? And you have the agency, if you are educated. A lot of times, women don't because of various reasons, and I think being there for their children is probably a primary cause for staying. Can you say more maneuvering looks like? Is that figuring out survival in a conflict-ridden relationship or community?
Amal Hamada:
Sometimes, maneuvering would be building, focusing on your kids, rather than yourself. I know this might sound naive, but this is what mothers sometimes do. So they know that maybe I don't have a life out of this, but I can help my kids to have a life, focusing on the kids, rather than on herself. Sometimes, maneuvering would mean even avoiding the significant other in heated conversation, maybe saving money behind his back, maybe giving him the silent treatment, maybe making him suffer in sex, use different things women do. I understand from a feminist perspective, this might be too little, and I agree this is too little. But every individual, every woman, she knows what she's capable of. It's not about, take a jump of faith. No, it's not that easy. Maybe for an empowered woman, yes, it's easy. I will definitely walk out of the relationship, but this is not the case and doesn't mean that the other women are not worth of respect of their experience.
Jordan Enos:
Much of your work involves the theme and the role of women in peace building. Can you talk about how we involve men, particularly in heavily patriarchal societies?
Amal Hamada:
This is the point. I believe women have agency, no matter what, okay? It's just, how do we define and contextualize agency? Okay, this is one. Second, definitely, definitely as much as you can do anything without the help of women, you can do nothing without the help of men, because we're living together. I believe, yes, we do need to bring them on board. The question is maybe focusing too much on the formal level. Women become a threat to men. Reading in strategic and peace studies, there is this belief that when women are occupying formal positions, whether in negotiation, in government, et cetera, men feel threatened that she's taking their position. Maybe working on building the trust that we're not, it's just that we're taking the responsibility for the destiny of everyone, we're doing our part, and working on the informal level. This might help building the trust more. I don't know, maybe.
Raphael Rony Antony:
[inaudible 00:18:36] Hamada. Yeah, so we are going to start talking about, I feel, one of your important interest areas, and that is Iran. We are going to dive into the topic that is what has been happening there for the last one year, especially since the death of Jina Mahsa Amini. The protests that followed after that, in your opinion as a scholar on Iranian history and Iranian politics, how has it changed the protests that has been happening over the last year or so?
Amal Hamada:
I've been working on Iran ever since 1990. That's a very, very, very complicated and interesting example. Unfortunately, there is kind of iron curtain what's happening in Iran. So we don't really know what's happening. We know about the protest. We know about the death, the tragic death of Mahsa Amini. But unfortunately, we don't know much. Though this is very alarming, but I feel that this is very assuring, that something big is happening on the ground. Because nothing is happening, then the authorities would not mind sharing, because it would show that they are in control. So as long as they are trying to keep everybody in the dark, it means that the other party is gaining ground, okay? So I'm not sure whether women are more free now to go on the street without being forced to with their veil or not, but building on my experience in Iran, unfortunately I haven't been there since 2007.
But even before 2007, women, of course they had to wear a headscarf, but it was a fashion statement. They put it on their head flying, so half of their hair is showing. You can tell that if this person is conservative wearing hijab because she chose to wear hijab or she is just complying with the law because she doesn't want to be arrested. [inaudible 00:20:26] Iranian women are very, very exceptional. They're on the street all the time. The first time I went there, it was 2001 and the last time 2007, and was surprised with the number of women on the street moving around, working, having fun, et cetera. I think it has something to do with Shias in specific, because I don't know if you know or not, but Shia Islam has doctrine. It's based on the daughter of prophet Muhammad, Fatimah and her husband. It's the daughter and her husband, and the husband of course is the cousin of the prophet, but it's the daughter. So women in Shia Islam play a significant role in the history of the doctrines.
So there is a sense of pride that we're daughters of Fatimah, and you cannot really separate. It has nothing to do with being religious or not. It's just the cultural aspect of being the daughters, okay? Unfortunately, I'm a little pessimistic when it comes to governments giving in, but I think changing. It's changing on the ground. My main fear, following the news in Iran, was the societal disputes over the need to control women's body. This is my main fear, that societies in general and especially conservative societies feel that they have to control women's body. Actually, it's all society. It's not even conservative societies, because liberal societies feel that they have to control women's body by covering or uncovering. So it's the same. The end or the bottom line, it's the same, being forced either to dress or not to dress. I remember watching very alarming videos of people fighting, average people fighting with young girls deciding to take off their [inaudible 00:22:35] This was really scary to me, more than the authorities trying to suppress women, because this is more scary, more violent.
Raphael Rony Antony:
Okay, coming back to a point that we picked up from your talk yesterday about mothers just protesting outside just to find out if their children are alive or not, to find out where they're buried, if not alive. Based on your experience in Iran and your scholarly expertise, can you explain how that situation, mentally for a mother just to go out and protest or go out and just ask the government, "Is my child alive? If not, can you tell me where his remains are?"
Amal Hamada:
I think this is a very difficult moment, and it's very motherly thing that sometimes mother, she just want to know where she can go to recite or read some verse from the Bible and feel near to her kids, even if the kid is not alive. But she needs to feel the connection. Sometimes, even the sad reality is that my kid is not alive anymore, but at least some comfort will be in knowing that he or she is first buried with dignity and can visualize this kid even under the ground. I remember there was an older incident in Iran of maybe 2013, 2014, Reyhaneh. Reyhaneh was a girl who was sent to death because she killed her rapist.
A guy raped her and she killed him in the post. The judge simply sent her to death, and she wrote a very, very, very moving letter to her mom, telling, I remember ... I don't remember the exact quote, but it was something along the line that you told me that to love the world, but unfortunately the world does not love us. It was really moving, and I think Reyhaneh is dead now, but the legacy is alive, and the grief of the mother is alive. So sometimes, it might mean in terms of gains, what are you going to benefit just from where your kid is? But for a mother, it means a lot. It means a lot. It means accountability. You did it to my son or my daughter, and the body of my son or my daughter is the proof that you did it.
Raphael Rony Antony:
All through the protests in Iran, we read about Voria Ghafouri's arrest who was a Kurdish football star who stood up for the issue. Then I was on ground in Qatar during the workup when Iran National Team, they first refused to sing the national anthem. That time, they were supported by the general public, but then they were threatened by the government and they were in fear of their families' safety. So then they had to comply with the government's request and then they had to sing the national anthem in the next game. They were all public as a mass. They were against the Iranian men's team when it comes to a question like while protesting for the basic rights, but I have to protect my family as well. So in that situation as a man who wants to stand up for people around, and irrespective, men, women, it does not matter, just for the basic rights, what sort of expectations are there, is what I want to know.
Amal Hamada:
Well, as much as we expected from women, we expect more from men. You're a man. You should stand up, okay? This actually does not recognize or respect the limitations. As you said, they had a family. Their families were living in Iran, and they need to protect their family. So I think the first time they refused to sing, they told the story. They sent the message. That was it. The second time, they complied even better, because everybody now knows that they did it because they were asked or forced or talked into doing this. That's what mattered. For me, it's about symbols. It's about the narratives. So this is what it takes. Now we know that even the national team is not happy, more than enough.
Raphael Rony Antony:
Okay, now my last question from my side, more than a scholar on Iranian politics, as a woman, as I would say a Muslim woman, what does the phrase, "Women, Life, Freedom," [Persian 00:27:10] mean to you?
Amal Hamada:
It means a lot, because I remember I'm veiled, but liberal veiled. I'm not conservatively veiled. I remember when I was in Iran, especially the last visits, I didn't take off my veil, but I kind of wore it the way they do, the more liberal. I remember having a colleague coming to me and saying, "Why are you doing this? You are veiled. Why are you not removing, but kind of loosening it a little bit?" I told her that out of solidarity, I don't want them to feel that they are alone, though I believe that veil is a religious duty.
But at the same time, I believe that it's the woman's choice to comply with the religious duty, and it's not my business if anyone else is deciding to wear or not to wear. For Women, Freedom, Life, it's everything and doesn't mean that I want to take this right from men or to take this right from someone else. It's just, why can't we just simply respect the right to live? Even if I believe that your choices are not the right choices, it's your life. Ruin it, as long as you are not ruining my life. It's your life. Ruin it.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
We are recording this episode just about one month since the conflict began in Israel and Palestine. Both the United States and the European Union have designated Hamas as a terrorist organization. Do you have any examples or experience to tell our audience of a Palestinian mother and their role in counter-terrorism or disputing?
Amal Hamada:
I'm not a politician, okay? So naming groups as terrorist groups is not my job or my interest, okay? And I think we need to contextualize when we are naming groups. So for me, it would be too difficult to put ISIS, Al-Qaeda, Taliban in the same sentence with Hamas. It's a different complex. This is very important point to start with, okay? Second, I believe it would be too difficult after losing 5,000 lives of women and children, 10,000 lives, Palestinians in a month. Maybe it would be too unrealistic to talk about women in peace, because I was thinking the other day about mothers and building peace. Are there any mothers left in Palestine to build peace, to teach their kids about peace? It's very difficult.
But if we try, and I think this is very tragic moment and it's a missing opportunity, we missed opportunities by this tragic development, by these tragic attacks and the massacre happening in Gaza, okay? So if you want me to share an experience about Palestinian women working for peace, I would share a movie that was done in 2003 by a Palestinian director. He is a son of a Jewish woman and a Palestinian guy. Both were communist, and the Jewish lady was part of building Israel. Then she joined the Communist Party and she married the Palestinian guy and she moved to Jenin, the camp, where she spent her life working with Palestinian women, educating kids about art and theater.
She died in Jenin out of cancer after years. This is an eye-opening example of women living together, educating the kids about the importance of survive through art, okay? The lady, her name is Arna. The movie is Arna's Children, and it shows ... It's a documentary movie. It shows footages of her standing at checkpoints, protecting Palestinian men, women, and children to pass through the checkpoints, et cetera. For me, it would have more sense to humanity if we build on that experience, rather than deciding on simply killing 10,000 plus, half of them are women and children, and then expect mothers to be agents of peace.
Yet on the Palestinian side, it might be too difficult to talk about this. But if you follow the demonstration on the Israeli side, the anti-war demonstration taking place right now, demonstrating in front of Netanyahu house or the Parliament, the Women in Black, the group I talked about yesterday, they're there, and they want to stop the war, and they know that it makes no sense, and it's against human rights. It's against any sense.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Following to my next question, I would also ask you, what are the impacts of this long conflict on the emotional and psychological wellbeing of mothers? And how can this aspect be addressed?
Amal Hamada:
I have no clue. It's amazing, their ability to resist, meaning that following [inaudible 00:32:55] techniques, Palestinian women trying to adhere to normality is actually scary. There are photos of women trying to give their kids a bath in the middle of a wrecked building, photos of women baking a cake for a birthday, celebrating the birthday in the middle of the wreck, a very, very heartbreaking photo of a woman preparing her infant to be buried. She's just wrapping him in the [inaudible 00:33:32] and she seems composed. For me, I cannot describe it in words. Because as a mother myself, I cannot imagine the pain. But also as a mother, she needs to survive because of the other kids, not only her kids, but the kids who lost their mother in the war. There is this sense of responsibility that this is going to end, and we need someone to take care of the kids. Who is going to do this? It's the women. Definitely when this is over, I think part of the reconstruction, we need to pay attention to the traumas and the damage happened to Palestinian women.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
How do you think gender dynamics, cultural norms, and the social expectations shake the experiences and roles of mothers in this longstanding conflict?
Amal Hamada:
Okay, in the Palestinian case, I believe mothers are the buriers of the buriers. They carry the history. They're the one who tell the story. They're the one who tell the story, not only the political story. They're the one who tell the story about the grandparents, the house, the cooking, the embroidery, the small little details, the songs. How do we celebrate marriage? How do we celebrate having a new baby? This is important, because it's not only about the political negotiation over the land. It's how we narrate in order to maintain the memory, the collective memory, okay? So I think this is the main role women are playing. Definitely some of them are playing political roles, et cetera. But my focus and my interest is this role.
Raphael Rony Antony:
I just wanted to ask you another question.
Amal Hamada:
Yeah, sure.
Raphael Rony Antony:
We saw one of your TED Talks from, I think, 2014 about more street politics. In terms of the cultural structure in the way the Arabian Gulf from the Persian Gulf is structured, how do you expect ... It's very difficult for women to just go out and protest in general, especially if you take the Arabian Gulf. We have seen a lot of changes in terms of ... I'm talking about the changes in Saudi and how things have loosened, but yet ability to go out and protest for right, especially for women, is very difficult. What recommendation would you give for them to-
Amal Hamada:
It's not about going out to protest. It's about going out, being present in the public spaces, being visible in the public spaces, the ability of women to occupy, in the good sense, the public spaces. When I teach my students that men don't have to justify why they are in the public space, it's their right. Women have to justify it, to say a reason that you're going out. So for me, street politics is not only about protest. It's about the ability to be in the street and the daily little strategies used by women to be present and visible and to take it as a right. This is what I mean by street politics.
Raphael Rony Antony:
I don't know if you know, there was a couple of arrests in U Chicago yesterday for protesting against the current conflict in Israel and Palestine. So as students especially involved in politics and public policy, again I'm asking for your expertise, your recommendation on what are the best ways to get our voice out there for our rights, our basic ... I would say just getting ourselves out there.
Amal Hamada:
Well, you know your context, so I'm not in a position to give you advices in this regard, but my only thing is that it's amazing that as the war on the ground is taking place, there is another war of narratives. This is the new thing happening, that people get to see other narratives. People have access to other narratives, and no one can take this from you. Maybe the right to protest might be restricted or something, but no one can take your right to tell your story. I think this is the way to go. It's a very long road, but it's very sustainable. It's very sustainable.
Raphael Rony Antony:
One last question from my side, from listening to you over the last two days, we seriously look up to you as a person, as a-
Amal Hamada:
You shouldn't. You shouldn't.
Raphael Rony Antony:
No, as an academic, as a scholar, as a mother. So who do you look up to?
Amal Hamada:
This is difficult. I look up to all the brave mothers who are not as privileged as myself, are less lucky. But still, they wake up in the morning and they have something to tell to their kids. A Palestinian woman doesn't know if she's going to wake up in the morning or not because of the bombing, but she still has the ability to dress her kids and to bake a cake. There is no way of comparing my life to her life. I cannot complain. I have zero to complain about, and so I look up to them. I look up to mothers all over the world who lost their kids because of terrorism, because of war. They kind of moved forward beyond the loss of a child and try to save the rest of the children, not only in Palestine, but anywhere.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
There is a last thing about this conflict I would like to ask you. What are the organizations or activists that you are following that can help provide our audience with more information, what is happening on the ground?
Amal Hamada:
Well, I've been thinking about this question since yesterday, and I decided I will not recommend anyone, because I think it's enough, telling people what to listen to or what to follow. I think it's more important to tell the people that you need to search for yourself and find a narrative that makes you go to bed at night feeling that you tried. You tried to know the truth. You tried to know what's really happening on the ground. It's not someone recommending speaking against anyone, but I feel, truly feel, that I can give you a long list, organizations, websites, people to follow. But I will be doing the same that I criticize, that not you, but the other side is telling you that this is the absolute truth. As the radical groups, they tell you, "This is the absolute truth." No, search it for yourself. You're very lucky. You have the internet. You can decide for yourself.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
What is something you wish we would have asked you?
Amal Hamada:
I don't know, maybe about my kids.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Are they well?
Amal Hamada:
Yes.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
That's so good.
Amal Hamada:
About my dogs.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Yeah, how many?
Amal Hamada:
I have two dogs.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Amazing.
Amal Hamada:
[inaudible 00:41:44]
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Good to know. Thinking about our audience, there are mainly public policy students. If there was one paper or one book or even a movie, another movie that you could recommend to our [inaudible 00:42:04] to watch or to read, which one would it be?
Amal Hamada:
Okay, there is a beautiful movie done by a Lebanese director. Her name is Nadine Labaki. The movie is a little bit old, but it's very beautiful. I show it in my class every year. It's called, [Arabic 00:42:24] And Now Where To? [inaudible 00:42:28] very moving, but it's nice. There is this recent book I just discovered. The subtitle is Beyond The Crying Mothers. It's by Springer, 2023. I'm sorry, I can't remember the main title of the book and it's ... discuss. It's an edited book and it discuss. It's not public policy thing, but it discuss different roles of women in building peace as mothers. The subtitle is really, really interesting, Beyond the Crying Mothers. These are my two recommendations.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
Thank you very much. It was an honor to be here with you.
Amal Hamada:
Thank you. Thank you. It was my pleasure, and I hope people listening to the podcast would make them think, reflect about new things.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento:
I'm sure about this.
Hannah Balikci:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Dr. Amal Hamada. This episode was produced and edited by Hannah Balikci and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Jordan Enos, Raphael Rony Antony, and Isabella Pestana. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website, PearsonInstitute.org, and follow them on Twitter @PearsonInst, Inst spelled I-N-S-T. Thank you.
Root of Conflict
11.02.23
After Authoritarianism | Monika Nalepa
Hannah Balikci: Hello, this is Hannah and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast. You're listening to Root of Conflict, a Podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects.
Hannah Balikci: In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict. A research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy, at the University of Chicago. How are authoritarian elites and their collaborators handled in the aftermath of democratic transitions? The modern discipline documenting transitional justice, began with the Nuremberg Trials for Nazi perpetrators. The trials shifted the way the international community thinks about accountability for human rights violations committed by authoritarian regimes and are generally the most well-known example of transitional justice. Yet there exist different procedures of extrajudicial transitional justice, including lustration, truth commissions, and purges, that hold human rights violators accountable and remove them from positions of power without formally sentencing them.
Hannah Balikci: In this episode, we speak with Professor Monika Nalepa, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago, about her new book, After Authoritarianism, and her monumental work building the Global Transitional Justice Dataset, at the Transitional Justice and Democratic Stability Lab. We talk about the different implications of transitional justice for both leaders and rank-and-file members of authoritarian regimes and the more recent global phenomenon of Democratic backsliding.
Olga Bednarek: My name is Olga Bednarek. I'm a third-year dual-degree student at the Crown School of Social Work and the Harris School of Public Policy, and I'm a Pearson Fellow. I have the privilege of working at Professor Monika Nalepa.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento: I'm Isabella Pestana. I'm a first-year MPP student at the Harris School of Public Policy, at the University of Chicago, and I'm also a Pearson Fellow.
Monika Nalepa: Hi, I'm Monika Nalepa. I'm a Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago, a former member of the Political Economy PhD program, as well as a Pearson's Institute for Global Conflict Affiliate.
Monika Nalepa: Thank you so much. I want to say that first I feel like I had the privilege of working with Olga. We met just before the summer, and I hired her instantly as a research assistant. And I work on, I think the broadest way of saying it is on regime change and factors leading to regime change and also concentrating on what happens after regime change. Probably the biggest area of my research is transitional justice, which is the way that new democracies deal with members, collaborators, and a vast array of legacies of the previous authoritarian regime or regime that was boggled by Civil war.
Monika Nalepa: I've been interested in this topic for over two decades now. I wrote my dissertation on it. I've written two books on it, given lots of lectures, written a number of articles. Most recently I wrote about, prospects even for transitional justice in Russia following the war Ukraine. I would say that's the greatest passion that I have substantively. But also as a social scientist, I pay a lot of attention to methods and I would describe myself as an institutionalist. Somebody who pays particular attention on the way that institutions structure human behavior and how humans interact in political situations and social situations.
Monika Nalepa: At the University of Chicago where I've worked for over nine years now, I teach classes on game theory, social choice theory, and analytical methods and comparative politics.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento: Super impressive.
Olga Bednarek: Could you please define transitional justice for those of us who are not familiar with the term?
Monika Nalepa: Sure. Paradoxically, it has often a little to do with normative concepts of justice. And it essentially refers to all kinds of mechanisms that are set up in the aftermath of transition to democracy, to handle former authoritarian elites that are collaborators, sometimes bystanders, sometimes victims. And very frequently, the concept actually extends to non-judicial institutions. Following transitions from authoritarian rule, new regimes are often resource deprived or depleted.
Monika Nalepa: Coming up with judicial procedures for handling sometimes huge atrocities that were committed on behalf of the former authoritarian regime, is just not feasible. Hence the reliance on extrajudicial procedures, such as illustrations, urges, truth commissions, hearing commissions, et cetera. And even though these mechanisms often... What else? Opening archives, but with documentation of human rights violations that were committed. And although these extrajudicial procedures don't fulfill standards of rule of law perhaps, and due process, just because of the vast array of actors and actions that one has to deal with in the aftermath of transition, they're better than having judicial processes set up, only reach a few.
Monika Nalepa: I would say that in my most recent strand of research is arguing that, transitional justice procedures that may be skimp on due process and rule of law extrajudicial, but reach a vast array of former citizens of authoritarian regimes are better than concentrating, for instance, just on criminally prosecuting the leadership, the authoritarian regime. There was a normative implication there, if you want to catch me on that, but yes.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento: It's amazing. Please.
Monika Nalepa: The normative implication basically is that, following, I would say, World War II and Nuremberg trials, there has been a shift in the way that the international community thinks about accountability for human rights violations committed by authoritarian regimes. There's been this shift towards believing that, if we hold accountable leaders of these authoritarian regimes and those who are issuing orders, then the incentives to fulfill these orders on behalf of the rank-and-file will disappear. Meanwhile, there are reasons to doubt this.
Monika Nalepa: In fact, we see that, I have a theoretical paper with Stephen Boyd, one of the students from my Transitional Justice and Democratic Stability Lab, where we show that there are actually limits to the strategy and perhaps prosecuting rank-and-file numbers of authoritarian regimes. Those who are fulfilling orders in the long-term can actually be better at disabling these principal agent relationships. Between authoritarian leaders who are issuing orders of repression and rank-and-file members who are fulfilling those orders. I'll qualify that though.
Monika Nalepa: It's better from the following point of view. If we're asking, what kind of transitional justice mechanisms are best suited for reducing the volume of repression that is committed by authoritarian regimes? I'm not saying that it's just to let leaders off the hook or not to concentrate on them so much, I'm just saying that in the long term it reduces or maybe punishing them harsher and harsher at the expense of punishing rank-and-file members, does not reduce the amount of repression that they exert against their own citizens.
Olga Bednarek: Speaking of your lab, could you explain to us how you are gathering this data? How you're studying it? Because it feels a bit ambiguous to us, I think. You're studying such a big topic and so, really understanding how you are would be helpful.
Monika Nalepa: Sure. The idea of the lab came out of, just looking at the geography of transitional justice and how this discipline has unraveled. And it's mostly happening through country studies, right? There's a regime change in confidence on country and country expert from that country, writes about the transitional justice procedures that were administered there. And often this would be very disjoint from similar research on transitional justice from sometimes even neighboring countries. At most the works in comparative politics that dealt with transitional justice would cover two or three countries. There were very few cross-national efforts.
Monika Nalepa: And while I was at Columbia University, my advisor, Jon Elster, was writing a book about transitional justice and historical perspective. And he was actually interested in a more qualitative way, but really surveying over time and across space, how various countries have dealt with elites of their former authoritarian regimes. And he asked me to collect data on six East European countries and their transitional justice processes. And he gave me very little input on how he wants that data organized. So, leaving it largely up to me.
Monika Nalepa: And the first thing that I thought to myself, that instead of just taking a snapshot of what are the transitional justice mechanisms that have been implemented in a different country, why not create a chronology for the entire Democratic period. Starting when the country transitioned away from authoritarianism and focusing on four mechanisms. In my case, it was, illustrations, purges, truth commissions, and victim compensation. Why not concentrating on those four mechanisms? Just prepare chronologies of transitional justice events that took place in that country.
Monika Nalepa: And when coding these events or when collecting data on these events, concentrate both on developments that were advancing the transitional justice process forward, as well as events that were setbacks. Well, if the president vetoes a transitional justice bill or they'll say, opening archives of the secret political police, that's a setback for transitional justice. But if the legislature passes a law, creating a truth commission, that will uncover the passion of abuses committed by an authoritarian regime. That will advance the transitional justice process forward.
Monika Nalepa: And then out of this collection of events, some pushing the transitional justice process forward and others backwards, and we can actually code those literally as zeros and ones or negative ones and plus ones, and create measures of the severity of transitional justice. Using that approach, in many, many years later, after I graduated from Columbia, I applied for a grant to the National Science Foundation and laid out this idea that, we should be collecting systematic data on transitional justice. And I also proposed a theory that I would test with this data because otherwise the NSF does not give money for the data fishing expeditions. And after being funded, I hired roughly 10 research assistants, to help code these data from all democracies in the world that have transitioned from autocracy since 1918.
Monika Nalepa: In the first phase of data collection, we focused on extrajudicial transitional justice procedures. So frustrations, purges, truth commissions. Purges of entire agencies, purges of individual persons, illustrations on truth commissions. And that data set was released in 2021, and that basically concluded the funding from the National Science Foundation.
Monika Nalepa: But, following that, I was fortunate enough to get support from the University of Chicago, including the Pearson Institute. Thank you very much. And we expanded actually our data collection to criminal procedures. We decided to focus, in-line with this paper that I described a little earlier, we decided to focus on, collecting information about, transitional justice events of criminal trials against perpetrators of human rights violations. But focusing both on leaders, so those who are issuing orders, and the rank-and-file, so those who are fulfilling orders.
Monika Nalepa: And that data set is going to be released tomorrow, on the day of the global forum. The first sneak preview of the data set will actually happen during the global forum. And what it reveals, just as a descriptive statistic, is that, indeed, after 1946, there has been this shift towards prosecuting leaders. Those who have been issuing orders rather than those who will be fulfilling orders. But that's just the first snapshot out of the data set. There's lots more that can be done from it.
Olga Bednarek: Could you please tell us, since you're publishing this data set tomorrow, will it be available for the public to view? How will you be basically disseminating to support information?
Monika Nalepa: Both data sets will be available on the website of the Transitional Justice and Democratic Stability Lab. The address for that is tjdemstabilitylab.com, and there is a tab there that goes to the global transitional justice data set. And right now the data that is available is for these four transitional justice mechanisms that are non-judicial, illustrations, two types of purges and truth commissions. And that database is interactive so one can choose a subset of countries to compare the volume of transitional justice mechanisms in those countries. One can look at the severity, the urgency, and the volatility of transitional justice in those countries. And next week, we will make downloadable the data set on criminal trials. So the second part of the data set that breaks down criminal trials against leaders and rank-and-file members. And it will also be available in the interactive format. The tjdemstabilitylab.com website also has a page with the research products of our labs, so papers that have been published as well as papers that are in progress. And it also introduces the members of our lab, so you can see our faces.
Olga Bednarek: Thank you so much. I'll definitely have to look into that and play around with that data set. I do have two follow-up questions. The first one is, could you please define illustrations for us?
Monika Nalepa: Thank you. Thanks for that question. Illustrations, from Latin, it means shedding with light or purifying with light. And it's a transitional justice term that has been used very broadly, to refer to any way of dealing with members of the leadership of the former authoritarian regime, but, in not these non-judicial race. So not criminal trial. Firing them, preventing them from holding office. And in my new book, After Authoritarianism, I actually re-conceptualized the use of the words illustration and purges. Because illustration is also used popularly to refer to, exposing who among citizens of a former authoritarian regime, collaborated with the secret police and preventing those who collaborated with the secret police from fulfilling all kinds of functions.
Monika Nalepa: And one of the things that I point out is that, that's a very different mechanism than purges, right? When we think about purging, we think about, firing from office, from their positions, whether in the enforcement apparatus or in the bureaucracy, people whose status and collaboration with former authoritarian regime was known, right? Who was a minister in an authoritarian cabinet? Everybody knows. Who was the chief of military? Everybody knows. But what people don't know is who the secret collaborators that the secret police recruited to spy women's surveillance of the opposition was. But those are the people who are known.
Monika Nalepa: And illustrations to the extent that they focus on revealing these collaborators or preventing former collaborators from running for office, creates very different effect than purges. Purges essentially are punitive, right? They sanction people for what they did in the past. Sometimes they might correct systematic biases that keep in place pure council numbers of the authoritarian apparatus might create. But what illustrations do is actually remove opportunities for blackmailing former collaborators of the secret police with compromising information.
Monika Nalepa: I'll give you an example. If a former collaborator of the secret police becomes a politician and is in a position of executive power, some executive power, and only he knows that he was a collaborator, and arguably his leading officer or some people from the tight circle of the secret police, that person can now be blackmailed with the threat of revealing this information about collaboration. And can be steered towards implementing policies that they would otherwise not implement. This blackmail ability of former collaborators, makes illustrations or transparency regimes more broadly, actually a forward-looking mechanism rather than backward-looking mechanism like purges.
Monika Nalepa: Even though purges and illustrations have been used interchangeably, they're very different mechanisms. And in my most recent book, I argue that countries following transitions, such as Russia hopefully will be, should focus on transparency regimes like illustrations and eliminating the use of compromise from politics. Whereas with purges, they should use them sparingly and only apply them when actually the bureaucrats or the members of the enforcement apparatus who are being purged, don't have any expertise to offer that could be usable by the new Democratic regime.
Olga Bednarek: Thank you so much for that definition. One more follow-up question. You were talking about studying over space and time. My question is, does transitional justice ever end? How long is your timeframe for studying? 10 years, 20 years, or is it indefinite?
Monika Nalepa: It's indefinite, which basically means that, the Transitional Justice and Democratic Stability Lab is an ongoing process. Because even countries that transitioned decades ago, are still embarking on transitional justice. And I'll just point to a couple of instances here. Spain and Argentina are fantastic examples. In both of these countries, their initial efforts of holding former perpetrators accountable or even revealing the truth about what happened in Spain, both during the Franco regime and during the Civil War, were put on hold. There was this strong belief that transitional justice will distract Spain from setting on a path towards democratization. But putting on hold issues of accountability, often comes to haunt new democracies. And sure enough, decades later, a memory law was passed in Spain, and these discussions basically resurfaced.
Monika Nalepa: And now we're in an era where street names are being changed, information is being circulated. Of course, many people are being held accountable because too much time has passed, but transitional justice doesn't really end for good. Of course, perpetrators might die and become ill, and there's not really a chance to hold them accountable, but there's always truth to be revealed. One of the things that I think come out of my research is that, transitional justice is not really a choice whether to do it or not is just how to do it.
Olga Bednarek: Thank you, professor. We have seen examples of authoritarian regimes transitioning to democracies, but there are also examples of places where democratic institutions seem to have faced some type of fragility. We can talk now about Turkey and some will argue about Brazil. What is your opinion on this topic? And now it's my curiosity, do we also have data being produced about this? It would be the opposite of transitioning to democracy, but places that were democratic.
Monika Nalepa: I'm really glad that you asked that question because that's basically a second strand of my research agenda, which largely started because I'm Polish. And in 2015, Poland that had democratized in 1989 started this process of backsliding into autocracy. And the only reason I can now speak about this process with complete relaxation is because, just this last weekend, the first election in any country actually in the world that has been backsliding for two electoral firms, the election actually reversed the support for the incumbent. And most likely we will, within a few months, have a non-backsliding regime. But liberal opposition will come back to power.
Monika Nalepa: As always, Poland, it's a little bit complicated. It was research interests sparked my developments in Poland but of course, as you noticed, it's a phenomenon that has occurred around the world. And it's a very puzzling phenomenon because especially I think for citizens living in established democracies who've come to believe that who've come to take in their institutions, the democratic institutions and institutions of representation for granted, the fact that the role of restrainers of executives is being diminished. And by restrainers, I mean, courts, other chambers, opposition parties, is very troubling. Researching the causes and consequences of that is another one of my interests.
Monika Nalepa: And I would say that the biggest focus of this research has been on diminishing the role of vertical restrainers. Vertical restrainers are essentially voters. What do incumbents do to prevent voters from voting them out of office, when they start undermining democratic institution? It's puzzling because presumably voters want to live in a democracy, the elect into office an executive who is undermining democracy, such as, firing judges of the Supreme Court, trying to take over control of the media. Why do voters keep voting for that incumbent?
Monika Nalepa: In one of the papers that I've written with a couple of co-authors, Catherine Chiopris and George Vanberg, we posed that, voters are uncertain about the true intentions of these executive incumbents and may be led to think that these incumbents are actually pursuing policy goals. And that making some changes in these constitutional institutions, such as courts, such as electoral systems, are merely an instrument to achieve those policy goals. And because voters want to see those policy goals implemented, they give these incumbents the benefit of the doubt. And then the incumbents after being re-elected, turn around and use the fact these institutions of control have been weakened, to stay in power forever. This is of course, a shortcut from Adam Szybowski, but, basically main difference between autocrats and democrats is that, democrats are willing to step down when they lose popular support, autocrats want to stay in power even when they lose popular support.
Monika Nalepa: In this paper, which I just described, we actually were fortunate enough to carry out an experiment in Poland a couple of years ago. So writing a little of the electoral cycle, and we were able to find supporting evidence for this mechanism. That once voters become less uncertain about the true intentions of the incumbent, they can actually reverse their decision and vote against an incumbent that they formerly supported.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento: So it would be more about the short-term outcomes of some policies then.
Monika Nalepa: Let's talk about Poland for a second. We actually just talked about this yesterday. What happened in Poland that could have made those former supporters of the populist backsliding government, revert to voting for the opposition or just from staying at home? We know that PiS, the law justice party that was ruling for the last eight years, lost half a million voters, which is not a huge amount. Actually, the opposition gained way more voters than the incumbent lost. But one of the things that we were talking about was what made that half million change their mind?
Monika Nalepa: It could be simply displacement. It could be that the old voters for PiS and young people switch their vote over to the liberal opposition. It could be corruption scandals that exposed that really, the PiS government was just about filling its coffers. It could have been also something deeper. It could have been reactions to the refugee crisis in Ukraine, it could have been in a variety of things. We're now in the process of trying to get survey data from, what was it? Two weeks before the elections? Everything I shared with you, Olga? Yeah. And see what's going on there.
Olga Bednarek: And in your opinion, there is spillover effects that you were talking about researching just in one nation and having also these cross-national studies. Do you think there are spillover effect, and we are facing some of them or not?
Monika Nalepa: Yeah. That's right. Methodologically, my approach to studying global transitional justice, is very different from studying backsliding. And I think the reason is because, for these incumbents to stay in power, they have to be re-elected by voters who have to make these individual decisions based on their beliefs. There was a huge advantage of doing sub-national studies to test these phenomena, even though the mechanism that I explained, I think works in a broader set of countries on spillover effects.
Monika Nalepa: For the longest time, I think people believed that, Hungary and Poland are sort of working in tandem, right? At first, both democratized very rapidly. In Hungary the opposite Fidesz, backslider Fidesz, at first was in the opposition for a very long time, then it came to power, started gradually dismantling democratic institutions, starting with courts, got into trouble with the EU. And in Poland, basically the same thing seemed to be happening. Many people are saying that, "Oh, Kaczynski is just following Orban's playbook up till now," right? Because basically, while Orban managed to secure victory in the third consecutive elections, in Poland it seems that that fund was reversed.
Monika Nalepa: And I think that one of the reasons behind this difference is, the legacies of opposition resistance in Poland, which, I don't think are as prevalent in Hungary. Let me turn to Olga here, who basically, when she was hired as my research assistant, she was tasked with this gargantuan task of coding the city where oppositionists who were interned in Poland in 1989 were. Poland during its most threatening to the autocrats authoritarian crisis, had martial law enforced. And during this martial law regime, about 15,000 of members of solidarity, the Independent Trade Union, were arrested and basically placed in isolation, which is known as internment.
Monika Nalepa: Thanks to the Institute of National Remembrance, we have now a database of the orders requiring that specific persons be arrested and interned. What this allows us to do is actually to trace the density of opposition networks in communist Poland. What Olga is helping us do, me and Hanna Bosz, a co-author of mine from Stanford, is we're trying to see if these patterns, these opposition activity from the communist authoritarian regime, were by any chance recreated in resistance to the populist backsliding regime in Poland. We have a hunch that these legacies of opposition activity don't die out. And because in Poland they were just so prevalent, but we think that we'll still be able to find a link there. But it's basically just a hunch hypothesis that we hope to test.
Olga Bednarek: Thank you so much for explaining your research to us. Could you explain if there's any way to relate your findings over the past 20 years to what's happening in the U.S. at all?
Monika Nalepa: Thanks. U.S. is a very tricky example because it's an established democracy, at least at the national level. And because of that, I feel that the sensitivity to issues of transitional justice is somewhat depressed, because you need to have regime change to realize how important transitional justice is. And the U.S. democracy has just lasted for quite some time, and it was just interrupted with the Civil War interval. However, an often-neglected fact is that, actually it was transitional justice, both after the War of Independence and after the Civil War.
Monika Nalepa: After the War of Independence, there was a push for lawyers from the colonies to disbar loyalists, so people who had collaborated with the British. And the goal of that was actually very common to the goal of a lot of new democracies, which was to give a chance for the lawyers who were affiliated with the Independence Movement to have jobs. And following Civil War, there was a similar push to remove from positions of power and control, elites who had collaborated with the Confederacy. Now, those attempts were actually unsuccessful. Confederate elites, as we know from Jim Crow, were able to return and even entrench themselves. But because of lack of transitional justice at the elite level, there were a lot of acts of spontaneous justice, which I won't refer to as transitional justice because they were not really procedurally sanctioned towards the rank-and-file.
Monika Nalepa: What this meant is when confederate spies were found, they were instantly hanged, and they were court-martialed and summarily trialed. Actually, the U.S. does have a history of transitional justice, it's just not acknowledged or research history with one exception. There are several political scientists who are experts in truth commissions and have researched truth commissions around the world. And what they have been documenting is the creation of local truth commissions in the U.S. for dealing acts of racial violence. The problem, however, is that, all of these truth commissions are tasked with researching only very specific and very narrowly defined events. There has not been basically a nationwide truth commission or a nationwide transitional justice institution, such as the one that would make it, for instance, into the global transitional justice data set. So the U.S. is not even a dataset that we released.
Monika Nalepa: But of course, as the events of 2020 suggest following the murder of George Floyd, there is an enormous need for accountability of racial injustices in the U.S. Not just racial violence, not just racial physical violence, but also, unfair housing policies and a history of discrimination. There's definitely room for people interested in doing research on the U.S. to work on transitional justice. There are tons of questions that are still unanswered. And I think we have now developed by working around the world on transitional justice, the tools for doing that. I would encourage students who are listening to this podcast, to turn their interests there.
Olga Bednarek: Amazing. And do you also see the reflections of your work in today's global policy?
Monika Nalepa: Yeah. It is a very tricky question to ask for somebody who's not affiliated directly with a policy school. I work in the political science department, and I've always been focused on researching these basic institutions. How to reconstruct institutions of transitional justice. When do they work? When do they not work? And I think largely, shying away from consulting, but of course, there's no way of hiding policy implications of my research. Like I said, forced policy implications, I will offer them. And in this most recent article that I published in for Soviet Affairs on Transitional Justice Options for Russia, we actually do make some suggestions.
Monika Nalepa: And of course it varies from place to place, but the overall normative implications is, if the goal is to ensure democratic stability, then transparency institutions work better than punitive institutions, such as purges. And to the extent that, criminal responsibility should be administered, which of course this is contingent on having the judicial resources, et cetera, et cetera. And actually having peace in the first place, it's really not worth neglecting the prosecutions of rank-and-file. Because they're just as important, if not more important than prosecuting leaders.
Monika Nalepa: And on that note, there is the, if one looks at the way that international criminal tribunals have been set up, this overarching goal of reaching order givers or those who are leading regimes that give orders of repression, has led some of these tribunals, such as the International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia, to actually pre-bargain with rank-and-file members, as well as middlemen, so mid-level officers, in order to get them to reveal information about leaders issuing orders. And I would say that that is a terrible strategy. Because it essentially lets off the hook people who have committed crimes with their own hands sometimes, or have committed the most brutal acts of violence, and sacrificing a justice done to them in order to punish the leaders. And we don't even know that punishing the leaders is in the long-term effective.
Monika Nalepa: Meantime, victims are observing this and just feeling that, the testimony that they gave to go after these rank-and-file, has been completely wasted. I would say, I've shied away from making policy implications, pretty long time just focusing on these basic institutions. But I feel pretty confident in giving those two pieces of advice. Transparency institutions on the one hand, and then not neglecting prosecutions of rank-and-file.
Olga Bednarek: Perfect. And now turning to our audience. If there was one paper or book that you would recommend, which would it be?
Monika Nalepa: Wait. It's not going to be a book, it's not going to be an article, but it's actually going to be something a bit better. It's going to be a blog. A few years ago there was this part of the Washington Post, which is called the Monkey Cage. Maybe some of the listeners will recognize it. And it was a space for political scientists and social scientists to describe their research, especially if it was relevant for the interpretation of current events, in a way that's accessible to a broader audience. And unfortunately, because of the way the news market works, the Monkey Cage was closed down. And for about a year, they basically were homeless, but now they have recreated themselves as Good Authority.
Monika Nalepa: It's essentially the same model, political social scientists commenting on current events based on their own research. And interestingly, they're not opinion pieces, so they're not op-eds. In fact, authors are given very explicit instructions to shy away from opinions, they're rather analysis pieces. And I think there are two advantages of reading that. But one is that it's gives you an opportunity to very quickly learn what the current research tells us about this event. But also it allows readers to familiarize themselves with who is an expert on this topic. And you can go to their academic webpage and read their most recent article. I would definitely put a plug in for Good Authority.
Isabella Pestana de Andrade do Nascimento: Amazing. Thank you very much, Monika.
Hannah Balikci: Thank you so much for all of your insight today. It really does seem like your research is incredibly important and can have some long-lasting implications, especially when thinking about today's current conflicts and all of the atrocities happening all over the world. We really appreciate you taking your time to be here with us and your decades worth of work on the issue.
Monika Nalepa: Thank you so much. It's been a pleasure to speak to you and to speak to the product audience that is listening.
Hannah Balikci: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Professor Monika Nalepa. This episode was produced and edited by Hannah Balikci and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Olga Bednarek and Isabella Pestana. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute, for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website Thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter @pearsoninst. Inst is spelled I-N-S-T. Thank you.
Root of Conflict
10.06.23
Kurdish Women and Resistance | Rez Gardi
Root of Conflict
09.07.23
Lives Amid Violence | Mareike Schomerus
Reema Saleh:
Hi, this is Rima and you are listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast. You are listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the study in resolution of global conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
What mental models underpin international development and how do they hold back actors working in conflict affected countries? In this episode, we speak with Dr. Mareike Schomerus, author of 'Lives Amid Violence' and Vice President of the Busara Center, one of the first behavioral science research labs in the global south. Drawing from 10 years of research by the Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium, she argues that the international development sector in its current form often fails to take into account the experiences and perspectives of people living in violent contexts. And she offers a new language for transforming development in the wake of conflict. We talk about the colonialist thinking that underpins international development, how the sector's unflinching faith in causality creates blind spots for practitioners, and what it means to envision this space anew.
Hannah Balikci:
The following is a PSA from the University of Chicago's Pearson Institute for the study and resolution of global conflicts presenting the Pearson Global Forum. A thin line divides human realities. The fundamental desire for simple human existence remains the same, yet reality is dramatically disparate for many. Join us on Friday, October 20th to hear from global experts as they discuss the topic of disparity and how it impacts people around the world in places like Iran, Afghanistan, and Mexico. This in person and virtual event is free and open to all. You can find more information at the pearsonglobalforum.org. Thank you.
Reema Saleh:
Hi, my name is Reema. I'm a Pearson fellow and a student at Harris.
Julia Higgins:
Hi there. My name is Julia Higgins, I'm an MPP student at Harris as well, and also a Pearson fellow.
Umama Zillur:
Hi everyone. My name is Umama Zillur. I'm also a student at Harris and a Pearson fellow.
Mareike Schomerus:
And hi, I'm Mareike Schomerus. I'm a visiting lecturer at Harris and also Vice president at Basara.
Reema Saleh:
Alrighty. So can you tell us a little more about why are you here this quarter at Harris? What courses are you teaching?
Mareike Schomerus:
So this is my third time that I'm teaching at Harris in the spring term, and I teach two courses this time. I teach qualitative research, which is of course within Harris, a little bit of a novelty since this is not a very qualitative environment. So I think it's one of the few courses that you can take at Harris where you learn qualitative research and get to do a little experimentation with your own qualitative interests and approaches and so on. And the second course I teach is a hybrid course that we teach across Busara, which is my home organization in Kenya and here. Where we have people design a behavioral experiment, and the actual part that we do in class is the so-called formative research. So where people set up the first round of research where they're trying to understand what really is the context like in which they're going to implement this hypothetical experiment. And so we do a little bit of data collection so people can actually experience what it's like to design an interview instrument, analyze qualitative formative data, and then how to use that for experimental design later on.
Reema Saleh:
Can I ask what first drew you to this intersection of behavioral science and conflict studies?
Mareike Schomerus:
Yeah, it piqued my interest probably by now six, seven years ago. In fact, after I did a lot of ethnographic field work, very qualitative field work in conflict resolution and peace protest and armed groups and so on. And it really became very clear to me from reading more and more about behavioral science and from cognitive biases and cognitive processes, and primarily actually the point where it becomes very clear that people start remembering things very differently as time passes and change their own recollection of what it is that brought them to a particular place. And which I had seen a lot happening if you do qualitative conflict research, you see that, of course you see people changing their stories and so on. And I thought, I wonder what that is. And I've read a lot more on behavioral science and then thought, I think qualitative conflict studies is really missing a big perspective or it doesn't engage more with behavioral science.
Because behavioral science, at the time even more so than now, sits very separately, sits as a mainly quantitative discipline still, even though it's also hugely qualitative and anthropology is often very behavioral and so on. And so I started looking into what kind of research could be really useful to try and interlink a very serious qualitative perspective, which is what I bring, and a very serious behavioral science perspective. And it turned out there wasn't a lot of that around. And so I set up a little research project to try a particular approach, which we then implemented, and that's kind of how I ended up at Busara.
Reema Saleh:
That's amazing. Can I ask how that's informed? We'll be talking a lot about your book, 'Lives Amid Violence'. How did that inform or what inspired the book project in the first place?
Mareike Schomerus:
So the book project was inspired by a very technical requirement. I was the research director of a big research consortium, the Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium, which ran for 10 years. Was hosted at ODI in London, funded by, at the time, the Department for International Development, which is the UK's development secretary really at the time was called DFID. And it was looking into that seemingly very simple question of how people survive in situations of violent conflict. And survivor being quite a holistic category, not just security wise, but also in terms of really income, food, services, health services, education, things like that. How do they manage in these situations?
And I took over as the research director for my predecessor in 2017, something like that. And then the project came to a close in 2021, and the final deliverable for the final research director was to step back and answer the big question. Say, well, if we do 10 years of research with really dozens of partner organizations all over the world, we have over 150 outputs from that particular research consortium. All very specific on many, many different aspects of this question in many nuanced ways.
But really what is a big picture answer that you can give about what you learn? Which is actually a really tricky question to answer. You have a huge amount of material from very, very different methodological perspectives, very different voices and so on. And so that task fell to me as the research director. And I guess the only way that I could answer that question really was to do something very different. I wouldn't have been in a position to really summarize the research. It's too nuanced, and I make that point very often in the book that really each individual piece of research stands alone. And if you're interested in a particular part of this broad range of questions, you would really need to go and read the research on this.
So I wanted to look at patterns of insights that arise from this. And the patterns of insights that were really striking to me were that over these 10 years, these many outputs, the recommendations that almost every piece of research has to the policy makers, decision makers, program designers and so on, were very, very similar. They hardly ever seemed to change. And yet also alongside the hardly ever change in recommendations, hardly anything else ever seemed to change either. And so I thought, well, why it? Why can you keep saying the same things over and over again and nothing seems to shift in this? And so that's my inspiration for what the book actually ended up being, was recognizing these big patterns.
Reema Saleh:
That makes sense. Can I ask where kind of the title came from originally
Mareike Schomerus:
The title of the book? So 'Lives Amid Violence: Transforming Development in the Wake of Conflict'. So 'Lives Amid Violence', I think came to me quite early because it was very clear that I wasn't going to write actually primarily about the people whom the research was about, the people who were living in situations of violence. But also a lot about the people who were on the other side, on the implementing side, on the side of trying to deliver development programs and so on to support those other lives of people who were living amidst violence. And so I thought that was a phrase that caught both the fact that everyone's lives gets wrapped up in these situations and in often very unhelpful ways.
But it also, I really wanted to have an emphasis on this understanding that amid violence lives also go on, they continue. They are often brutally interfered with, interrupted sometimes, but remains really crucial to pay attention to how people live. And I think that's particularly crucial for the people who then make decisions over how to support those people. Because I would argue that very often their decisions are a bit misguided, because they interpret things in a particular way that is not very helpful.
The second part of the title, which is a bit grandiose, transforming development in the wake of conflict, I actually mentioned that in the book that I had to say that out loud quite a few times to myself to see whether that sounded completely ridiculous. Because everything that has transforming in the title is a little bit cringe worthy to me, but it's also important to highlight what direction the book is going in. And so from a publisher's point of view, it's very important that people know that this is about international development and that this is in the wake of conflict.
So it doesn't do that division between we're now in conflict and we're now post conflict, which is usually the jargon that is used. And the transforming part, I think the publisher, who was very supportive of this title, felt that it is a book that called for a genuine transformation. And that it's quite serious about this despite the fact that I find it quite hard to let the word transforming come out of my mouth. But it is, it's asking for a real shift. And so that's how the title comes about. But negotiating a title is also not something that the author does alone, I'm just saying. So I think my very original title was a lot more creative, which would've never made it to the bookshelves.
Reema Saleh:
Oh, can we know what it is?
Mareike Schomerus:
Yeah, I don't remember embarrassingly, I shouldn't have said that. But it was definitely something more creative.
Reema Saleh:
Oh, we'll definitely follow up. We won't. No, but to me, I admit it always struck me as, because I feel like the book writes a lot about, it's hard to define when a conflict starts or when it ends for people. So it kind of captured that for me.
Mareike Schomerus:
Great. I'm delighted to hear. So it does work kind of.
Reema Saleh:
So I think we're definitely going to get through what needs to be transformed about development and how we think about aid, state building kind of things. But first, can you walk us through what is a mental model? And what about the mental model underpinning international development needs to change?
Mareike Schomerus:
So this is exactly where I landed when I looked at all these many outputs and recognized this pattern of recommendations were always the same. And they were basically in one way or another, every recommendations were saying, you have to work being politically aware, things have to be context specific and context appropriate, and any planning needs to be flexible and it needs to work with local realities. And I mean, these are very common policy recommendations that you see and yet they never really changed. And so I thought, well, why is that? And as I was trying to understand, literally letting it emerge. People can't see me, but I'm grasping things in the air with my hands, which is very much actually a reenactment of how this process felt like. Because I was sitting often and I was walking around talking to myself and trying to really grasp what it was that I was seeing.
And at some point it was very, very clear to me that what I was seeing was a mental model underpinning these international engagements in conflict situations that wasn't ever going to be appropriate for what the realities were. And so what that means is, so a mental model is something that we all have in multiple layers and multiple versions, which is basically our go-to, often subconscious or unconscious explanations of how things work. So you fall back onto, you make sense of the world through the interpretative patterns that you have ingrained in yourself based on your personality, based on your background, your upbringing, your culture, your surroundings, your learnings and whatever. And you just apply that very snappy and say, "Okay, this is why these things are in a particular way."
And so mental model aren't, it's not correct to say this is your way of thinking because it's much more visceral than that. If it was your way of thinking, it would be much easier to say, "Oh, let's articulate this thinking and now let's rethink," which is how this is often done. But a mental model is deeper than that. It's the blood that flows through that thinking where people say, "But I'm deeply convinced that there's one particular way in which something works and the mechanisms through which something works." And the way I unpack that in the book is through looking at what some of the major approaches are in these situations of violent conflict. And why in a way they never really change in their approaches despite the calls for being context specific, despite the calls for being politically appropriate and aware and so on.
And how that emerged to me in front of, as I was grasping with my hands in the air for explanations, was that I realized that the language in which international intervention of development speaks about this sounds like you're talking to a bunch of engineers. So it's almost like you're sitting in a room with people who've written a blueprint on how to now create a post-conflict society. And I say this a little bit flippantly, but actually it's not that flippant. It's quite stark.
If you look at the language that's used in this, it's state building and institution building and building blocks and blueprints and pathways. And I mean it's all very, very technical engineering language. And what that does is it really speaks to one mental model, which is the need for certainty. So there's a real deep need I think for people who work in that field to feel somewhat able to say, "No, we're on top of this situation. We're in control of this situation. We have a plan, we have sequencing."
So yes, clearly we need to, this is a situation that was, for example, a peace deal has been signed, so now we need to go into the institution building and we need to stabilize this. Again, stabilization, like build a foundation that can't slide. Very, very architectural. We need to stabilize this. We need to build these institutions. These institutions then need to become accountable. They need to then start acting on behalf of their citizens, at which point the citizens then stop contesting the legitimacy of these institutions. And that's how you bring about a peaceful society.
And that mental model of this engineering mindset, I think for starters is really misleading. The second part of the mental model is that ultimately all of this thinking that happens and the many nuances in, for example, a state building effort and so on, really speaks to an idea that deeply believes that economic growth in one way or another will solve all problems, is completely necessary to solve very complex social problems. And that also with the idea that economic growth and economic resources is the most important thing for people, everything becomes a transactional relationship rather than a social relationship where people maybe build an economic transaction on top of a social relationship.
The mental model of international development flips it and says, "Well, the most important thing for people is resources, material wealth." And that's interesting because we see time and time again that this very established idea of the hierarchy of needs, where always the economic need is the big foundation of the pyramid gets flipped in situations of violent conflict. Or contestation where actually people put other needs, where they forego economic opportunities for social connections, for example. And this mental model that ultimately, in really bare bones words, it's the mental model that informs still the idea of homo-economicals, the rational driven by the aim to get the best economic decisions done and gain the most benefit from these decisions. That is still a mental model that underpins a lot of the analysis of these contexts.
Umama Zillur:
So on that train of thought, and just maybe looking at a more long-term view of this, all of this I think is... I mean, my original question was, what's wrong with international development and its relationship to colonialism and ongoing conflict? But I want to rephrase that and ask you, do you think the relationship is a prominent part of the development economic discourse currently? And then unpack why that link or the fact that the link is missing is an issue.
Mareike Schomerus:
The relationship to colonialism. So I think that well, colonialism had has at its heart the same mental model. And so let me nuance that a little bit more what I mean by that. So colonialism, I think often when people speak about it, they think of it actually weirdly, again, the mental model of engineering and administrative things. So very often when people speak about decolonization, they think about the administrative parts of this. The first wave of debate on de-colonialization was countries becoming independent. So actually a very technical administrative act. And now I think the debate has moved on, luckily, a lot more and has realized that there's also deep thought patterns, deep prioritizations of what kind of knowledge is important, what kind of knowledge is even readable to people. And sometimes readable quite literally, whatever is written down still holds a lot more power than something that is spoken and so on.
And so I think the relationship that I see between colonialism and these mental models of international development is, I guess has a couple of elements to it. One is economic growth, trying to get the best economic gain out of a situation. I would argue it's really profoundly part of colonial thinking. I would also argue that the idea that you can put people's experiences into certain boxes of administrative units is also part of a colonial... Colonial administration, that's how they administered people, by segmenting them by populations, segmenting them, even within one person there would be segmentation of what this one person was about. So it wasn't a very holistic view of humans, not a very holistic view of human experience. And I think in so many ways, development replicates that.
So you have that replicated through the various sectors. It's very hard for me to really understand how you can separate the health sector from education or how can you separate health and water and sanitation. These two are very intertwined, yet they're completely different sectors in international development. The second way I think, in which or third way maybe in which this is replicated, is in this really, really difficult subject of targeting. Of how NGOs, non-governmental organizations actually deliver their programs to people.
They always do this by identifying categories of people that are most, in their view, most eligible or most needy, most in need of what they want to implement. Which sounds like exactly the right way of doing it, because it kind of seems very commonsensical. You identify who's in need and then you deliver your program. But in this categorization, actually a lot of thought patterns I think continue that take people out of the entirety of the holisticness of their being, their nuances into a very, very narrow identities that aren't necessarily reflective of how people feel.
And the work I used there is from a colleague who worked in Uganda a lot, and he gave us an example that in Uganda, a lot of programs would target female headed households. So women who were the head of the family for whatever reason, and they were often targeted with a very particular set of programs, non-food items, so wash basins and soap, and sometimes also food items and so on. But his argument was that a lot of them were actually embroiled in land conflicts, and they were trying to battle the right for their land, which they had lost. And really what they needed was legal advice, legal support. And so while they took the non-food items, it didn't really gel with how they themselves experienced themselves.
And so this fragmentation of identities into these very operationally, easily implementable categories, I think also is very much part of this relationship between international development and colonialism. Because that was an element of control during colonial times was to say, "Let's segment people. Let's put them into categories." I mean, categorization along administrative lines was a pretty popular tool in colonial administration. So that I think indeed would be one of those mental models that categorization is a necessity to implement anything. That is quite a challenging one.
Umama Zillur:
Thank you. That's a really helpful way to look at that link, I think. And do you think that that link is now a prominent part of the discourse when it comes to international development?
Mareike Schomerus:
I think it depends. It can be and then it also isn't. So it can be, let's start with a more constructive one. I think it can be because, well, weirdly, I think, sorry, let me rethink how I start this because this is complicated stuff. So it can be when people make it visible that some of these thought patterns still continue. That is definitely, I think, very helpful. I think it's very helpful that there's definitely an awareness now that the model of implementing programs that are designed in New York or Washington, Brussels or London or Oslo or wherever, and then they've flown into any other part of the world and implemented in similar ways. I think that is very much established now that that's really not the way to do it.
It gets more complicated in many other ways. The first way in which it gets more complicated is that of course a lot of the debate continues to be held along the lines of categories. So weirdly, and this is what's so fascinating and so frustrating and also necessary to have about this identity debate. I would say that the debate that says, we need to really make sure that the discourse on international development isn't held by western people, but weirdly that still works with categories. Really, that is still quite an unnuanced and quite clunky way of actually thinking about what does collaboration between people need to look like. Collaboration, that from where I stand, has to rest in the realization that some countries are where they are right now because they took from other countries. So I think that's, for me, that's a very, very good platform for which to have that debate.
The then very categorical debate is trickier, because on the one hand I understand it, I can even support it. On the other hand, I find that it does replicate some of these patterns that aren't particularly helpful. But that's a difficult debate to have. I think we need to engage on the substance of this, and we need to try and figure out ways in which some of these power relationships become very visible. How identity-based directions are guided in certain ways in certain traditions that replicate power patterns. All of that is hugely important. But I don't know whether we get that far if we are simply doing this based on identities. Because the dirty history doesn't get changed by that, but the future truly has to be collaborative. There's just no other way on this planet, that's the only way that we can work together. So I'm very torn about how to have this in the best possible way.
And then of course, I'm also very aware that based on my own identity, it's tricky for me to be the one to say how this debate should be held. So this is the cycle in which I then get caught up. And then at the same time, I also think it's too important for people not to show up for it. So that then also includes me. So this is really very nuanced and contradictory. But I want to say that also one of the things that I feel is a mental model that's not helpful is to try and get rid of contradiction, which a lot of international development tries to do. It tries to find the one way in which it seems seemingly this is the right way, and that is very problematic. It will always be contradictory. It'll often always be ambivalent, ambiguous. It will feel uncertain and it will be uncomfortable. So in my own learning with this debate, I also try to then remind myself that I truly believe that it needs to be uncomfortable and contradictory. And it often is.
Umama Zillur:
I think it makes sense to be torn about something like this, because it is tricky and it is difficult. I know you touched a little bit about this, but at the core of the two books and just your life's work is that we need to handle the experiences and perspectives of the people living in context of violence and conflict with care. Can you walk us through your vision for how to transform development in the wake of conflict? And what does responsible engagement in these spaces look like for you? What are some of the ways you hold yourself accountable when existing in this space?
Mareike Schomerus:
Yeah, I mean always in incomplete ways, that is I think also true. So what does transformation really look like? Again, I can only, truly I can only speak from my perspective and I can only say that I think it requires an acute awareness of these mental models. It requires an acute almost check-in mechanisms with oneself. And this is where it gets, again, very tricky because sometimes when I talk about this, you can feel a palpable sense in the room where people go, "Oh my God, she wants to sit around the campfire and sing songs." I'm like, "No, this is not a touchy-feely thing. It's really a necessity to understand why you are seeing certain things in the world in the way that you do." To really recognize that that is also shaped very much by, not just by personality, but by background and culture and education and all these kinds of things.
And then take that as a real invitation for self-awareness and say, "But where's my role in this? Why am I pushing for something like this? Is it because my mental model that I fall back on? Is it because it's my sense of this is my seat at the table, so let me take that seat at the table?" So these processes are really important. They have nothing to do with me going and hugging a tree, because they're actually very, very incomplete in a lot of these processes. So that is where I would argue that's where their transformation really needs to start.
And then bringing the perspectives in of the people, again, is one of those seemingly really obvious things to say. And then once you put it into practice, it gets very tricky. So a lot of the times people say, "Well, that requires spending more time with people where you're doing research so that you do better research." That is true, but that doesn't then give me the license to claim that I've now adopted the perspective of someone. It's also true that simply by virtue of someone being from the same country then doing research in the same country, that person isn't necessarily closer to the people with whom they're doing research. Because stratification doesn't just happen along national borders.
So this idea that prospective representation is a straightforward thing by allowing others to speak through you is a little bit simplistic, because the whole point of research is the research creates the knowledge, they become the interpreter. And it's tricky when they start speaking for the people with whom they conducted research, because there is always a translation process. So I would embrace the imperfection there and do by all means everything that is possible. And obviously our research methods are a lot more aware of this now, we have much more participatory methods and so on. But I think it also remains the case that the process of research of someone else coming in and working with people to ultimately extract information about their lives from them, there is always a certain power of relationship in this. And then being the one person who is then able to write that down in a linear story that then somewhere else can read.
So this is I think another moment of embracing contradiction and trying to do the best that you can. And the best that you can, the accountability that you were asking about I think just comes from continuing to check, continuing to reflect on why I have certain perspectives. I grappled with that a lot and really also stopping myself often and taking a step back. And I had a jargon dictionary while I was writing this, and I wrote the first draft and also realized that there were many things that I couldn't explain without the typical international development jargon. So I kept a note and then at the end when it was almost finished, I did a word search of the whole document to try and get rid of the jargon that I really find awful, like beneficiary and all these kinds of things.
But actually, I also realized that very often once I got rid of the jargon, I mean I didn't have the vocabulary anymore. So even being aware of this, that sometimes I use language that I dislike because it's the only way that I can speak about this, because I'm so embedded in this system as well. Is a contradiction that is one to then make visible, but not necessarily one that I can get rid of. So that to me is very important that it will always be imperfect. And I fall on the side of saying, "It's still worth trying with the imperfection." Others fall on the side of saying, "It's not, you shouldn't try that. But that's a good debate to have, I think.
Umama Zillur:
Yeah, I think the love hate relationship with academia is something a lot of people can relate to.
Julia Higgins:
I think this whole conversation really illustrates how insidious colonial legacies are in development work and how complex engaging with these ideas can be. To shift gears a little bit now, I think a theme that really shines through in your writing is the fact that relationships are really crucial to state building and institutional capacity development. Can you walk us through exactly how relationships function as currency in post-conflict settings? And if I recall correctly in the book, you focused on a couple of really interesting case studies in the DRC and Afghanistan.
Mareike Schomerus:
So there's many elements to this. So the engineering mindset of state building is very much based on this idea that you build an institution, and an institution in that image is almost imagined as being quite literally the building. And fill it with administrative processes, which is where this notion of capacity building comes in very strongly. So building a capacity for a country means to train civil servants to do the very technical aspects of their job. I mean, a lot of capacity building is done on spreadsheet training and things like that. Very technical stuff.
And it really overlooks that, of course, institutions always are hardware and the software and that what the building projects very often is very different from what happens inside. And that's true for anywhere in the world. There's the hardware and the software version of the institution. And the common capacity and state building approaches have overlooked that a little bit. And they've overlooked it, because I think as a little sideline, because I think they took Max Weber's ideas about the state a little bit too seriously and a little bit seriously too long over a century, saying, "This is the only way that a state should look." I think that's a tricky one.
But also because the idea of the state in that particular imagery is one of a leveler and a neutralizer. And it really is the idea that the institution should try and counter the social relationships that might've existed in situations where there isn't a democratically elected government, but that's not the format of governance. So this idea of the neutralizer and leveler still underpins this and often is projected as so often these things are in international development into an infinite future. At some point in the infinite future, this institution will function so that it pays equal attention to all citizenry in the country. But when exactly that future will happen, we don't really know.
And yet what we see, of course, that in a lot of situations of violent conflict, the very same structures and dynamics that created the conflict in the first place, and often conflicts are very long-running. They will of course continue once there is a state building effort and humans are very clever. So they will usurp the state institutions to make sure that they function in the interest of the people who held the power before a conflict officially ended. They will make very sure that that continues to be the case.
And so what that also means is that despite institutions being built, there will be continued relationships, and this relationship, state run on relationship is very important. And the example that you're alluding to in the DRC was done by two scholars who did this very interesting work where they unpacked the relationships that provincial governors had with the capital in Kinshasa. And then tested this relationship often based on length of knowing the president and so on against how efficient their provinces were run, their districts were run. And efficiency being measured in the ability to pass legislation and budgetary resources and so on. And that it turns out that the stronger your relationship is, the more efficient you can become.
So relationships are a real capacity builder, of course, in the kind of state building mindset that's the worst version. Because the way I described it, is one way to describe it, the other way to describe it is patronage. And that's the one thing that the idea of the state as a neutralizer and balancer wants to avoid. But it actually is the more efficient way to govern, if you are allowing the inside that relationships are capacity, that they aren't just something that needs to be neutralized and controlled away, but that they can be a real engine.
And that's very tricky because of course these relationships are often held amongst elites. And the international state building effort wants to make sure that the elites don't run the country to their own interests only. But that's again, one of those contradictions that requires a little bit of unpacking in each needs context. Now, is it ultimately maybe better for the populations that are removed from the elites, if the elites feel secure in the resources they have access to, and actually it is better for ordinary citizens? Or is it ultimately better for ordinary citizens if the state building efforts continue to try and break the grip of elites on the state resources, possibly then continuing battle for authority and resources and ultimately continuing conflictual dynamics?
Julia Higgins:
Yeah, absolutely. I think it's really interesting to think about relationships as a tool to pull us out of this infinite future that you've referenced and into more of a concrete present. Very interesting.
So again, to pivot to a little bit of a different topic here, in your previous work you've engaged pretty extensively with the violent conflict in Northern Uganda, between the government and the Lord's Resistance Army. And in the context of that work, you and your research team applied the concept of a mental landscape, which I think is pretty closely intertwined with the mental model framework that you were describing previously as well. But essentially how I understood it was that it is how people perceive, interpret, and experience their circumstances today and how that can be shaped by legacies of war or violence in their particular setting. So I'm wondering, can you speak a bit how you utilized these mental landscapes to contextualize your work in Uganda specifically, and also how you apply that framework to other conflict settings?
Mareike Schomerus:
Yeah, so the mental landscape conflict as a concept is a concept redeveloped through this work. And it really came out of this realization that was quite confusing, that some of our survey work showed that even in situations where the hard indicators had measurably improved for people. So it was measurably more secure, there weren't any more attacks. People were walking at night on the street, there were streets where there hadn't been streets before. People were growing crops that needed longer to mature, all the kind of indicators that you would look at to see whether a security situation is improving. And so even in situations where we saw that, when you ask people whether their lives were improving, they were saying, "Well, no, they're not."And this was actually one of the moments where I thought, this is where we need to bring in behavioral science into this conflict study, because we don't get far enough by asking people because it's confusing. The answer is confusing, contradictory yet again.
And so we basically went in with this question to say, is there something specific about people who have been through a very multi-layered experience of conflictual dynamics, of vulnerability, of uncertainty that makes it harder for them to experience their own recovery? If that's how you want to call it. Because arguably, if you can't experience your life getting better, then it's not getting better. It doesn't matter whether I tell you 10 times that "No, your situation has improved." And so that's when we used people's own stories of...
We didn't even use their own stories of conflict. We asked a group of people whether they could tell us something that was important to them or that happened that was important to them during the time of the conflict. And then we asked another group of people whether they could tell something that was important to them two weeks ago, very, very recently. Because you have to think very, very carefully of how you talk about these things in an ethical way. And then we asked people to make decisions through some very established behavioral games on altruism and their risk preferences and so on. And we saw that even on this tiny little difference of asking people to situate a particular memory, and not everything that people talked about who talked about the time of the conflict was specifically about the conflict. That there was a noticeable difference in how they made decisions.
And so that's where the concept of the mental landscape was born, because we then did a lot of qualitative interviews as well. And it's very clear how people carry many, many layers of memories and sense-making with them at all times. And some of them are contradictory again. And we know, I mean, there's a lot of very quantitative research done on the question of whether the experience of violence changes your behavior and your preferences. But to me, that question is almost too narrow. So I wanted it to be a little bit wider, and I thought, but it's more than the experience of a particular violent act. It is your individual memories, your communal memories. It is your own experience of being able to access a particular resource or not.
So a continued experience of marginalization, which you then might explain through one of your individual memories, so it becomes reinforcing. So it's really complicated. And it also changes, because if somebody, for example, has a religious faith, they then interlace their own sense-making a lot with their religious faith. So it's very complex, changeable, movable landscape that really has seasonality. Like every landscape has, where sometimes the mountain looks very gray on a day, and then the next day it looks very green.
And I find this a very helpful way of thinking about this, that moves us away from the much more bare bones perception survey. Which basically asks people, how do you perceive your situation to be and demands of them to give you a snapshot of what it is in that particular moment. And this mental landscape where you also then say, "But what are some of your communal memories? Why do you think this is the way things are for your community? Why do you think this is the way things are for you? What kind of also disappointments have you had, for example, with generations of international development programs?" Who very often come in and offer a lot of hope and a lot of promise of a better, again, future somewhere in the far, far future. Which then cannot deliver this?
So you have an added layer of people being permanently disappointed and needing to preserve for themselves their sense of hope. So they become very reluctant often to engage in the next round of program. And because hope is a precious currency, you can't spend it freely because you need it to keep going. That things will ultimately be okay, is really an important thing to carry with you. So the mental landscape one is trying to nuance a lot more what prior was only ever captured in really quite dry perception surveys. And tries to very explicitly what I've mentioned earlier, bring the many, many elements of humans back together in a way that is still graspable.
This is also my problem with, even though I kind of came up with this concept as a mental landscape, and I need to work on it and nuance it much more. I also find it really difficult, because of course, at the same time, it still tries to capture, give a catchy term to something that is very, very nuanced and multilayered and complex and changeable. So while I'm trying to say, "No, there's a lot of fluidity and it's nuanced," I'm also saying, "And here's the label, the one label that makes it really comfortable to talk about it." So again, it's tricky, but if it helps towards an understanding, even in this one element of communal versus individual memories, then I think that's already much, much more than we have right now.
Julia Higgins:
Yeah, much more comprehensive.
Umama Zillur:
In 'Lives Amid Violence', in one section you describe the success of peace building as being presented as an Excel table that shows the number of attendance at a meeting. I think that this really captures how much of the current practices surrounding evaluation of development projects really miss the mark. Because we want to quantify impact and change, we only look for things that are quantifiable and in the process, what ends up happening is we're missing rich insight into actual impact. Whether that's positive or negative. So I want to ask, how can those working at the intersection of evaluating peace building efforts strike a balance between measuring progress with precision and avoiding the flattening of personal stories and structural narratives? And that's already a long question, but I want to add onto that. Do you think the broader friction between qualitative and quantitative research feeds into this reality?
Mareike Schomerus:
So I want to preface what I say by saying on any of the points that I make, there are always good examples. And I say that because I know that a lot of organizations also do fantastic work. And wouldn't measure their peace building efforts in attendance at meetings, but many also do. And a few good stories don't make an approach a successful thing. So this is very, very important. And often obviously people come back to me and say, "But this particular program, it did great work." I'm like, "Yes, I don't dismiss that at all. But there are still underpinning mental models that primarily then make many more programs look in this other way."
So how can organizations counter this? I don't know whether the burden is necessarily just on the organizations, because this is another thing that I write about, and this is a very established area of discourse in international development. Is the cognitive dissonance with which many international development professionals operate, where they implement things, do things, count attendance at meetings so that they can put it on the M&E spreadsheet, while knowing that that's ultimately meaningless.
It's really, I think, not to be underestimated how many people work with that permanent cognitive dissonance, because they also believe that the small parts of some of the efforts ultimately are a good thing to do. Or a lot of people also buy themselves some freedom by delivering the spreadsheet based M&E and say, "Well, once that's okay, nobody will look too closely in what I'm doing, so here's what I'm actually doing." And that I think is quite constructive. So that cognitive dissonance is not to be underestimated.
But I also think that the main responsibility on changing this isn't really necessarily just with the implementing organizations, because all implementing organizations look to their funders. And the funders will often request these things, will often want reassurance. And there it is again, the mental model of certainty and reassurance, and also of that tricky bit of trust. How much do they trust the implementing organizations to really do something constructive? They get a bit of reassurance from seeing the spreadsheet in which the attendance was marked. And that's complicated to change, because the funders then sit in the treasury of donor countries and ultimately at some point in time get called in front of parliament and say, "This is why we're spending money on this."
And there's work on this political narrative that needs to really change in this, which is that the idea of the money that is built as foreign aid isn't money that is so directly improving people's lives. But it's really a political tool of the donor countries as well. And once that narrative would be shifted towards that, then it would be much easier to account for it in parliament, and a lot of these slightly performative practices might change. So a lot of this I think needs to change also in the donor implementing relationship.
And then I forgot now the second part of your already very long first question, but just remind me.
Umama Zillur:
How does the broader friction between qualitative-
Mareike Schomerus:
How I forget? How could I forget that question? So the interesting thing is, the friction for me is not as frictious as it might sound to you. Because for me, no method is perfect and they all need to speak to each other. And despite the fact that I'm a qualitative researcher, I'm really no purist on this. And I really think of the way I teach qualitative research is to say there are certain questions and certain types of answers that you can only elicit through certain kinds of methods. And some of them are very suitable for just quantitative approaches, and it's very helpful to have a quantitative answer to establish obviously the scale of a phenomenon and things like that. But that's not particularly valuable if you don't then also pay attention to saying, "Well, why do these things happen?" And even in the quantitative work continue to highlight that this doesn't yet help us with understanding the nuance.
So the two methods really speak to each other. And so for me, that divide actually, despite the fact that I am quite at home in the qualitative methods, that's actually quite a helpful contradiction rather than a friction. Because it also allows these broader questions that need to be asked about, when is knowing the scale actually important? Is knowing the scale part of a political theater that allows for the very quick soundbitey, election driven arguments and policies? If that's the answer to this, then that's a very, very useful insight to have and say, "But then we need to change that that's what people want to hear." And at the same time, we can say, "But when is something that we know for a fact is only been experienced in a particular way by one person," because we only ask this one person. When is something like that so powerful and resonant that it can actually change people's minds more broadly, and it's completely irrelevant whether this is a phenomenon experience by one person or by 2 million people? That to me then recreates exactly the humanity that we talked about.
But the two need to speak to each other, need to work in tandem with each other. And they also, as philosophical approaches really benefit from having a conversation with each other. We wouldn't have had the kind of insights that we had without both a quantitative survey and then a lot of qualitative and ultimately also some experimental work, and without a lot of conversations between people. This is the other thing that's always underestimated. Research is not a lonely undertaking. It becomes a lot better if you speak to each other.
Reema Saleh:
So what are the biggest takeaways that you think policymakers should take away from this book? And what should we have asked you in our hour together?
Mareike Schomerus:
What are the biggest takeaways? So I would say this idea of a takeaway is a very, very unhelpful mental model, because it always... No but it's, I know everyone's laughing and I'm laughing at myself, but it's true. Because ultimately it again tries to head us towards some sort of certainty, some sort of nugget of insights, some sort of solid ground on which to work. I had a one-hour conversation and I walk out with five takeaways, which is exactly the kind of thing that is really unhelpful because you can't condense this complexity endlessly. You can't endlessly synthesize.
So actually, I would say that a good takeaway is one where everything feels a bit unsettled. So not one in the lines of recommendation and, "The government should do this, and the implementers should do this." But in the line of, "Wait a second, what am I listening to? Why am I doing the work that I'm doing? What can I contribute? What can I not contribute? What fulfills me in this that then might become helpful to others? What fulfills me and might not be helpful to others?" I think are really useful questions to ask. And continuing to ask oneself, "Why do I believe that things work in the way they do? Why do I fall back on certain explanatory patterns? Why are they so ingrained in me?"
So the main takeaway is uncertainty and contradiction, but that's a really, really tricky thing to get your head around. And it feels weirdly unsatisfying when people walk out of an event and go, "Well, that was a bit fluffy. Well, she didn't really tell us what to do." People very often ask me, "So what's the solution?" I'm like, "Yeah, that's the mental model, the solution." How could there be one solution? These are complex, long, deeply rooted thing. There isn't one solution beyond continued engagement and learning and discussion and realization and so on.
Reema Saleh:
I feel like it almost reminds me of, there's a Susan Sontag quote that often comes back. "The only good answers are the ones that destroy the questions," it kind of reminded me of that. But I don't know, it's a scary thing. How do you even know what is underpinning your own mental model? How do you go beyond just rethinking it?
Mareike Schomerus:
It's very scary. It's very scary to me, and it was very, very hard for me to write this and to also say, "No, this is really what I think. This is actually how I think about these things." Because it's very clear to me that some people will really like it and others will think this is really naive. I had a comment from someone who said, "But your whole idea that this is not about economic growth unless redistributed properly, otherwise nobody can benefit. But don't you understand that that means some people will have less?" I'm like, "No, I do understand. That's the whole point of redistribution." So it's not as if I make some naive suggestions here, but I do understand completely that for some people, this idea that deeply the mental model isn't always applicable to every concept, it's very, very challenging.
And I catch myself out all the time. I almost would've given you five takeaways here because I'm so conditioned for this as well. And obviously my own mental models can be ripped apart by someone else on a daily basis. So it does feel very scary, and it feels also, I don't know, the way I then always think about this is to say, some people listen to me and go, "Oh, that's a bit naive and cute." And I'm like, "Yeah, but people still talk about trickle-down economics as workable." That's pretty naive and cute. But nobody talks about it in this way. For some reason that's an accepted way of thinking about this. So I'm trying very hard, and I don't mean to suggest that I succeed all the time, but I'm trying very hard to embrace that, that it feels scary and uncertain and that I can be attacked and that I represent contradiction in this. And that that has to be part of this as well.
Reema Saleh:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Mareike Schomerus. This episode was produced and edited by Rima Sala and Nishita Karun. Thank you to our interviewers, Julia Higgins, Rima Sala, Umama Zillur. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
08.01.23
Sudan’s Political Transition | Ibrahim Elbadawi
Hannah:
Hello, this is Hannah and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You are listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed in the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
What does an interrupted democratic transition look like? In this episode, we speak to Dr. Abraham Elbadawi, Managing Director of the Economic Research Forum, and former Minister of Finance and Economic Planning in the Republic of Sudan. In May, Dr. Elbadawi joined us in Chicago at the 6th Annual Reverend Doctor Richard L. Pearson Lecture to discuss Sudan's political transition and economic policymaking. The lecture took place just weeks after violent conflict erupted in Sudan. Fighting between two military factions has forced millions of Sudanese to flee the violence and cast a shadow of uncertainty over Sudan's ambitions to transition to a civilian-led democracy.
Hisham Yousif:
My name is Hisham Yousif. I'm a second year MPP here at Harris. I'm also a Pearson fellow.
Kirgit Amlai:
I'm Kirgit Amlai. I'm a first year MPP and also a Pearson fellow.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
My name is Ibrahim Elbadawi. I am currently the Managing Director of the Economic Research Forum for the Middle East and North Africa. I joined this forum back in 2017. It's a forum of distinguished economists from the region and outside the region. It's really a very interesting forum that produces research and reports on the development and public policy issues. Before that, I was Director of Research at the Dubai Economic Council in Dubai, which is a semi-government institution on policy-oriented economic research. However,
the majority of my professional experience was developed while at the World Bank Development Economic Research Group, which I joined in '89 and then I resigned in 2009 and came back to the region.
I was a graduate of the University of Khartoum and then I had a PhD from Northwestern University and North Carolina State University. So we lived in Evanston for two years and my wife and I and our elder daughter who is with us here, Dr. Lina Elbadawi, she's a medical doctor, was born in Evanston. So it's really a great pleasure to be back here in Chicago. When I was a graduate student, we used to come to the Department of Economics of University of Chicago to attend some seminars and so on. So I've always been impressed by University of Chicago.
Hisham Yousif:
All right, so before we start with the questions, just kind of a framing, we have as our kind of working title, a retrospective on democratic transition interrupted. Many people studying conflict and folks that listen to this podcast, the civilian transition after the toppling of a dictator obviously is the most sensitive and fragile part of the transition. That process of democracy, you got headwinds of entrenched former regime elements, you got the army, you have various civil interests, you have protestors out in the street. So ultimately, we'd like to hear what it was like to be in Khartoum during that transition in a place of sensitive posts during that period, and how we got to where we are today. Obviously, you can't flip on the news without hearing what's going on in Sudan.
But before we get to that, tell us about your upbringing. Where are you from in Sudan and how was it like growing up in good old Sudan?
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
Despite the political instability and what we come to know in our kind of political culture as the Sudanese political syndrome, which are all of these coups and uprising and the alternation between short-lived democracies and long-reigning dysfunctional authoritarian military regimes.
Nonetheless, for my generation, we lived in a country that enjoyed a legacy of strong institutions, educational system, efficient bureaucracy, and to a large extent, a judiciary system and services. I enjoy it actually as the rest of my generation the benefits of meritocracy and being able to study at the University of Khartoum.
Of course, before that I was raised in a medium-sized city in central part of Sudan, in the region of Kordofan, which is a region that reflect the mixture of various cultures at the crossroads of various tribes and communities. And so, I studied my pre-university in my city, in my home city, and then I moved to the capital to study at the University of Khartoum, which was then in the late-70s or mid-70s was considered one of the best learning higher learning institutions in Africa and the Middle East.
For example, one of my professors, he was a physicist who actually became so renowned in his research on astrophysics so much so that he was contributing research to NASA at that time. I remember in the early 70s when I was a student majoring in mathematics at the university, he gave a talk about general relativity. And of course, we didn't understand much, but it tells you about the standard. We have an Arab linguist who was considered one of the major contributor to the history of the Arabic literature and so on and forth. And as well, as of course, economists, because I transferred to economics after my first year in mathematics. So what I was saying is that actually it was really great growing at that time, despite the fact that they were coups and militaries and so on.
The major setback to the Sudanese society and politics as a nation was the coup of 1989. That coup actually reflected or came as a result of a movement that we call in Sudan now an Islamawest. Not an Islamic because actually that movement effectively used the great religion which constitute the face of the majority of the population in order to advance very narrow-minded sectarian kleptocratic gains or agenda. Since then, actually Sudan was never before.
I personally was fortunate because in '89, I got an offer from the World Bank to join the Research Department of the World Bank. So six days after the coup in June 30th, 1989, I left the country. But my colleagues who were there, they really suffered. Because I used to teach at the University of Gezira, which is the second largest university in Sudan. They actually basically mismanaged everything. For example, they thought that they will feed themselves so the country will feed itself, so they destroyed the cotton industry and tried to grow wheat in a climate that's not conducive to high-productivity wheat. That's just one example. This is in one of the major agricultural projects in the country, the so-called Gezira scheme. Two million acres of irrigated agriculture, which was a backbone, so they destroyed that. That's just one example.
The Sudan Shipping Corporation that used to have a thriving maritime transport capacity, they basically sold that. Privatized and sold at fair sale prices to their membership. They did the sort of privatization that very much akin to what happened in the former Soviet Union when the former Soviet Union collapsed and chronic capitalism emerged. They disseminated the army and the civil service so much so that during the waning days of the regime, many of the leaders of that movement, they regretted what they have done. So it was a situation where you have kleptocratic ideologues taking over a country and destroying the elements of vitality in that country and that society.
That is why when the youth who were basically raised under the reign of that regime, 30 years and below, because that regime survived for some 30 years between early 90s up to 2018 when the revolution started in December, 2018. So these very youth who were raised under that regime, they actually they were the one who rebelled against the regime. The stories abound about their bravery and patriotism and their lyrics and literature and all of the wonderful things that the social media have reflected.
So myself, and my generations, who felt really challenged by what this new generation have done and that we failed to do, we've looked to serve in all capacities, including in myself. In my case, I resigned from my, I would say, comfortable position as Managing Director of a major research center based in Cairo to join the transitional government.
Hisham Yousif:
So before we get to that point, it was good timing on the World Bank that you were able to leave right as that regime took hold. A family member has described that period of time of they had an energy, but it was all directed in the wrong place. The privatization or the intensification of the war in the South or like you said, the destruction of the military and then having these parallel militia groups essentially where a lot of young people were conscripted. The 90s was a rough time for the Sudanese population. During that time, where were you headquartered? With the World Bank? Were you in ... ?
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
Headquartered at the World Bank. But like all Sudanese in the diaspora, we were not oblivious about what was happening, the atrocities in Darfur, the religious war in the south and the persecution and brutalization of the political movements and so on. So what we did was, or in fact personally I did, was to join the opposition in my own teams. Obviously as an academic and a researcher writing papers and participating in discussions about how to develop, for example, an alternative economic agenda, national agenda.
Then in 2005, an opportunity came for me to be directly involved from my perspective of the World Bank, which was the peace agreement between the Sudanese People Liberation Movement of the late Dr. John
Garang. With the support of the international community and the US and other members of the UN Security Council, a peace agreement was arranged between the then government of General Omar Bashir and the Sudanese People Liberation Movement. I was invited and asked to actually join the international group to support this process.
So I used to travel to Nairobi where we met with the two delegations, the government and the rebel SPLA movement, and we discussed issues about the future in terms of economic agenda, and the needs and the support that the World Bank and the UN system could provide in terms of technical support, in terms of training officials from both institutions, from the government institutions and their counterpart in the South. And so, that was a great opportunity for me to be involved and the first time actually in my lifetime to visit South Sudan. Because Sudan is a huge country, so I never had a chance to go to the south. The amazing thing is that we were staying for two weeks at the headquarters of Dr. John Garang, SPLM, the Sudanese People Liberation Movement, and then they were cattle rusting in the neighborhood. So we came with a plane from Kenya, but the weather actually, there was a storm, and so the plane could not come back. By the way, this is the same area where Dr. John Garang actually died as a result of an airplane crash.
Hisham Yousif:
That's right.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
It's called New Site. So we spent two weeks providing training and discussions with the technocratic leadership of the Sudanese People Liberation Movement. And so on the way back, the commander of that camp or the base decided to actually escort us with the Sudanese People Liberation Army.
Hisham Yousif:
Oh wow.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
And so, when I went back to Kenya in a town near by the border Sudanese/Kenyan border, that was a kind of an interesting point of discussion with my friends about that it was the first time for somebody like me to be escorted by the Sudanese People Liberation Army, which in the north, or at least the discussion was that this is an army of the rebels and what have you.
Hisham Yousif:
The enemy for a long period of time.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
But it's amazing that it's so unfortunate that the SAOs has to succeed as a result of the policies of the former regime. Because the young man that I was actually sitting by him and he was driving the car was playing Sudanese music, a famous singer, the late Mohammed Wardi, who was very popular in Sudan.
Hisham Yousif:
Oh, wow.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
This is supposed to be the rebel movement that was supposed to articulate grievance and a different culture and so on. So there were so much in common. If, for example, the thinking was right about their Sudan is ultimately a multicultural, multi-ethnic society, and we need this political system that actually accommodate all of these diversity.
Hisham Yousif:
It truly was a lost opportunity, unfortunately. The fact that as Bashir came to power, you were able to jump to the World Bank. That in retrospect is actually a positive thing in the sense that you were able to escape the closed environment that gets created in a dictatorship like that. So when an opportunity presents itself for services to the country, after the regime gets toppled, you were able to create these alternative ways of looking at the economy or rendering services, a thought process that happens outside of the country. And so, you have a very interesting journey here. So describe to us how you came to be in a position to be in the Finance Ministry, the Finance Minister, during such a pivotal moment playing such an important part after Bashir was gone.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
I think obviously part of it is that, as I said, like many Sudanese professionals in the diaspora, I was quite concerned Sudanese first and foremost, but also a quite concerned professional economists who would like to help. Therefore, I was involved in a variety of activities during the 30 years, attending opposition events and presenting papers. And so, there was almost like a consensus about that I was a person that might actually be a good choice to lead the economic agenda, especially since the regime actually destroyed the economy, and it was by its own politics because of the sanctions and the listing of Sudan in the state-sponsored terrorist list. But also because of the mismanagement of the economy and especially the fact that they were unprepared for what we call in Sudan ... sorry, in economics, the sudden stop. The sudden stop is that when you have an economy that depended on a resource, whether capital flows by investors or an actual resource, and suddenly that stream of income stopped.
So what happened was that actually most of the oil more than 70%, or in fact 75% of the oil proceeds come from oil wells produced in the South. So when the South succeeded, they thought the ideologues of the so-called Islamic front who controls the government then, they saw that this is a time for them to exercise full control on Northern Sudan as an Arab Muslim country. But then they didn't really, their economic calculus did not really take into account the huge implications that an economy will suddenly lose this significant resource. That is why that the beginning of the end for them economically. Obviously the revolution was a revolution for dignity and freedom and so on, but it was aided by economics, economic crisis.
And so, when the transitional government or when the agreement, when the revolution succeeded, and the coalition that came out to be known the FFC, the Forces of Freedom and Change, which is a large coalition of freedom forces and political parties and civil society and so on, they decided to form a government for two years in order to prepare the country for elections and democratic transition, but then also in the interim, to manage an economy and to prepare the legal infrastructure for election, for the systems of government and what have you. I was one of those who were considered most qualified to lead that agenda. I'm quite grateful for the opportunity given to me.
I think despite the political instability and the setbacks and so on, the economic agenda that actually I was responsible for as the Senior Minister in charge of the economic sector remains the best hope for Sudan to chart a path of renewal and nation building.
Hisham Yousif:
Sure.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
Right now, I think there is a general consensus that hopefully when we return back to the constitutional process, we will go back to the same agenda, the unfinished agenda.
Hisham Yousif:
So before we actually get to that agenda and that period of time, which is pretty interesting, you also had the military kind of in the background. So one of the interesting things that I think people want to know is how much freedom was there to be able to implement such an agenda during the transition? But how did you come to the attention of the Forces of Freedom and Change, the FFC? How did that transition come about? How were you able to join the government in that direction?
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
Because of my activism during the period, the 30 years period. For example, as early as 1994, I presented a paper about the alternative economic agenda at the Sudanese Democratic Forum then in the 90s. Then in 2011, in Sudan, after the peace agreement and some opening up of the political system, I went to Sudan and there was a major, major conference or workshop organized by the Umma Party, which is one of the largest party in the country. Even though I'm not really an explicit political activist, but I am associated with the Umma Party.
Hisham Yousif:
I see.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
And so, I presented the alternative economic agenda in 2011, which basically constituted the basis for the program that I tried to implement during my reign as a Minister of Finance.
Kirgit Amlai:
Wow, I mean, that's interesting, with years of experience and all you've been able to contribute. I just wanted to, if you could share more back in 2021, the Juba Power Sharing Peace Agreement, which you talked a little bit about it. We know that it was designed to promote peace and democratic transition in Sudan, and evidence showed that provision of effective inclusion of previously marginalized ethnic groups could increase chances of peace. What went wrong? Any hope for this agreement to move forward?
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
Actually, perhaps maybe the intentions were good. The expressed intentions. But really the Juba Peace Agreement entailed much more than meet the eye. The Juba Peace Agreement, it started when I was a minister. It was basically overtaken by the military partners in the government. And it turns out that actually the reason why they pushed for the Juba Peace Agreement was that they wanted actually to reorder or to move the balance of power towards their hidden agenda, which is basically to disrupt the civilian democratic transition by building alliance with the so-called what we call in Sudan freedom fighters. But they're really leaders of militias who proclaim to represent the aspirations of the marginalized people. Of course, they fought and paid heavy prices, their armies, but at the end of the day, they were also military institutions.
They were not sure about their political power base, civilian power base, even in places like Darfur or the Sudan Blue Nile or the Sudan Kordofan. That actually created a dilemma for the Sudanese political discourse because they basically were quite ready to concoct a deal with the military leadership in Khartoum. Except for one leader, all of them, they actually joined the coup that took place in October, 2021. That was a litmus test as to their commitment to the democratic process and to the true aspirations of the people of the marginal
right regions. Unfortunately though, they remain powers to contend with because they have fighting forces and so on.
But I think the future, thinking ahead, the Juba Peace Agreement has to be integrated into a national peace conference in which all the stakeholders, civilian stakeholders, should have a seat in the table. That is the only way to ensure that peace is a democratic peace. Because actually what was happened in Juba was essentially, as in hindsight now we know, was basically a collusion of military institutions, military forces in Khartoum in terms of the army and the rapid support force, which is of course now they are fighting it out in Sudan and in the capital on one hand, and the rebel movements. And so, that actually kind of repeat the experience of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the Sudanese People Liberation Movement and the regime of Omar Bashir.
Because when you confined, in fact, I wrote a paper and presented it at the Copenhagen Consensus Forum, which is a forum in Copenhagen concerned with peace and development. I criticized the agreement then of the 2005 as an agreement between two military protagonists who eventually will control the process and exclude the civilian stakeholders who have every right and legitimate right to be part of the process. So I think my answer to the question is that while it was a process that at least silenced fighting, but it wasn't enough, and it should have been integrated into a broader context. Unfortunately, part of the hidden objectives was actually to consolidate the militarization of Sudanese politics
Kirgit Amlai:
Considering your experience over the time both in Sudan and outside of Sudan, in every conflict there are always stakeholders be it within and external. If you could just share more, what has been the role of external actors such as neighboring countries, regional organizations, and international communities in responding to the crisis in Sudan and how their actions have influenced the trajectory of the crisis.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
This is a very important question, I think. The external actors have substantially influenced development in Sudan and will continue to do so. I think if I take the African Union, I think in Sudan and in all of Africa, I think the African Union has come a long way. The African Union actually has now matured and emerged as a respectable, genuine regional organization that actually promotes peace and security and development.
Obviously, not all African countries are democratic, but it is very clear that Africans as a collective body of people and political discourse and culture, I think they are much closer to democracy and democratization through the various interventions like for example, not recognizing a government produced by a coup. That has been very helpful for the case of Sudan after the 25th October, 2021 coup that reversed the political process.
I think the UN system obviously is impaired by the lack of consensus in the Security Council and the role that the autocrats in the Security Council play. Because China and Russia, they basically prioritize sovereignty, national sovereignty, and economic agenda over human rights and political rights and so on. But then also, I think probably the West also has own some other interests that may not necessarily align with these ideals. But by and large, I think the European Union and the US have played a very positive role in supporting the democratic process in Sudan, has provided immensely needed resources to support the program that I have
been responsible for, which I understand I can speak about later. So I would say that the external influence, largely positive.
The Arab countries obviously are not as advanced in terms of embracing democracy and democracy ideal as the African part of our belonging as Sudanese. But nonetheless, I think the more recent role of Saudi Arabia is really very commendable and supportive and neutral. Working with the United States now is, I would say, the only hope for the Sudanese people to help stop this violence. Because right now this violence is not like a
standard civil war. It's actually a high intensity military conflict between two branches of the armed forces. And so, this is the sovereign institution fighting it out. So it does require positive neutral external intervention to stop the war first. Then, we're very heartened actually the vibes that come out of the two sponsors, the recent reiteration of commitment by the Secretary of State, that the ultimate goal is not just to stop the fight, but also to ensure that there is a democratic transition. And I think he went further, which is really very encouraging, that actually the security reform should be under the auspices of the civilian administration. That's really very important.
Hisham Yousif:
Looking at the situation now and see that these two branches, as you call it, of the military fighting it out, they've had control of this situation or at least the government for a while. So while the Secretary of State Antony Blinken talks about having security reforms under a civilian transition, we're kind of a long way from that. Before we get to that point, we need to understand that what happened the last time the civilians were in control and how that kind of unraveled.
And so, there's going to be two questions here. One is going to get us to the role of the civilian institutions, whether it be the Sudanese professional association or the forces of freedom of change and how they did not want to support President Hamdok on the second try when he came back after reversing the coup. But before we even get to that, the period of transition where the Hamdok regime was in power, they were met with a lot of resistance, secret resistance from the army. And one major part of that is that the army has a large stake in the economy. Being a Finance Minister responsible for jump starting this economy, you must have had bumped up against that obstacle.
So can you tell us about that transition period? Because it started off very optimistic, there was a lot of energy and President Hamdok was saying all of the right things and the civilians were moving in the right direction. If you can take us from those first optimistic days to right before the eve of that coup in October and how it all unraveled.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
Actually, as you said, the revolution itself, or what we call in Sudan, the Glorious December Revolution itself, injected huge feeling of optimism about the future of the country. I was going to say tomorrow in my speech about the meeting that I had with some group of staffers from the Congress who actually requested a meeting with me when I came in September, 2019 to attend the annual meetings of the IMF and the World Bank. I was really pleasantly surprised about their knowledge about Sudan and also about their admiration of the Sudanese youth and their expression of support. That makes me feel quite confident that actually the US and other countries that really wanted Sudan to move forward as an example of a democratic system. And it did happen obviously in terms of the various programs that they supported. So all that, in addition, in fact first and foremost, the support of the Sudanese youth and commitment and so on, not only actually filled us with optimism, but it was in the first place the reason why we flocked to support the new system.
Unfortunately, I think the impact of isolation has actually created a huge impediment to us in the government. As a Minister of Finance, I had to deal with two major sources of headwinds. The first one obviously and the most challenging one is the military itself, as you said. But we thought that we will be able to overcome that through the agreement with the IMF. The staff-monitored program is a famous agreement that usually the IMF try to arrange with countries coming out of conflicts that are highly indebted countries or countries that are highly indebted in economic crisis and dysfunctional kleptocratic system, like what we experience.
One of the clauses in that agreement, which I think was the genesis or the beginning of the motivation for the coup of 2021, was that in June, 2020, I signed a framework agreement with the IMF in which in addition to
the standard economic reform, there was a clause that stipulates that the HIPC program, the High Indebted Poor Countries program that was going to actually provide unprecedented debt relief for Sudan. Actually the HIPC was going to reduce the debt of Sudan from 64 billion or above 60 billion to less than 15 billion. About 50 billion will be relieved. That would constitute one-third of all the resources is spent in the HIPC program since it was established in 1996. So this is a really, really huge deal. This will open up opportunities in terms of investment, in terms of attracting businesses, in terms of a huge transformation in the very well-endowed Sudanese economy.
I thought as a Minister of Finance that will be enough to convince the military. I tried to actually, because as a Minister of Finance, I was a member at a very important forum, which is called the Security and Defense
Council. I was also a member of the Supreme Peace Council. These are all led or chaired by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan as the Chairman of the Council of Sovereignty. We used that as a way of introducing, of course in addition to our normal business at the Council of Ministers, the Civilian Council of Ministers. I was presenting this program as a program that is going to enhance and enlarge the economy, and therefore the share of resource allocation to all functions of government including the military. I was one of those who thought that this will be enough to convince them that you go for the bigger pie in the future in lieu of a smaller pie that eventually will not be sustainable.
I think that particular clause, if you think about it and how two main actors react to it, I think will give you an idea about the challenge and why eventually things collapse. That the military for some reason, they don't seem to be willing to abdicate their hegemony on the economy and the illicit activities in the gold sector, as well as of course the budget, and so on. That is one major impediment. This is because of kleptocracy. I think the Sudanese situation teaches us that when you have a kleptocratic regime that remains in power for so long, it creates a culture of kleptocracy and of kind of political marketplace in which the actors basically corner the resources and their political calculus that let us stay with the current and the future is uncertain. So, they don't really gamble on a prosperous future. They want to retain what they have in a very kind of myopic scheme of thinking.
The other actually impediment was the isolated political class, especially the left-wing Sudanese political class, especially like the Communist Party and the Arab Ba'ath Party and so on, who were actually very influential in the FFC, in the Forces of Freedom and Change. They didn't see the agreement with the IMF, which came by the way as a result of a national vision that actually we developed very carefully as Sudanese economists and Sudanese thinkers, that actually we need to undertake reforms because actually these reforms were not sustainable. The country was spending deficit financing through deficit financing, one third of the budget on fuel subsidies.
I was very embarrassed really when the visiting Minister of Energy from UAE, from United Arab Emirates, who is a very good engineer and told me about the prices of energy in the world, and that Sudan, Iran, and Venezuela where the three countries that provide the cheapest energy prices, sell energy at the cheapest prices in the world. Iran and Venezuela are major energy producing countries, but Sudan, he just mentioned that to
me. I knew about it but the lessons became very clear. How would you actually expect us to support you if we are actually pricing energy at a more costlier and more realistic price than yourself?
So basically we came up with a communication strategy that I tried to preach very widely in Sudan through the radio and television and so on, was that we are not lifting subsidies. We are actually graduating from supporting commodity subsidies to directly empowering Sudanese people. Our two main instruments for that empowerment was a very comprehensive salary review program that basically addressed the distortions in the
salary structure, and also increasing salary in order to actually meet the high expenses, the living expenses. The share of salaries and benefit in the government in Africa was on average about between 8% to 10%. We inherited a share of about 3% to 5%, which shows the impoverishment of the civil service as well as the military rank and file in Sudan. So, we have to address that.
Then also, the Family Support Program, but which I can speak to, but I think your question is geared to different angles. So I would say that you'll find the military on one hand, and supposedly the supporters of the revolution and the political parties, some of them, very opposed to any kind of reform. But nonetheless, of course, even though I left the government, but the program that I was responsible for was implemented later.
Now when I go back to Sudan, or have been going back to Sudan actually recently, everybody I meet in Sudan as well as outside Sudan in the diaspora, almost everybody, especially the young educated people, they would tell me that that was a learning process. But unfortunately that learning process was slow. But everybody now seems to be in agreement about the agenda that we had to do. But unfortunately, the lack of support by the military as well as by some partners in the civilian camp basically created a situation of apathy and undermined the hopes and aspiration, and I think contributed to the coup.
Hisham Yousif:
By the way, I think that's an element of transitions that are not talked about enough in the sense that there is two parallel from what you just told me. There's a mirror ring that happens. So the army and the kleptocratic regime is afraid of economic reform because they don't want to give up what they have now for positive things later in the future.
But there is a parallel to that in the civilian population as maybe isolated elements, left-wing elements of the civilian coalition, that there is a subsidy dependence. There is no way that they can give up the security in such a precarious economic situation to be able to get economic growth, which they see on charts. They really don't understand what that means. And so, being able to get to that democratic transition is not just ballot boxes or economic opening. It's convincing two different elements, kleptocratic and civilians that are concerned about subsidies being lifted. And that's a really difficult challenge that I don't think many people understand that democratic transitions have to go through, and it opens up a lot of difficult questions and difficult decisions, and how can you implement unpopular policies that are good for the long-term that are not good in the short-term that creates an effect.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
If I may very quickly, I would say that-
Hisham Yousif:
Please.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
... we basically were very aware about this dilemma. That's why we introduced the Family Support Program, which by the way was very successful. The international community provided about 800 billion ... 800 million, sorry, $800 million for this program. $400 from the World Bank and the other $400 from the bilateral donors.
The start of this program was based on creating direct links with the families, and if the time allows, I'll tell you a nice story about that when I presented this program at the Security and Defense Council. One of the top leaders, I won't mention his name, but he's now one of the top leaders who are now involved in this unfortunate conflict, asked me about how much we are going to give to the families. I told him that we will be giving about $5, which then would be about 500 Sudanese pounds.
I went on to explain, a family of six will be receiving about 3,000 Sudanese pounds per month. Imagine a family in isolated village in Darfur, that family, the only thing that they remember or they experience vis-a-vis the central government is conflicts and warfare and atrocities and what have you. That event, the head of the family, the woman, the mother or the father receiving the 3,000 will be the most important event for them. And that will be tantamount of a new social contract. That is how I try to present it. You know what that leader told me? He said, "If you really manage to do that effectively," and that was before the Juba agreement, "those rebel movements will not find fighters to fight for them."
So it was really a big deal. But unfortunately, people who were isolated for a very long time, it's hard for them to appreciate the potential. In fact, I will tell you that I had a discussion with the Director of the World Bank, the Regional Director of the World Bank for Sudan, Ethiopia, and Eritrea, who actually, he's from Senegal, who was actually transferred from Vietnam. He was the Director of the World Bank office in Vietnam. When I actually explained to him that I'm facing some difficulties, and I believe these difficulties is because of the isolation and some of political activists could mostly really appreciate the potential, he said, "How about actually inviting some Vietnamese officials from this Vietnamese Communist Party to come to the Sudan and explain their experience?" And so, you have a very powerful ruling communist party in Vietnam, and of course before that, in China, who really understood because of the elongated experience they went through, that actually they need to reform the economy and they need actually to have an efficient economy in order to finance the social agenda that they care for.
Hisham Yousif:
And so, that requires certain innovations in communication with the population, certain ways to persuade that this is how we're going to deliver. What happened?
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
What happened, of course, I left the government. Before, I had my own differences with the Prime Minister, but because maybe I was hoping actually to move forward as quickly and on the agenda before, and because maybe the divisions within the FFC itself kind of complicated the process. But right now, I think the main point really is that now the real concern is the military. But actually, If you manage to get an agreement whereby the military, and that's a different story, but the military is cleansed from this Islama west group that actually ignited this conflict in the various place. Also, the other branch of the military, the Rapid Support Force to be integrated into a unified professional military. I think the politics now is fully aligned. I think everybody now, almost everybody now understands that the program that I tried to implement is really the way to go. The Sudanese people themselves now I think will be very much from this experience. Perhaps maybe you have to go through this experience to be able to appreciate the end result.
Hisham Yousif:
Especially the kind of a missed opportunity. So the next time it comes around, I think everybody will seize it. So you said you had differences with the Prime Minister and you left the government. I think, what, about three months before the coup? Is that right?
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
No, I left actually in July, 2020.
Hisham Yousif:
Ah, I see.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
So much later. By the way, I will tell you also that actually after the Prime Minister resigned, I was approached by the military leaders to come as a Prime Minister, and of course I declined.
Hisham Yousif:
Fascinating
Kirgit Amlai:
Wow.
Hisham Yousif:
Go ahead.
Kirgit Amlai:
I mean, we've had a lengthy discussion about economy. I know the issue of subsidy in most African oil-producing countries is like a major, major issue, but it's something that I know we're not really going to delve into, but I just want us to just look at other things. Earlier we were having a conversation how Sudan was once the largest country in Africa, which you also kind of give us some details how the separation affected the economy and so on and so forth. But I wanted to ask, Sudan fought one of Africa's longest civil war. The first one was in 1955 to 1972. The second was the largest that lasted 22 years. With all the things that happened, I just wanted to ask just what are the lessons learned? What were the mistakes that led to what is happening now? How can Africa learn to avoid issues like this moving forward? Because it is a global issue now and almost everyone is watching and it's a learning curve for almost every African country. I was just wondering if you could just shed more light on this.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
Thank you. This is a very important issue. I remember in 2000, the World Bank, I was a task manager for a project that produced a widely circulated and discussed report called Can Africa Claim the 21st Century? That was the name, that was the title of the report. One fundamental conclusion or message from this report was that unlike the historical Asian experience where an authoritarian regime, developmental authoritarian regime, could be counted on to actually create huge economic transformation, eventually subsequently leading to democratization, as in for example, Taiwan and Korea, this experience is not transferable to the case of Sudan ... sorry to the case of Africa, as well as the Arab world, by the way, because of Africa is dominated by social diversity and in many countries actually social polarization. And so, even if you have a developmental authoritarian regimes, and there are quite a few of them, take the example of Ethiopia, that regime under Meles Zenawi was able to transform Ethiopia in about 15 years where the economy grew more than four times from 2000 to 2018.
Nonetheless, at the end, because of lack of democracy, a civil war erupted as we know, and Ethiopia had to deal with warfare and conflicts and so on along ethnic lines and so on. So I think what we need in Africa is really is to give much more premium to the importance of democracy. But not democracy as electoral competition. It has to be democracy as an instrument, as a platform for discussing how to develop resources and how to distribute these resources. And so, I think we need an economic legitimacy for democracy.
That has been actually for the cause of Sudan one of the problems that Sudan inherited from the British system, a west ministerial democracy. And we had elections in 1954. It's one of the early elections, fair and elections and open in Africa. But because it was a system imposed on a backward society and kind of primitive economy, it did not survive. And there was a disconnect between the educated minority kind of
class in the center of power in the Nile River region of Sudan and the rest of the country, especially the marginalized regions, the far reaches of the country in Darfur and the south and so on. And so, uneven development was the main cause behind the conflict. Then when the conflict was resolved temporarily as part of disagreements that we talked about, it was not a democratic peace building. It was a militarized peace building. I think these are the main lessons that perhaps we need to have.
Right now, I think for the case of Sudan, hopefully if this conflict is resolved and the demilitarization of the Sudanese politics was addressed and a full civilian government came to power. The civilian itself, even after this tragic experience, if they did not learn the lesson that actually we have to have a decentralized political economic system that gives power and resources to the various regions and so on, I'm afraid that actually we will still might face another setback.
Hisham Yousif:
So there are kind of getting towards the current situation and maybe a perspective look to what you think how this is going to develop, there are two questions that I think are important. One is how you've observed the civilian government after you left it, that observation of it all the way to the coup, there was a chance for the Prime Minister to come back, which he did, but he didn't have civilian support, which led him to resign again. And so, that's probably the point where we can mark the loss of civilian influence in the Sudanese government. Then it gave us about a year, year and a half, or however long it was of where the military kind of took over and decided to talk about transitions, which is ending in the military breakdown in this fight between these two factions. So to get us to where we are today, just a word on how the civilian relationship splintered and failed, and then how this military relationship is splintering.
Ibrahim Elbadawi:
Actually, what has happened is that after the Juba Peace agreement, especially given the context behind the agreement, the government was transformed from a technocratic to a large extent apolitical government as it's supposed to be during the transitional period. To a government of political parties and freedom fighters movement or rebel movements. And so, I think to a large extent, the authority of the Prime Minister was diminished because the reference point for these ministers are their movements that actually, or parties, and I think that was a major or a fatal setback to the meritocracy and efficiency of the government. Obviously as a result of that transition, the situation did not improve and the progress was actually was halted.
One important milestone basically was like the straw that broke the back of the camel, which was that the leadership of the Council of Sovereignty was supposed to be moved from the military to the civilian. That was actually the trigger of the unfortunate developments that took place, that actually the military leadership and of course with the support of their new alliances of the signatories of Juba, they wanted to retain the leadership of the Council of Sovereignty. They also were not keen about, there was a major thing which is related to the investigation committee that supposed charged with investigating the violent disbanding of the setting, which was the epicenter of the revolution. As you know, there were so many atrocities and this violent disbanding by the military forces and also some elements from the so-called National Islamic Front and so on, was to be investigated. But then nobody want to touch it. The committee was phoned, but they never really came up with any reports or anything like that.
So all of these issues prompted the army or the leadership of the army to mount the coup, even though being fair to the Prime Minister. The Prime Minister was trying actually to mediate these conflicts, these divergent views between the FFC and the military and so on. But then, I think after coup, the fatal mistake I think that the Prime Minister committed was actually to give in to the army and sign this agreement before asking for an opportunity to explain to the youth and the freedom and democracy camp about why he wanted to do that. That actually created the condition that deprived the new deal between the Prime Minister, between Dr. Hamdok and General Burhan of support by the general public. And so, it ignited actually counter actions through protest in the streets and what have you, and obviously also the international community were not convinced that actually this is a return to the constitutional process, which actually eventually obviously forced the Prime Minister to resign.
Since then, there was no any constitutional process. The head of the army was the ultimate ruler. He was actually ruling by decree and there was no any constitutional process until actually we reached this stage. Before that obviously because of the pressure and the economic crisis, that became so clear. Basically Sudan was returned back as a result of the coup to the last phase of the former regime. And so, the military leadership was forced to come back to the table of negotiations and the process was going fine. But then an issue that was not really discussed before was who should control the military? That is when the two branches of the military see themselves in huge difference.
Obviously before this fight happened, everybody was stalking arms and fighters and so on. So the atmosphere was very clear. And this is very important point, but the trigger, lots of evidence which was conveyed in social media and everywhere during the last 10 days of the holy months of Ramadan, the National Islamic front and the followers of the former regime who were disgruntled and never accepted that there was a revolution that deposed them. And famously, the former leader, the late Sadiq al-Mahdi, he described them as the disgruntled far right. And so, this disgruntled far right basically seized the opportunity that actually now the military itself found itself divided and in discord and so on. And so, it is widely discussed now in the media that actually the bullet was fired by the brigades of these followers of the former regime at the camps of the Rapid Support Force, which then ignited the conflict between the two who caused the Rapid Support Force attack the army garrisons and so on, and that was the beginning.
So I think any kind of credible, viable resolution has to also account for who started this and to be held accountable legally and politically. Because I think as long as this subversive element continue to operate freely, the future of Sudanese democracy and transformation will be in doubt, even if the military finally come to terms with an agreement that a unified force professional army will be formed. Because as long as their elements are in the army, the future democracy of Sudan will never be secured. Not only him, but of course all the politically motivated elements in the army.
Hannah:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Dr. Abraham Elbadawi. This episode was produced and edited by Hannah Balochi and Nishita Karu. Thank you to our interviewers Hisham Yousif and Kirgit Amlai. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit their website, thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter at pearsoninst, inst spelled I-N-S-T. Thanks.
Root of Conflict
07.03.23
Precarious Protections | Chiara Galli
Reema Saleh:
Hi, this is Reema and you are listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You are listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world, and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world.
Reema Saleh:
Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Reema Saleh:
What is the human toll of the US immigration bureaucracy? In this episode, we speak with Dr. Chiara Galli, a sociologist at the University of Chicago. Her latest book, Precarious Protections chronicles the experiences and perspectives of Central American unaccompanied minors and their immigration attorneys as they navigate the asylum process and pursue refugee status in the United States.
Reema Saleh:
Spanning six years of research between the Obama and Trump administrations, her ethnographic research examines the paradoxical and precarious criteria that decide who is deserving and who must we protect. We talk about how US asylum laws often fail to help children who are escaping life-threatening violence, how new immigration changes are impacting unaccompanied minors and how Chicago will grapple with an unanticipated influx in migration.
Natalie Reyes:
I am Natalie Reyes. I'm a first year MPP student at the University of Chicago, and I'm also a Pearson Fellow.
Gabriela Rivera:
And my name is Gabriela Rivera. I'm a one year student at the MA and I'm from Guatemala. I'm a lawyer, so it's amazing for me to be here today.
Reema Saleh:
And my name is Reema. I'm the producer of Root of Conflict and I'm a second year at Harris.
Chiara Galli:
My name is Chiara Galli. I'm assistant professor of Comparative Human Development at the University of Chicago. I'm the author of Precarious Protections: Unaccompanied Minors Seeking Asylum in the US.
Reema Saleh:
Yeah. So you joined the Chicago faculty pretty recently, right?
Chiara Galli:
Yeah, I just moved here, what was it? Last summer. So this is my first year joining U. Chicago. Yeah, it's been a great year thus far.
Reema Saleh:
Yeah. What brought you here kind of as a sociologist here in the Comparative Human Development department?
Chiara Galli:
Well, they hired me, so I was very glad to come and accept their offer.
Reema Saleh:
How did you first get involved in kind of international migration studies?
Chiara Galli:
Well, so I'm an immigrant myself. I migrated to the US as a child with my parents, and actually we came to the northern most suburbs of Chicago. So for me, coming to U Chicago is kind of a homecoming of sorts, you know I spent my life between suburban Illinois and Rome, Italy where I'm originally from. So I've been interested in immigration from like my personal experience for a long time. And I worked in the immigration policy world in the European Union before starting grad school. But I was really interested in being able to ask my own questions and define my own research agenda, which is why I chose to pursue a PhD.
Reema Saleh:
So what brought you to the topic of Central American migration and unaccompanied minors?
Chiara Galli:
Yeah, so I've been interested in Latin American studies for a long time, and that was kind of the focus of my bachelor's degree in development studies and then in my master's degree as well. And I'm fluent in Spanish, so I'm really a believer that you need to be to speak the language really well in order to do good in depth
ethnographic field work. So it was kind of my draw towards studying Latin American populations, and I was interested in immigration policy and how it impacts people's lives because of my experience in the policy research realm. But to be completely honest with you, I kind of stumbled upon the topic of this book. It was my very first year in grad school and I had just moved to Los Angeles and I needed to find a field site for my ethnographic field methods class where we would do hands on, learning the method by doing ethnography.
Chiara Galli:
And so I reached out to a lot of nonprofit organizations in Los Angeles offering to volunteer with my Spanish skills in exchange for research access. And so I heard back from an organization that had a long history of helping Central American seek asylum in the US. And so this was what was happening at the time. It was just shortly after summer of 2014 when the Obama administration declared that a humanitarian crisis was underway as increased arrivals of children and families from Central America arrived at the border, these asylum seeking kids and families. And it seemed to me that this was such an important and understudied topic. And so after having fortunately stumbled upon it, I decided to stick with it and I ended up doing six years of research on the topic.
Reema Saleh:
So let's talk about your book. What first drew you to begin writing after you had started this field work?
Chiara Galli:
So this book is born out of my dissertation, and initially I actually started doing the research with asylum seekers from Central America of all ages. And it was only later on during the course of my dissertation that I decided to really center in on the case of children. And that was both because I noticed that not very much had been written on the topic, whereas there's quite an extensive literature on asylum seeking adults. And this was despite the fact that increasing numbers of children are migrating alone to seek asylum worldwide in rich countries like the United States.
Chiara Galli:
But I really think that the case of children in the asylum process is an interesting one for the purposes of thinking through theories of immigration as well, because you know we have this contrast between these two forces, these two competing forces at play in countries that are liberal democracies that receive asylum seekers.
Chiara Galli:
On the one hand, on the face of it, we say that we respect human rights and the rule of law, but on the other hand, very much receiving countries of immigration want to be able to control their borders, regulate immigration flow, and exclude those categories whom they see as undeserving or undesirable. And so you know when human rights belong to foreigners, then it brings this tension into play. And I think that not just in the US but really in countries all over the world, including in Europe, the rights of asylum seekers have been chipped away at more and more because of this tension.
Chiara Galli:
But in the case of children, it's a lot harder to do that, right? Because we widely agree upon the fact as an American society that children should be protected. And so this is what gives rise to these protections for this population of unaccompanied minors in the US asylum process. But unfortunately, I show in the book that when they're implemented, they're precarious protections in practice because we're still trying to chip away at them in various ways. And so this is what leads a lot of kids to actually not be eligible for asylum and not obtain the protection that our laws promised despite the fact that they escaped from violence in Central America.
Gabriela Rivera:
Well, first of all, as a Central American, and I must say that I really appreciate you writing about Central America. As you very well said, it is an understudied area. So really thank you very much. So one of the things I found more interesting in your book is that through all of these stories that you heard from minors, you found that there's not only a lot of suffering, but there is also a lot of strategies that the families and the kids themselves have to make in order to show exactly what types of suffering they lift and the amount of suffering, the intensity of the suffering to be able to be protected by law. So what are other categories that you think should be introduced in asylum law in the US or in the process to be able to capture these particular types of suffering these kids are going through?
Chiara Galli:
Yeah, so in the book, basically, I argue that these children are defacto refugees, right? Because they flee conditions of life-threatening violence in Central America, which is a place where you know teenagers are especially at risk. And one of the things that they're especially at risk at of is forced gang recruitment and being targeted and victimized by gangs, which is not a valid reason to seek asylum in the United States under the current state of our case law.
Chiara Galli:
So this is what kind of leads attorneys to have to search for other eligibility grounds that do satisfy existing case law, such as child abuse, such as persecution on account of one's race, which is sometimes a type of case that indigenous Central Americans pursue. So a very kind of straightforward fix would be to recognize these experiences of forced gang recruitment and victimization as eligible for asylum. And indeed, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, they believe that those experiences should count as valid reasons to be granted asylum. So really the United States has a more restrictive interpretation of refugee law than the UNHCR recommendation.
Chiara Galli:
So that's one thing. And then more generally, I think that we should have an asylum law that protects people who are fleeing their homes, and that seems like a pretty straightforward point to make. But the truth of the matter is that our asylum law currently does not protect those individuals who are fleeing violence, including children.
Gabriela Rivera:
And in your book you talked about introducing this concept of humanitarian capital and how minors and the people representing them gather this in order to make them eligible for differently held protections. Could you tell us more about this concept of humanitarian capital?
Chiara Galli:
Yeah, so this humanitarian capital is kind of drawing on a Bourdieusian framework, and I define it as a form of symbolic capital that lawyers activate as they interview their clients in order to make their suffering legible to the decision makers who have such great powers over their lives and can decide whether or not to grant them relief on humanitarian grounds based, yes, on formal criteria and legal definitions, but also on a host of discretionary criteria that really hinge on these evaluations of who is deserving, who is compassionate and whom we should protect.
Chiara Galli:
So I think the concept was helpful to me in explaining the process because it allows me to highlight all of the paradoxical ways in which human suffering is translated and then counts or does not count in helping people obtain protection. So a good example of this is, you mentioned that children and their families have a lot of strategies. For example, also in planning escape from the home countries, they have to navigate and mitigate conditions of violence, and they do so in several ways, for example, by helping kids go into hiding while they accrue enough resources and savings and loans to pay smugglers to get them out alive, Right?.
Chiara Galli:
So of course, these strategies are carried out by family members who love and want to protect their children, but then these go on to carry unexpected weight in the asylum process and play out in negative ways. Because the paradox is that if you flee too soon and before anything really bad happens to you and before the right, the correct type of bad thing happen to you, then you might not have enough humanitarian capital to make a case that you've suffered enough to meet this bar of persecution. So these decisions that these loving caretakers make to protect their children then go on to actually harm their chances to get protection in the US asylum process.
Natalie Reyes:
You actually talked about this a little bit in your previous question, and it's something that Gabrielle and I have been talking about, so there's this enormous dichotomy between the adult responsibilities given to the minors and then fulfilling the necessary expectations of what childhood is supposed to look like Right?, to extract the compassion from those in the immigration system. What results have you seen on the development of these kids?
Chiara Galli:
Well, so that's a hard question in the sense that to be able to really answer that question, I will have to write a second book after following the respondents for a long time. And the adaptation trajectories and how they lead to positive or negative outcomes in terms of the integration of immigrants is one of the key questions that interest sociologists who study immigration. So you know to really answer that question, someone will have to do the research in the future, but I do identify some mechanisms that I think do give us a hint as to what the effect might be.
Chiara Galli:
So for example, in the book I write about this process of legal socialization, which is how kids learn about the law and acquire all sorts of values and attitudes about their law, their position in society, their relationship with the state and the rights that they have or do not have. And they undergo this process of legal socialization really quickly because from the moment when they first step foot on US soil, they're channeled through this complex bureaucratic maze. They interact with all of these actors from border patrol officers in holding facilities at the border, office of refugee resettlement, so-called shelters, which are detention facilities. They go to court, they interact with immigration judges, with asylum officers, they interact with their immigration attorneys, they're integrated into migrant community.
Chiara Galli:
So all of these adults who are surrounding these kids are sending them different messages about what it means to be a newcomer in this society, what it means to be an asylum seeker, and how they should behave if they want to have a good chance of being able to stay. So this is where all of these kind of infantilizing messages and these contradictory messages come into play.
Chiara Galli:
So kids are told to behave in an innocent way, to not demonstrate adult-like desires or aspirations. They're told to be very compliant and well behaved. And attorneys also tell them about their rights that they have because they are a protective category in the US. But what I found unfortunately is that kids retain much more the information that they received about how to be well behaved, how to be good kids, and they retain far less information about their rights as a protective category. And so I think that this really shows that undergoing this asylum system is a disempowering process. It's not a process that will produce a lot of activists or a lot of people who will want to change American society. Rather it's going to produce people who will be very afraid of being deported, very fearful, who will know that they have to be exceptional and exceptionally compelling to win asylum and also unlike people like them.
Chiara Galli:
So it also creates these discourses of distancing from other individuals in communities and kids reproduce these discourses of, "I'm not like those other bad immigrants, or I'm not like those other bogus refugees." So in this sense, I think that this kind of foreshadows some of the things that we might expect about this population and their long-term trajectories in the United States.
Natalie Reyes:
So this actually brings me to my next question. So throughout the book you talk about how the minors internalize all of these stigmas about, quote, unquote, "bad immigrants, bogus refugees, and then the deviant Latino teens", and they learn to perform their deservingness in contrast to these identities. So how do you see this mental narrative influence how they then interact with other groups once released?
Chiara Galli:
So this is also a tricky question. So something I had wanted to do for the study that I wasn't able to do was actually, because of course, one can never do everything when writing a book, but I really wanted to embed myself more in the communities of these children and their everyday lives, and I would've very much liked to be present during their peer to peer interactions. So that just didn't end up being feasible. First of all, just to the sheer scope of the project, I ended up focusing much more on children's relationship with the state as it was mediated by these attorneys and these nonprofit organizations.
Chiara Galli:
So I got to see kids kind of reproduce these narratives and perform these behaviors in these spaces of the nonprofit of the legal clinic. And then really the only glimpse that I got into kids' everyday lives was through a formal research interview, sort of a formal research encounter. And as much as I made a lot of efforts to make that as informal as possible in the sense that I didn't want to reproduce the encounter that kids had with their immigration attorneys and these interviews that have the goal of producing an asylum narrative, because those are very re-traumatizing interviews, they're very anxiety filled encounters.
Chiara Galli:
So I met with them in local parks, sometimes in their homes, oftentimes at Starbucks. That was a very popular meeting place, and we spent a lot of time chatting and getting to know each other before getting onto to actually addressing the research questionnaire. So beyond the fact that they kind of reproduce some of these narratives with me, and they said that they did that when they were in other spaces, including community spaces, I really can't answer that question. And I guess this is a limitation of the study or a study that can be taken up by another scholar who will do an ethnography that's less kind of an ethnography of the state or an ethnography of the law in action and more an ethnography embedded in migrant communities. And that's very difficult to do with teenagers because the age difference creates a big power differential.
Chiara Galli:
I mean, there's always a power differential between the researcher and the research subject, but the age issue kind of heightens that. So someone would need to come up with an innovative research design to do that. And people have done studies of children.
Natalie Reyes:
Okay. Yeah. Thank you. So I'm going to go ahead and change the subject to something that you've mentioned a little earlier, and that was the Office of Refugee Resettlement Shelters or detention facilities like you said. There was a section where you described how militaristic they are. There was an alarming rigidness about the rules, even arbitrary ones in which girls weren't allowed to hug one another or even brush each other's hair. And that made me curious because when there are plenty of opportunities implement rules regarding schedules appropriate activities, why do you think these shelters feel the need to intervene in such emotional or personal interactions?
Chiara Galli:
Well, what I argue in the book is that it's by design to teach compliance to these kids. And this kind of resonates with the messages that shelter staff give them. They give them a lot of advice about how to be well behaved, how to stay on the state's radar, show up to courts, make sure they don't get in trouble. So teaching compliance is part of the institutional kind of mandate or agenda of the office of Refugee resettlement as is caring for children. And in some way, these two things do overlap. I mean, I think that in some ways it's not just, let's say like an evil agenda. We do tell children what to do to protect them as adults. And I think that the shelter staff could probably come up with reasons and rationales for why they do this. I know that they're very concerned about kids harming themselves or each other.
Chiara Galli:
So they're trying to limit interpersonal contact without supervision. They have to manage a large number of kids in these facilities. But the truth of the matter is it does teach key lessons about compliance. And most importantly, unaccompanied minors, they experience these rules in a way that's kind of punitive and constraining and frustrating and arbitrary. So they would complain about the shelters to me. I mean, I will say that there are different types of facilities from more emergency facilities, which are on the far side of the spectrum, like the famous tent court in Hampstead, Florida, which are really abysmal conditions. One of my respondents told me that several children fainted every day because it was so hot under the tents.
Chiara Galli:
Then there's more like mid-range facilities, which have a lot of kids in them, and they have these kinds of arbitrary rules like no touching each other or braiding each other's hair, things like that. And then there's more foster care like arrangements. And I will say that some of the kids who I interviewed describe these arrangements as something like when you do study abroad and you stay with a family, they reminisced about these kind families taking them on field trips. So there was a spectrum of treatment, of objective treatment.
Chiara Galli:
But I think that a quote by one of my research participants says it best, he called the shelters a fancy prison, and he said, because they treat you well, but it's a prison, right? Because you can't leave. So we can't forget that these are detention facilities, these are facilities that are surveilling children where their liberty is deprived. They're not free to leave. And so even though we have some protections, it stemming from the florist settlement, this key lawsuit that created a series of legal protections for children in US detention facilities that adults don't benefit from. So that's improved conditions and some care must be provided, some schooling must be provided. They're still fit prisons despite the fancy aspects that some of them might have.
Gabriela Rivera:
So we saw in the book that a lot of the minors spend a lot of time in these facilities, but then eventually go out and they have access to legal services. And you spend a lot of time shadowing these interactions between the lawyers, the paralegals, and these kids. And I must say that as a lawyer, I felt very validated when you explained this work of legal translation that lawyers and paralegals do.
Gabriela Rivera:
So was that very different? Do you think that's very different to the general idea people have about lawyers? How was your experience shadowing these interactions? Because we all think about lawyers as just people in a fancy office just signing contracts all day and not doing all of these different things that you talk about in the book.
Chiara Galli:
Well, first of all, I'm very glad to hear that you felt validated as a lawyer in reading the book because that means a lot to hear that. It means I did a decent job in describing, as you say, this crucial role of legal translation that these individuals do. So I mean, first of all, just a briefly about the context. I mean, immigrants are not guaranteed free legal representation in the United States, and this includes children. So in some ways, the children who I followed were somewhat privileged because they had gotten access to services from nonprofit organizations. And these lawyers, their place of work and what they do does look pretty different from what people imagine in the sense that their offices are really not fancy. These nonprofits, they're strapped for resources. They're working with very limited resources and trying to represent as many kids as they can with a lot of resource constraints.
Chiara Galli:
So in the organizations where I did my work, lawyers could represent as many as 70 or 80 cases of kids at the same time. So it's very difficult work. Lawyers report a lot of secondary trauma, burnout. They're doing exceptional work considering the very scarce resources at their hands. And I think that there's another way in which the legal translation work that these lawyers do is fundamentally misunderstood by the general public.
Chiara Galli:
So President Donald Trump called asylum lawyering a big fat con job, and he said, "Lawyers sell asylum seeker's story." So I think that this is a widely held misconception among the American public and also in other countries. But it's not at all true that lawyers sell their clients' stories. Rather what they do is they try to ascertain which facts in their clients' narratives of escape fit with our existing interpretation of refugee law, which is an exceptionally narrow definition, which doesn't guarantee that if you escape from life-threatening violence, you are going to qualify. And they don't make anything up. They just ask questions until they can find some detail that fits.
Chiara Galli:
So for example, when a child fled force game recruitment, that is not an eligible experience for asylum, but if that child also suffered severe child abuse at home, then that is an eligible experience. And so they'll focus the legal narrative on that. So it's their job to teach kids what asylum eligibility is so they can volunteer relevant facts about their experiences and then to make these experiences eligible. And that's central to their legal translation role. And sometimes all they can do is tell their clients, I'm sorry, you don't qualify. And that's that.
Gabriela Rivera:
Yeah, that was very interesting to read when you highlight that the reason why they end up applying for asylum or for any kind of labor protection is often not the exact reason why they left their countries. And as I read it, it seems like it's a very surprising moment for a lot of these kids to realize that their reasons are not necessarily the useful ones. How did you see this moment of surprise? Because sometimes culturally, a lot of the things that are considered serious harms against a young person here are culturally acceptable in Central America, or at least in the context where these kids lived. So how did you see that process of realizing, well, maybe my whole life made me eligible for one of these protections and I didn't even know it.
Chiara Galli:
This is a big issue, I mean, there's a level of normalization of violence within vulnerable low income children and indigenous children in central America. And that stems from a longer history of violence becoming normalized is since the civil wars. And so a lot of the things that may seem commonplace to these children, they wouldn't even think to disclose them. So something that's child specific is the example of child abuse.
Chiara Galli:
So some form of corporal punishment may seem appropriate according to their perspectives. It's something that is part of child rearing practices. It's something that they've seen in families around them, and so they wouldn't necessarily disclose that. Another example that is really interesting where kids really pushed back is so these children not, these children not only apply for asylum, but they also apply for this form of relief called special immigrant juvenile status, which is a form of protection for children, abandoned, abused, or neglected by one or both of their parents.
Chiara Galli:
So the neglect category was fascinating because the definition of neglect is a definition that comes from state law. So in the case of where I did my research in California law, and the parent doesn't need to have had an intent to harm the child for the lawyer to be able to prove neglect and get relief for the child. And so one of the things that constitutes parental neglect is working from a very young age or working in certain types of jobs or working in dangerous conditions. And so that was extremely perplexing to kids.
Chiara Galli:
And attorneys would ask them things like, well, they would ask him things like, how young were you when you started working? What kind of work did you do? And they would never portray this as something that they didn't want to do as something that they were forced to do. For boys in particular, it was a source of pride to be able to enter the labor market to support their families. It was something that they wanted to do. And they found satisfaction in these jobs, even sometimes in very exploitative or intense jobs that they did in their home countries. And attorneys would ask some things like, did you enjoy work? And they would say, yes, I did enjoy work and no one forced me to work. So that was a real moment, kind of a major dissonance between children's subjective understandings of their lives and these narrow legal categories.
Chiara Galli:
And then attorneys would make a big effort to try to tell kids, it doesn't matter that you didn't feel this way, but for the purposes of your eligibility and being allowed to stay, you still qualify under US law. But there was a lot of perplexity that you could read with body language. There was a lot of pushback too. Kids didn't want to speak ill of their caretakers. They had complex relationships even with abusive family members. There was love and abuse in families happening at the same time oftentimes.
Chiara Galli:
And then finally, kids had a lot of trouble. And this comes back to for asylum eligibility, they had a lot of trouble focusing not on why they fled, which oftentimes was because the gangs wanted to kill me, but rather on describing the persecutors motivation for targeting them. So this is required in order to satisfy the refugee definition that requires that you show not only that you were persecuted, but that you were persecuted on account of a protected ground like race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a social group. So that's where the describing the why of the persecution is really important, and that's just not something that makes a lot of common sense to a person of any age, but even less so to a young person.
Gabriela Rivera:
Do you think these categories are so narrow or there is an element of the historical bias against Central American migrants? What keeps these legal categories so narrow that a lot of these experiences can't fit?
Chiara Galli:
Yes, absolutely. This is crucial. So we have a long history of denying asylum to Central Americans in the United States. Since the 1980s, especially Guatemalans and Salvadorans were fleeing these right-wing regimes that were being supported by US funding in the Cold War era. It was a very deliberate denial of asylum to Central Americans. Only about 2% were granted asylum at the time. And this was in the context of the geopolitics of the Cold War era where you would deny asylum to people fleeing your allied countries and granted to those fleeing enemy regimes such as the Soviet unions such as Cuba.
Chiara Galli:
And things have changed somewhat since then, and they've changed thanks to the legal advocacy that's been done since trying to get protection for people who are fleeing violence. So for example, so matter of ARCG was a case law that was a result of 20 years worth of advocacy to protect women fleeing domestic violence. And there were cases of women, Central American and Mexican women that contributed to this case law.
Chiara Galli:
So while the current context isn't as restrictive, the grant rates are higher, the fact that the refugee definition isn't expanding is absolutely a product of that longer history. And if you see the legal battles to where the particular social forced game recruitment, attorneys are trying to argue that this should be a recognized particular social group in the courts. And you read the written decisions of judges in these cases, the narrative, the justification for denying is that they're worried of opening the floodgates to excessive numbers of arrivals. And this isn't happening in a vacuum. When they talk about floodgates, they have particular people in mind and they have Central Americans in mind. So in this sense, this is a population that's seen by the US government as undesirable and a population to be excluded. So that's absolutely rooted in this longer history of exclusion of Central Americans in the United States.
Natalie Reyes:
So I'm going to back up here and try to tie in your tides to you talked a little bit about EU migration, and it was funny because throughout the book I was reminded of The Swimmers. I'm not sure if you've seen the Netflix movie about the Syrian sisters who make their way from Syria to first Greece and then Germany. Would you anecdotally be able to compare how legal socialization differs for unaccompanied minors in Europe versus the US?
Chiara Galli:
So initially I wanted to do a comparative study actually, of the reception of unaccompanied minors in Europe and the US and then for pragmatic reasons of kind of resource and time scarcity, I decided to focus on the US because there's so much to say just on this context alone. But I do have some insights because I did spend some time thinking about this.
Chiara Galli:
So first of all, generally the European Union countries actually provide more protections to unaccompanied minors than the United States. So for example, countries like Italy, they give unaccompanied minors a work and residency permit. So they have the right to reside legally in the country until age 18, and they get access to all sorts of benefits in the meantime, including housing. And this is not detention, this is housing where people are free to come and go and leave. They get access to Italian schools, vocational training, access to legal services, so all sorts of things.
Chiara Galli:
So the legal context in European countries is more protective than it is in the US. Of course, the major contradiction arises when these kids turn 18 and age out of the protections very abruptly. And it's then where they really have to fight for their right to stay. And different countries have different ways in which unaccompanied minors are able to do so. In the Italian case, they can apply for asylum and they can try to apply for a work permit if they're able to find jobs in different sectors. And there is some support for, as I said, vocational training to try to help them have that transition, make that transition successfully rather. And of course, there's always a big gap between the law on the books and the law and practice. So it's not like everything is rosy there, but it does matter that legal protections are more protective on paper.
Chiara Galli:
And that I do think has an impact on how people perceive their relationship with the state and the kinds of messages that they receive. So based on what I've read, based on other people's work, and there's a very rich scholarship on unaccompanied minors treatment in different European countries.
Chiara Galli:
In a country like Italy, people aren't really worried about deportation because we don't really have a deportation machine of the same magnitude of the United States that's so well funded. So it's much more rare for people to actually be deported. So kids, as they come of age, they face a series of vulnerabilities and they're very much at risk of kind of blending into the larger undocumented population, but they're not so much at risk of be being returned. And that of course shapes the decisions that people make.
Chiara Galli:
But there was a very interesting book that compared the treatment of unaccompanied minors in the UK and Italy and what they've found, because since the UK does carry out deportations of minors who come of age, what they've found is that some of these kids who come of age as unaccompanied minors in the UK, they turn 17 and a half, 18, they then migrate to Italy to avoid deportation.
Chiara Galli:
So migrants learn about the law and they strategize. They make decisions for their life, their life course trajectories, and in order to work around these laws that really constrain the choices that they have at their disposal and that they learn about in imperfect ways. So there's never 100% transparency and knowledge of the law, which is what I talk about in my book, that's also very much true in the European context, but migrants learn what they can about the law and then they make decisions accordingly.
Reema Saleh:
We're hoping to kind of talk a little more about current border policy and how that's impacting unaccompanied minors. We've all been hearing about the expiration for Title 42 just happening tomorrow, May 11th. Could you tell us a little about what is Title 42, who does it apply to, and how has it impacted unaccompanied minors?
Chiara Galli:
Yeah, so Title 42 is an obscure public health policy that ostensibly has nothing to do with border enforcement, that the Trump administration strategically mobilized and decided to use to close off the US Mexico border just one month into the Covid Pandemic. And what was interesting about the use of Title 42 is that the Trump administration had experimented with all sorts of new policies to curtail the rights of protected groups, including asylum seekers and unaccompanied minors.
Chiara Galli:
But really in terms of being able to access the border, unaccompanied minors had been spared from the worst of these attacks because we have this law, the 2008 Trafficking Victims Protection Act, which says that unaccompanied minors from non-contiguous countries are allowed to be admitted without undergoing any hurdles such as the credible fear interviews that adults have to undergo before being allowed entry into the United States. So what non-contiguous countries means is essentially kids from everywhere but Mexico because there aren't a lot of Canadian unaccompanied minors seeking entry to the US obviously, because we're similarly rich countries, et cetera.
Chiara Galli:
So Title 42 applied to everyone. It was a hard closure of the border that really violated the United States' commitment to the non-refoulement principle, the idea in international refugee law that you should not expel someone to a country where they fear persecution, where their lives are at risk. This policy essentially functioned as a state of exception. So the Covid Pandemic was framed as this crisis that required the border to be closed off despite the fact that public health experts actually never supported the policy. They thought that actually it would backfire by pushing people into crowded refugee camps in Mexico, and that would actually promote viral spread. You can't control a pandemic based on national borders because viral spread doesn't take a person's passport into account.
Chiara Galli:
But that's what the Trump administration did. And so they excluded everyone coming in at the border, including unaccompanied minors. And something like 10,000 kids, I believe were expelled in the first few months of the implementation of Title 42. And by kids, I mean unaccompanied minors.
Chiara Galli:
And I know that the Biden administration likes to say that it exempted unaccompanied minors from the policy. But the truth of the matter is that unaccompanied minors started to be exempted from Title 42 in November of 2020 because of a lawsuit filed by the ACLU. And so this shows you kind of the power of advocacy work, right? The ACLU said that the Title 42 was unlawful, that it was a violation of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act. And so since then, unaccompanied minors have actually been allowed to enter the US and to seek asylum, but Title 42 remained in place for asylum seekers from many, many other countries. So this had the interesting effect of producing a situation in which for months on end, really the only asylum seekers being allowed entry into the US were children.
Chiara Galli:
And then the Biden administration entered office, it decided to continue not applying Title 42 to unaccompanied children, and then it started applying Title 42 with caveats. So giving quite a bit of discretion to the border patrol to decide who to let in, when to apply Title 42, and when not to apply it. So some people have been able to gain admission at the border such as Ukrainians, for example, for a period Venezuelans and Cubans were allowed in, but that's no longer the case.
Chiara Galli:
And now, tomorrow, as you said, Title 42 is set to expire. And what's very unfortunate is that the administration has been trying to find other ways to curtail access to the US asylum process by essentially resuscitating the, what advocates called the Trump era asylum bans, right? The idea that if you transit through a country that is a signatory of the UN Refugee Convention and you should have applied for asylum there, you don't have a right to apply for asylum in the US. And there's nowhere in refugee law that says that this should be the case or to make people who cross between ports of entry ineligible to apply for asylum.
Chiara Galli:
So these are policies that the Trump administration experimented with first that were struck down by the courts, and that the Biden administration is trying to reintroduce with a series of caveats for vulnerable populations, for populations who use this CBP One app at the border. But really, I mean, the substance of the policy is very similar. Right?
Reema Saleh:
Yeah, no, it's definitely interesting to see how a lot of Trump era border policies just kind of came back in different forums. I keep reading about just app crashes for the CBP One app and just that being required now for authorized entry, and it's definitely strange to see it happening. Yeah, I guess this is kind of impossible to ask, but what do you expect that people will start to see in the near future for people at the border?
Chiara Galli:
Well, I can't predict the future, but I mean, I will say this, I think that the Trump administration set a series of dangerous precedence by really curtailing the rights of asylum seekers by undermining our commitment to non-refoulement. And so this puts us in a very dangerous territory, and I know that advocates are very well organized. They were energized initially during the Trump administration, maybe now, well actually, I know that towards the end of the Trump administration, people were exhausted, right? Because they felt like they were fighting all of the time through impact litigation on behalf of their clients that they represented individually. But the work that advocates do, and this is one of the messages that I try to send with my book, it's so important because if it weren't for advocates, trying to keep the government accountable, we really would see human rights be dismantled much, much more.
Chiara Galli:
So that's happening on the one hand. On the other hand, the Republican Party has now introduced a bill that's taking us in a very, very concerning direction, which is not expected to pass, but it does kind of signal the movement in which a segment of the American political system and specifically the Republican Party, would like to go in, which is essentially an end to asylum. And there's a provision in that bill that would do away with the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, protections for unaccompanied children, the ones that allow them to be admitted at the border.
Chiara Galli:
So while it's unlikely that that act will pass, it is concerning that it's being proposed. I will say this, I mean, it's not the first time that Congress tries to do away with TVPRA protections. Asylum has already been under attack once before in the 90s when there were debates leading up to the illegal immigration reform and what is it, IRIRA, a series of restrictive policies that were introduced in the 90s to limit access to asylum.
Chiara Galli:
And this is what I was so interested about, the reason that I wrote this book, to see the interaction between these protective and exclusionary forces. This is not new. This is kind of a constant in the US immigration system, but just how that will play out in the years to come is quite concerning because each time you set a precedent undermining human right, it becomes that much easier for future administrations to do this. So I've purposefully not made any concrete predictions because I don't have a crystal ball, but we'll all be following the news very closely in these upcoming weeks to see what actually happens. But it's not a time to take a vacation from advocacy work, that's for sure.
Gabriela Rivera:
So you were talking about all of these different types of barriers that the US puts on immigrants. Some are physical borders, some are legal barriers, try to deter people from coming, and they have changed in time and increased, but also in the time period that you tracked in your book, the amount of unaccompanied minors coming into the US has also increased steadily and sharply. So what do you think this means, what it represents, that all of these different measures seem to be failing, right? Because the amount of children that are coming to the US is not decreasing. All of these deterrence policies are not being reflected in the amount of children that are coming. So are they failing? What is it that policymakers in the US are not seeing?
Chiara Galli:
Well, in some ways, a lot of our policies are actually producing more unaccompanied minors because when you have a system in place at the border where it's easier to gain admission as an unaccompanied minor than it is for an entire family who's traveling with their kids, this leads families to make really difficult decisions sometimes to send their children to the border alone, to save their lives. And they do this because they have no other option. These aren't easy decisions. These aren't decisions that families want to make, but we're really tying their hands with our policies.
Chiara Galli:
So for example, when the Trump administration introduced the migrant protection protocols, forcing asylum seekers to apply from tent courts in Mexico, and unaccompanied minors weren't subject to that policy, asylum seeking families found themselves in a situation of real danger. Being stuck in transit is very dangerous. There's been reports by human rights watch, a lot of kidnappings, rape, extortion, deaths happening in Mexico to Central Americans who are extraordinarily vulnerable.
Chiara Galli:
So of course, families would send their kids alone to the United States. So that's part of it. Another part of it is the fact that the border was closed for a long time due to Title 42. People were traveling less because of Covid. And so now we're kind of seeing a backlog too, of people including children who want to seek refuge and a better life in the United States. And there's also some interesting research that shows that when you have increased rates of violence in specific sending communities, this creates a spike in out migration. But then that out migration stream balloons over time. So there's a snowball effect.
Chiara Galli:
So of course these flows will increase over time. And this similar things happen for voluntary migration. Once migration starts, it's a process that tends to sustain itself over time. People create migrant networks, they make connections, and all of these things kind of ease the constraints on exit, migrants loan each other money to pay for smugglers, et cetera.
Chiara Galli:
And all of this is happening while, of course, we spend more and more money on the externalization of border control, and we've been funding Mexican border enforcement to apprehend and deport Central Americans on route to the US and now Guatemala border enforcement as well. But the fact of the matter is that people who are fleeing violence will continue to flee violence regardless of our immigration policies. So even though we try to regulate, we try to externalize enforcement, we give Mexico money to apprehend and the poor Central Americans. If the conditions of exit don't change, people will continue to flee their homes and children continue to be at the risk in Central America today.
Natalie Reyes:
So bringing our focus back to the process in the US, you focused on LA as a research site, but I was wondering if you could comment on or maybe compare the advantages or disadvantages between Los Angeles and other cities, maybe Chicago for example. How is the immigration advocacy landscape different here than it is in other cities?
Chiara Galli:
Well, so in many ways, Los Angeles was a best case scenario to study this phenomenon. So I think it's telling that I tell a relatively bleak story in the book about our protections and our humanitarian laws failing to protect many children when they're implemented in practice. But I also do tell a somewhat optimistic story about the power of legal advocacy to help kids who would otherwise not have a chance of getting asylum and to stop the government from implementing policies that chip away at established protections and human rights.
Chiara Galli:
And I think I was able to observe that because as I said, LA is in many ways a best case scenario, and that's for several reasons. First of all, it's a sanctuary city in an immigrant friendly state. So people aren't afraid to go to engage with the court system to seek out legal representation. The state and the city funded nonprofits providing legal services to immigrants, but particularly so providing legal services to unaccompanied minors. So there was enough funding that there was actually an organizational landscape that could provide legal services for these kids. It wasn't enough to go around. Not everyone was represented, but there was a far more access to legal representation than, for example, in a rural area or in an anti-immigrant state.
Chiara Galli:
I have a new project where we're comparing state level representation rates, and we're seeing that in Republican states, unaccompanied minors access to legal representation is much lower than it is in states like California. LA also has a long history of immigration advocacy, immigrant rights organizing, and this long history of the sanctuary movement, the movement that helped Central Americans who were fleeing violence in the 1980s. So all of that legal infrastructure kind of dates back to that movement, to this longer history. And so these advocates know what they're doing. They have a lot of expertise to deal with this population.
Chiara Galli:
Many of them are second generation immigrants, Latinos, the children of Central American asylum seekers in some cases. And who selected into this profession because of their social justice motivations to give back to their community. So they have the linguistic skills necessary to do this work. They have the cultural competencies necessary to do this work. So you can imagine that in a rural area, an immigration attorney who doesn't speak Spanish, who's representing their first Central American cases would have a lot more trouble. It probably wouldn't be such high quality representation.
Chiara Galli:
So I think it's interesting that this is the kind of a best case scenario. And it's also finally, I'll just say it was in some ways a best case scenario also in terms of the institutions who decide cases, because the Los Angeles asylum office does have a reputation for being staffed by liberal young asylum officers, some of whom have gone to law school or some of whom have sociology or anthropology degrees. And this is very different from other asylum offices. There was a report that was recently published on the Boston Asylum Office where virtually everyone is denied asylum because institutional culture is important because discretion plays a big role in these decisions. Who the decision makers are really matters for whether people get protection or not.
Chiara Galli:
And there's always more immigrant friendly and anti-immigrant decision makers in courts and asylum offices all over the US There was just a higher concentration of individuals who wanted to grant cases using the legal protections at their disposal if they could compared to other parts of the country. But all of these differences, I think, create a lot of interesting research opportunities for people who want to do the next ethnography on unaccompanied minors experiences. I think there's really interesting comparative work to be done taking into account, particularly I think rural-urban comparisons or comparisons of different cities, right? Cities where there's fewer migrant networks, where there isn't a strong community of Central Americans, like the one that exists in cities like LA, Washington DC, that all have really strong, for example, Salvador and immigrant communities.
Reema Saleh:
So Chicago has seen a pretty big increase in migration, partly because Texas Governor Abbott is busing migrants here. And I think generally city officials, like the departments seem kind of unprepared. People kind of comment a lot that there's not the same infrastructure here as in other cities for housing migrants and delivering services. I guess, what does Chicago have to do to adapt to this?
Chiara Galli:
Well, I think we're experiencing a very interesting moment because it's actually never been the case that we have housed migrants and asylum seekers. I mean, we've detained them, but we haven't given them housing. So I actually think that it's exceptional what's happening in this city of Chicago and seeing these reception centers and these shelters being set up to house asylum seekers whose cases are pending. This is actually much more similar to the European bottle in which asylum seekers are not only detained, but they're frequently housed in facilities where it's not like they have amazing conditions and they're particularly fancy, but they're not detention centers. They have the right to come and go as please and to leave.
Chiara Galli:
So really, I think it's quite interesting, this historical moment in which we're seeing that a lot of resources like the state of Illinois has invested quite a lot of resources to support this population that's been bused in from the border. And I think that in part has to do with the political differences of takes of the Democratic and Republican parties on immigration. There's a desire to present the state of Illinois and the city of Chicago as a welcoming place for immigrants because I do think that that plays into the national politics of immigration that has become such a contested issue.
Chiara Galli:
Now, of course, again, there's a resource scarcity. The city was unprepared. This tends to be the case generally when asylum seekers arrived to new places. I mean, during the course of my field work, there had been some people who had been bused into LA. So this kind of scrambling to find support is kind of a key characteristic of the phenomenon of trying to help immigrants. And there isn't a very institutionalized system of reception in the US. So really we're seeing something new that I think in many ways is encouraging the fact that the city and the state have been trying to find ways to house asylum seekers and provide them at least a short term place to stay while they adapt to their new homes.
Chiara Galli:
Of course, there's lots of things that we could do to provide more support. For instance, providing housing for a longer period of time. I know that in some of the shelters, they're now requiring asylum seekers to leave after 30 days. That's really not enough time for people to get on their feet and find jobs and find housing, particularly so because it's taking forever for asylum seekers to get work permits right now. Asylum seekers have the right to get a work permit once they apply, and usually the so-called clock would start upon their applications and they would get their permits after six months. But because of a series of changes the Trump administration made, now it's looking more like nine months to a year.
Chiara Galli:
So there's a real mismatch between the amount of time you get a roof over your head and the amount of time it takes for you to get a work permit that's going to enable you to get a job where you can actually pay rent in the city of Chicago. So perhaps we should be housing people for a longer period of time, but the fact of the matter is that there's very scarce resources to go around. So I think the city is trying to distribute those resources as it can because people continue to arrive.
Gabriela Rivera:
So we have been talking about all of these difficult topics, violence and this difficult journey to the US and the super complicated conditions that people face when they come into the US. But what I think makes your research so fascinating is the fact that you decided to focus in this group of people that are going through this intense period of their lives. Most of them are teenagers. So how was it to work with teenagers going through these very complicated period in their lives and going through all of these incredible changes at the same time?
Chiara Galli:
I think that teenagers are a fascinating group, right? Because not only were they in a state of legal limbo between the potential promise of protected refugee status and the risk of being denied asylum and potentially becoming undocumented or being deported back to their home countries, but they were also in a liminally social position in the life course. A teenagers are kind of in a hybrid state between childhood and adulthood. And so they're very interesting group of people to work with. And they exhibit inherently both kind of what we think of as childlike dependent traits and adult-like traits of wanting independence, of seeking independence.
Chiara Galli:
I mean, of course, disadvantaged poor indigenous kids tend to grow up much more quickly in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras than teenagers do in the US where they're much more sheltered. And of course, I mean, there's a racial dynamic to this. There's a class dynamic to this, but white middle class kids are especially sheltered in the US, less so for a working class minority kids. But in Central America, kids do tend to grow up more quickly than they do in the US, which is why they feel infantilized by this need to show their childlike innocence, et cetera.
Chiara Galli:
But in some ways they also do retain some childlike trade. So for example, a lot of my research participants were hoping that they would be supported by their family members when they got here. Some of them actually wanted to stay in school and continue to pursue their education, and they were quite disappointed when they realized that the family members, sometimes aunts and uncles who they didn't really know well, they hadn't had a lot of contact with prior to migration. These individuals had promised, "You can leave ORR and I'll help you finish school and you can live with me." And then they found out that actually they would have to work to support themselves because their aunts and uncles that were supporting their own kids in Guatemala, so they couldn't afford to have them continue in this childlike dependent role of being in school and then continuing on to get their education in college.
Chiara Galli:
So they felt betrayed and they felt a lot of a sense of strong responsibility, a big burden on their shoulders because they had to work, provide themselves, sometimes send remittances back home, payback debt they had incurred due to their migration. So all of these adult-like responsibilities weighed really heavily on their shoulders. At the same time, they had all of the wonderful dreams and aspirations that teenagers have. I think teenagers are very future oriented. They dream about the future. They dream about who they want to be as adults, what are their aspirations for the kinds of jobs they want to do, the kinds of things they want to study, the kinds of people they want to be.
Chiara Galli:
And so something the kids would talk about, I have a story in the book about this Honduran girl who I call Linda, she wants to feel womanlike and she wants to buy things that will make her feel sexy essentially, right? Stiletto heels, mini skirts. And so this nonprofit organization where I was doing research told Linda, "We have these volunteers that want to give donations to kids, so what do you want?" And so she made this list that had these items on it, the stiletto heels, the platforms, the miniskirt. Because she had just turned 18, of course, she wanted those things. When we're teenagers, you're trying to signal that you're adult-like. It's part of your metamorphosis process as you try to look like an adult, to behave like an adult. You have your romantic relationships, et cetera. And it was very sad because the organization told her, "There's no way people are going to want to donate these items to you because you're an unaccompanied minor. You're a poor kid. They're going to want to give you things that you need, not things that you want."
Chiara Galli:
So I thought these teenagers are really not allowed to have the wants and desires that teenagers have as they transition to adulthood. At least not in any formal capacity. When they're trying to get help, they're trying to get support, they're trying to get legal status, they have to perform the childlike state in that space. And then of course, in their everyday lives, they very much signal the adult-like behaviors. And they're very much teenagers in the sense that they dress quite fashionably when they have little bit of money to do so.
Chiara Galli:
But it's a really fascinating population to work with, and they're a very inspiring group of young people. So I think that if only we did a little bit more to support them and a lot less to make their lives impossible by making it so hard for them to undergo this legal system with so few resources, they could really thrive and contribute in amazing ways to American society.
Reema Saleh:
So after spending so much time with unaccompanied minors and the immigration system, how would you say that things need to change? If there is anything that policymakers should take from your book, what should it be?
Chiara Galli:
So, well, they should read the policy recommendations that I make in the conclusion. And there's lots of things that should change. First of all, we need to completely rethink the immigration system in the sense that I make a case in the conclusion that I think that protections for vulnerable categories, including unaccompanied children, should be supplemental to a basic human rights protections for all immigrants. And this is really in line with the spirit of the convention of the rights of the child that says, children have human rights like all individuals, but in addition, we give them supplemental protections because they need protections due to their unique vulnerabilities because of their stage in the life course, their position in society, their developmental needs.
Chiara Galli:
So I think that this should be the logic of the immigration system, and that's not what the current logic of the US immigration system is, but also it's not the logic of what the European immigration systems is, which is to kind of chip away at the basic rights of immigrants, do away with asylum protections with access to asylum, make it harder and harder, and then create spaces of exceptions for vulnerable categories such as children, unaccompanied minors. In the European Union, there's some exceptions for migrants who are ill, for pregnant women, but really those protections need to be supplemental on top of what we give basic human rights guarantees for everyone. So this is a huge systemic change that I think needs to happen in the US and worldwide.
Chiara Galli:
And then the asylum system needs to change. I think that we should interpret refugee law to protect people who are fleeing life-threatening violence in their homes. And we've seen some evolution of the refugee law in the past that's been encouraging, such as protections for victims of gender-based violence, particularly domestic violence. And so this shows that these changes are possible. It is possible for the interpretation of the refugee definition to expand, to better reflect the conditions that are pushing people to flee their homes today. So we need to continue to do that work. And then finally, I mean, I have many, many ideas, but just to say one more, I think that we need a universal legal representation system for people who are facing deportation proceedings, removal proceedings in immigration court.
Chiara Galli:
And I say people and not children because I think that no one can prepare their asylum case on their own because it's exceptionally difficult to do so because of the complex nature of the law and our bureaucracies. And so we don't have a public defender system in the immigration courts because ostensibly these are civil proceedings. But if you think about it, really the impacts that the outcomes of these proceedings have on people's lives are much more similar to criminal proceedings. It's the deprivation of liberty. You can literally lose the right to stay in the United States and be sent back to a country where you might be facing life-threatening violence. So we should, at the very least, give people the resources that they need to actually fight their case in court and qualify for protections that they might very well qualify for. And because we know that the impact of legal representation is really important in producing these positive outcomes in the immigration system, and there's a lot of research to back that up.
Reema Saleh:
Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Chiara Galli. This episode was produced and edited by Reema Saleh and Ricardo Sand. Thank you to our interviewers, Natalie Reyes, Gabriela Rivera, and Reema Saleh. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit the pearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
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Somaliland’s Independence | Bashir Goth
Root of Conflict Podcast
Episode: Somaliland’s Independence
featuring
Bashir Goth
interviewed by
Deqa Aden and Joshua Charles
October 26, 2022
Full Transcript
Reema Saleh: Hi. This is Reema, and you’re listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts.
Reema Saleh: You’re listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you’ll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with The Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Reema Saleh: The Republic of Somaliland is a de facto sovereign state in the Horn of Africa. Declaring independence from Somalia in 1991, Somaliland is a self-governing country with democratic elections and a distinct history on the continent, but it’s still considered part of Somalia by the international community. In this episode, we speak with Bashir Goth, the head of the Somaliland Mission in the United States about how Somaliland has navigated state building without international recognition. We talk about democracy and development, and what Somaliland has to offer the world in the coming decades.
Deqa Aden: I’m Deqa Aden, a second year Master of Public Policy student and a Pearson Fellow.
Bashir Goth: I’m Bashir Goth, a Somaliland Representative to the United States.
Joshua Charles: I’m Joshua Charles. I’m a second year Master of Public Policy candidate and Pearson fellow.
Reema Saleh: Hi, my name is Reema. I’m a second year Master student and Pearson Fellow.
Joshua Charles: I think to begin, could you introduce yourself? What do you do? What’s your background?
Bashir Goth: Okay. Currently I’m the representative of Somaliland to the United States. You can say an ambassador. So, I do what any ambassador in the world does. Before that, I was working in different areas. I work in the oil industry as a corporate communication advisor. I work in the media as a journalist. And I worked in international organizations also as a communication advisor. That’s my background.
Joshua Charles: Okay. That’s quite dynamic. And so given that you have extensive experience working in the intersection within the policy space, and when thinking about the relationship between Somaliland and Taiwan, it’s pretty clear that there is a synergistic dynamic that mutually embraces each country’s path towards independence. To what extent does Somaliland have similar relationships in place that are a characteristic of the country’s relationship with Taiwan?
Bashir Goth: Taiwan’s relationship was a very strategic decision for Somaliland. We are two countries which are in similar situations, political and geopolitics also. We are both existing states in the world, democratic states, but not recognized internationally. Both of us are bullied by bigger countries, China in terms of Taiwan, and for us, although they kind of bully us, we’re very weak, our neighbor, but they claim Somaliland as part of their country. So that’s what brought us together. And not only that, but we have common values, like democracy and human values and free market economy and all kinds of things have brought us together. So that’s how we established ties with Taiwan.
Deqa Aden: Are there any other states like Taiwan that are also seeking independence that Somaliland attempted to build a relationship in?
Bashir Goth: No, actually, because Somaliland has a unique status, a unique situation, historical background, and the only one that’s actually similar is Taiwan. But other countries that are struggling… they have their own problems that are quite different from Somaliland. Somaliland was an existing state before, during colonialism, and after colonialism they became independent, and now they just went back to their past status. Taiwan is almost the same. Taiwan was ruling China, and then during the Civil War the rulers of China were defeated, and they ran to Taiwan and kept the Chinese government in Taiwan. So actually, they claim that they are the real Chinese government and represent the Chinese people. And they were representing China in the Security Council in the United Nations until 1971, when the United States recognized China, and then China took the United Nations seat. So, we are similar states, but we don’t reach out to other countries which are in a different situation.
Joshua Charles: Wow, and so when thinking about Somaliland’s path to independence, do you believe there… What do you think is required to get there? And do you believe that a strategic partnership with Taiwan will be significant to Somaliland attending its independence?
Bashir Goth: No, they will not, because we are both struggling for independence. We are both struggling for international recognition. So that’s what brought us together. But Somaliland relations with Taiwan can play another role, which is Taiwan is a very, very close friend of the United States, both economically, strategically, and politically. And they have a great influence in the United States also. So that could play a role in bringing the United States closer to Somaliland, because any country that establishes relations with Taiwan will definitely be, by default, a friend of the United States, because the United States cares about that. And any country that actually severs or cuts relations with Taiwan, the United States gives them [a] hard time also. So that’s one way, but the search for independence will just go on in its own way and through different other channels.
Deqa Aden: Just to follow up on that, I think it was very important that you highlighted that shared interest and similar stories are important for Somaliland, which is why also Taiwan’s path is quite similar to Somaliland as well. And since this relation that has been formulated very recently: in what ways has Somaliland benefited from Taiwan’s strategic partnerships? In what way did Taiwan benefit from Somaliland as well?
Bashir Goth: Somaliland benefited definitely. Taiwan is an economic giant in the world today, especially in what you call information technology. It is one of the leading countries in semiconductor and chips and making things like that. And in that way, Taiwan is helping Somaliland in different areas, in agriculture, in health, in IT. Recently, they started actually something that’s similar to a technology park in Somaliland. In training our coast guards… even yesterday some members of the Taiwanese coast guards arrived in Somaliland, and they were in Berbera. So, they’re helping Somaliland in different ways, in different sectors economically and in investment also. They’re investing in Somaliland energy, they’re starting oil exploration in different parts of the country very soon, next year actually, in collaboration with an international energy company. And that’s what they’re doing. So, they’re helping Somaliland in different ways.
Bashir Goth: Taiwan is also benefiting from Somaliland, because Taiwan needs a foothold in Africa. And they have relations with only one country in Africa, that’s Eswatini. No other country. So, when they establish relations with Somaliland, that gives them a foothold in that strategic area of the Horn of Africa. And then at the same time, Somaliland can play a role in winning friends for Taiwan from our neighboring countries, and that’s another way. One particular thing is that China is in Djibouti. They have a big base in Djibouti. So, when Taiwan is in Somaliland, and they’re watching what China is doing there, it’s just next door. So, they have a lot of benefits also from there strategically.
Joshua Charles: So, it’s quite interesting to hear that within Somaliland there will be oil exploration in the next year. Aside from oil, what other commodities and materials are untapped right now?
Bashir Goth: Somaliland is basically a virgin country. It’s untapped. We have a lot of minerals, we have a lot of resources that are buried underground, and it has to be tapped. And currently we know that we have oil and probably gas. It’s a great potential for that. But the economy of the country, actually the backbone of the country’s economy, is livestock. We export a lot of livestock on the hoof—that means live animals—to the Gulf countries, especially to Saudi Arabia. So mostly we earn our economy from livestock, and we have some other local companies that produce for domestic use, domestic consumption, but not for export. Usually for export for the country also depends on the diaspora remittance, which actually is like $800 million a year of remittance. That plays a huge part also. And then the local revenue, whatever. Berbera Port is a growing port and a very important port. It’s going to be a hub in the Horn of Africa soon, and that will actually be a game changer for the economy of Somaliland and for the whole region.
Deqa Aden: Speaking of economy, one of the main reasons people are always impressed with Somaliland is how self-sustaining it is, because Somaliland doesn’t get any foreign investment, it doesn’t have a seat in any of the major multilateral organizations. The question is, how does Somaliland manage to do that? And I’ve seen and heard that you are very much about Somaliland sustaining the way it is. And to quote what you said earlier, which is really a beautiful statement, is that we don’t want aid, we just want partnerships. And I think that is something that’s quite unheard of. I was just curious if you can just touch base on that a little bit more, for the people to know more about it as well.
Bashir Goth: Somaliland has actually proven that any African country can live without aid. It’s really a real example, if you want to see a country that’s surviving without aid, and we did it. We did it because Somaliland… Number one, there is a will. The will of the people, that they have to live with the conditions that they have. They found themselves in this condition by default. They found themselves that they cannot access international financial organizations. Then they have to find a way to live. That’s human innovation. Where there’s a need… necessity is the mother of invention. So they decide, the government of Somaliland and the people of Somaliland, decided that they have to live by their own means. So the revenue the government generates goes to usually public things like the government employees’ salary, the armed force salary, and some kind of public services. But the country actually survives by the private sector. We have a free market economy. So the free market, the private sector plays a big role. Almost 80% of the country’s economy is run by the private sector. That’s how we survive.
Joshua Charles: Wow, and so when thinking about the need for investment and thinking about the potential or a current existence of a domestic bond market, what does that look like at the moment? And if the domestic bond market isn’t developed at the moment, do you see that being a tangible solution to address some financial deficits?
Bashir Goth: We have a domestic market and a domestic private economy that’s actually ready for international partnership. They’re ready. They can do anything. They have the latest technology, they have a lot of money, they deal with the world, private sector. So they’re ready for partnerships. So the moment Somaliland gets international investors, the atmosphere, the environment’s ready. So that’s what we are counting on. Already there are some companies have come, and others are now on the way. And I think very soon Somaliland will have very good investment and partnership from the world.
Deqa Aden: Other economic partnerships that came to my mind is UAE, which has built a port in Somaliland, which has shown a great interest in the region, and DP World as well. And this made me think of this world of international affairs, where if you made an ally in one space, then you are also sending signals to also their enemies at times, or maybe their competitors in the market as well. Has there been ways where, when Somaliland partnerships with one state economically, that other states may reach out as well and show an interest?
Bashir Goth: Yes. For example, number one, DP World of the United Arab Emirates was the first one that broke the taboo that nobody can deal with Somaliland, because how can you have a signed international agreement with the country that’s not internationally recognized? Because later on, if there are problems, where are you going to go for and things like that? So that was a problem. Dubai DP World is a world port operator. They have I think they operate more than 83 ports all over the world, including ports in the United States. So, they know how to work, and they know Somaliland because Somaliland people and the United Arab Emirate people had a long history together of migration, working together, all kind of things. So they know the Somaliland people.
Bashir Goth: So they came, they saw the port, they saw the potential of the port in the whole region, and where it’s placed historically. Berbera Port in the ‘80s and Berbera Airport also in the ‘80s, it used to be a Soviet base. Then when the Soviets left, it has become an American port base during the Carter administration. Berbera Airport has the longest runway in Africa. One of the longest… Actually, it’s the longest when you look at the part that’s not run by plane, it is the longest runway in Africa. And the United States used that runway at one time as an emergency landing for the Space Shuttle in the ‘80s. So, Dubai came, they saw the potential of this and said we’re going to invest money in this. And the signed an agreement with the Somaliland government. They’re spending $450 million on that in two phases. First phase is over, second phase will be finished next year, and then it’s going to be state of the art port in the whole region. That’s number one.
Bashir Goth: Then the UK, after Brexit, they were looking for markets. They came to Berbera, and they know Somaliland. There’s nobody who knows Somaliland more than the British. And they said, “Okay, we are joining hands with DP World and we are going to invest in five even African ports, including in Berbera in Somaliland.” One in Egypt, one in Senegal, and some others, but Berbera was one of them. And the British are spending like 200-something million dollars for Berbera Corridor, roads coming from Berbera all the way to Ethiopia. And others will follow. I cannot say it now exactly, but I know that when I was talking to the Minister of Investment and Minister of Trade, they told me there is a number of companies that approach Somaliland for investment. So, it’s coming. It’s coming.
Joshua Charles: That’s exciting. That’s exciting. So, when thinking about UK’s relationship with Somaliland, it’s clear that there’s been some type of financial incentive for the UK to operate or to allocate capital to Somaliland projects. But outside of that financial relationship, politically, culturally, is there any type of dynamic that is of interest to you?
Bashir Goth: Yes. Culturally there is because Britain used to be the colonizer of Somaliland during the colonial period. There is a huge Somaliland diaspora in the UK, and Somalilanders have been in UK for a long, long time. Since 19th century, Somaliland seaman have been… They have established even areas in UK where they’re known. So culturally, there are long cultural ties. But yes, UK is after its own economic interest, but at the same time its strategic interest, because the place where Somaliland is located in the Horn Africa, the Gulf of Aden… You know, the Gulf of Aden sea coast, more than 11% of international oil tankers pass through that. Imagine that. So it’s a very strategic place, why all these countries are coming to have bases, for example, in Djibouti and other areas, because this is an economical nerve for the whole world. So they have an eye on that also. So a lot of things…
Deqa Aden: Going back to my also previous question. With all these new partnerships and all these companies coming from these different countries, you don’t also have to answer it either, has there been any negative consequences from building partnership with their opposing allies as well, or that’s not the case…
Bashir Goth: Not yet. Not yet.
Deqa Aden: Okay. That’s good.
Bashir Goth: Because we don’t have that many companies that have come. So not yet.
Deqa Aden: Okay. That’s good. That’s good to know. Now, moving back from economy to democracy, I think one of the most fascinating things about Somaliland is the latest freedom health score in 2022, which Somaliland scored higher than a lot of sub-Saharan African countries, including the Middle East, also including UAE as well and Qatar. And that is something that a lot of academics are really fascinated with. So, first question is, how did Somaliland build this democracy that people are just fascinated with?
Bashir Goth: Somaliland has actually built a democracy that’s a blend or a mix between traditional way that Somalilanders used to run their affairs and modern democracy. So, after the Civil War and the collapse of the former central government of Somalia, and when the people came together and they reclaimed their independence, they had to build their country back. So, they have to resort what they knew. Resorting to what they knew is how they used to run their country. So Somaliland people used to have a kind of pastoral democracy, which was natural democracy. People come, sit together under a tree, discuss things, no age barrier, sometimes gender barrier, everybody will have a voice. And then they will discuss, they’ll make a decision, and then that decision will be binding for everybody. And that’s how we have to do. When there is, for example, a conflict between clans, that’s how they used to solve. So that is our tradition.
Bashir Goth: And then with modern democracy, which we have to give credit to our founder, a guy who considered as a founder of Somaliland, who is Muhammad Ibrahim Egal, he was our independence leader in 1960, the first prime minister. And he was one of the independence leaders in Africa at that time. So he was a man who knew how democracy works. He was a man who went through this struggle of independence. So he became the president and he laid the foundation of Somaliland, modern democracy, and he knew how to deal with traditional… and win the trust of people, and he worked with that. So it was not a one person, but he was the leader, and the leader makes a difference everywhere. Mandela made a difference for South Africa, for example.
Bashir Goth: So he actually led this democratization of Somaliland. The Somaliland people were willing to do that, they adopted democracy. And over the last 31 years, there are more than five presidents that peacefully took over from each other the power. We are the only country in the Horn of Africa, for example… The second country could be Kenya. Kenya from 1963 when they became independent until now, there are only five presidents. Somaliland in 30 years, half of Kenya’s age, there are five presidents that replaced each other by universal election. One man, one person, one vote. That’s how we do it every time. Our parliament, our presidents.
Bashir Goth: And the unique thing about Somaliland, which is actually the only country that did that, the whole world, is we do our elections by… We use iris recognition, biometric identification. So that rules out any irregularities or rigging the election or things like that. So we are the first country in the world to use that biometric iris recognition. So international observers come to our elections, and there is not a single time that the international observers, including the IRA, which was the first to come, there is not a single time they did not testify that Somaliland elections was free and fair. Yes, in any election there’ll be some little here and there irregularities and problems, anywhere in the world. We have here in the United States, and we know that. But Somaliland actually has a very good record in that.
Bashir Goth: And that’s how the freedom… We have other problems also, for example. Freedom of speech. Freedom of speech is very, very good in Somaliland. Anybody can say anything against the government, against any institution, and against any organization. And we actually say in Somaliland we have more freedom than necessary, because anybody can say anything. But at the same time, we are a young democracy, so sometimes we have issues. For example, some reporters may be detained by the government because they said something, but that’s not literally because the government is against criticism, but it’s because we are fragile state, surrounded by a very tough neighborhood. These young reporters who are mostly unprofessional and untrained can just go to anybody and interview somebody who can say any flagrant statements that he wants to say against another clan, and that could cause a clash. That’s the time for some that person is detained. So things like that happen, which we don’t like, because freedom of speech has to be freedom of speech. But comparatively in our neighborhood, actually we’re the best.
Joshua Charles: Wow, that’s quite interesting. When considering the evolution of a democracy, like you mentioned, there will always be some issues that remain unaddressed in America. You have it within the politically elected officials, the representation can be more proportionate to the actual American population. Within Somaliland, from my understanding, there’s a lack of female representation within parliament. When that translates to policy, to the policy making process, what are some of the consequences of that, and what are some of the policies in place to amplify female representation within politics?
Bashir Goth: So generally, you’ll talk about political inclusiveness, inclusive politics, whether it’s female or any other people. Let me first go back a little and answer the question Deqa asked me. There [is a] very important factor I forgot. In Somaliland, we did not just dream when they came up with democracy. It went through a long process. And this long process was, for example, after we reclaimed our independence, we had more than probably ten community conferences in different parts of the country, where people came together to resolve local conflicts and local issues and things like that. And these went through states until it came to the grand meeting in Burao in 1994, where all the clans and everybody came together and they drafted the national charter for Somaliland, and Egal was elected. So it went through… It was a community-based process that started from the grassroots and then grew up all the way to the top.
Bashir Goth: Coming back to your question, political inclusiveness is always not an easy job. It’s a very, very difficult thing. You cannot satisfy all people all the time. There will always be gaps that has to be... There will always be improvements to be done. So we have these gaps, we have these shortcomings, but we try our best, and think all the communities are represented in Somaliland political institutions and political bodies. There are not elected women in our parliament, but they’re also represented in the government. They are in different parts of the government and departments and organizations and civil societies. Actually, women are very, very strong in civil societies. They have the strongest voice in civil societies. So they will come also to the political leadership one day, and they’re fighting for that, and we are helping them. But otherwise, we are moving forward. That’s what I can say.
Deqa Aden: I think just to build up on all the things you’ve said, mass misinformation is a threat to democracy, not only in Somaliland, across the world, and even the U.S. also struggling with social media and how that’s a threat to their strong democracy, which complicates freedom of speech. So this struggle you mentioned, it’s a struggle that a lot of countries have, and there’s a lot of debates about it, of how do we move forward? Because we want people to know the correct information and wouldn’t want misinformation to be the cause of civil war. As you said, we are a fragile state itself, and we’re right next to Somalia. And I think that’s really important to highlight, so I just wanted to also reemphasize that.
Deqa Aden: But going back even before that, I think the history of Africa in academic context, or in this part of the world, somehow it starts colonial times, as if there was no Africa before colonial times. So to me, it was really important when you mentioned that there was pastoral democracy even before colonial times, and there was Somaliland before the British came, and then that was part of the ingredients that made the democracy that we have right now. So the unfinished part of democracy, because there’s always going to be an unfinished part, and there’s the part we always admire, I’ve always been one of those people who admires Somaliland’s democracy because just no one knows about it, and it’s really fascinating. Where should the unfinished part focus on in the next couple of decades? Where should Somaliland’s unfinished democracy should work on… And as you said, democracy’s a project…
Bashir Goth: Yeah. Exactly.
Deqa Aden: It’s always constantly improving. So the unfinished part, how should we envision Somaliland in the next couple of decades?
Bashir Goth: The most important part for the unfinished parts would be women participation in Somaliland policymaking or decision making. That’s number one. Number two will be general political inclusiveness, which there are always grievances in Somaliland. Another thing will be, for example, every country has a constitution, but the constitution is a living document. It has to go through change all the time. Somaliland, over the last 30 years, we did not look back at our constitution. And that has to be done, and that will address a lot of constitutional problems in democracy of Somaliland. So I think these are the areas that we have to go through in the coming decade or years.
Bashir Goth: And another one will be youth employment. That’s a problem not only in Somaliland, but all over of Africa. By 2050, predictions are African population will be like 4 billion, and maybe 80% of that will be below 30. Imagine. How are you going get employment for that? It’s called the youth bulge. And the other African countries are suffering from that, and unemployment is really very high. What do you think of Somaliland, which doesn’t have access to international financial markets? It’s pretty difficult. So that’s another area also that we have to actually address.
Deqa Aden: Mm-hmm. Definitely.
Joshua Charles: Right. Youth, that’s the future of any society, and I have quite a few friends who live in Uganda, and one of my friends, she just graduated from Makerere University within the last few months. She jokes around and she says, “I’m an unemployed youth.” But that’s an unfortunate reality for many people within that region of the world. So thinking about… Okay, it’s clear that Somaliland is not well integrated into the international financial system, but there is certainly potential. From the government’s perspective, what can be done to enhance the job market for youth? What are some of the strategic partnerships that can be in place to actually support the youth employment?
Bashir Goth: For now, what Somaliland government is doing, not only Somaliland government, but Somaliland government and together with the private sector, they are trying to do a lot of things actually. Number one is employment, whoever they can employ. That’d be a very small number. The private sector can employ more. That’s one thing. At the same time, it’s giving skills to young people, young graduates for example, skills that they can start their own businesses. So that’s another one. Give them small loans that they can start their own small businesses. That’s another way they can do it. And attracting international investment, which is a huge thing, because once investment comes to, for example, now Berbera Airport. It’s employing a lot of youth who have been trained and skilled, and they’re working there. So when investment comes, it will generate a lot of employment. So, when the economy grows, employment also grows with it.
Bashir Goth: So that’s what we are trying to do a lot of… but it’s very difficult to catch up, because thousands of students graduate every year, just like any other country. And they come to the market, and the market is very small, so imagine. But we are trying to find ways actually, every single day the government and private sector are coming up with new ideas and new ways. Even the youth are coming up with their own new ideas. So we’ll think that some of these will work out. Maybe like we survive without international aid, maybe we can also teach the world how to create employment for the youth… Could be.
Deqa Aden: Absolutely. Another point that I thought of was… I was also in Somaliland last year, especially working on a business incubator for youth for finding jobs. And it was shocking to me because oftentimes we market Africa as a… “There’s no education. We have to educate women. We have to educate the youth.” And I was like, no, education was never the problem. In fact, education itself is the problem, because you have a mass of graduates who are really high skilled, who are ready and want to use their skills. And that can lead to a lot of frustration, so sometimes the youth just want to leave the country and want to come to this part of the world where they can put their education to use. Has illegal migration… Has it been a problem? Because I couldn’t pinpoint, with just knowing how unemployment is such a big deal, where are these youth going?
Bashir Goth: Somaliland actually never had that big a problem with mass youth immigration, illegal immigration. We had some of our young people who actually went through illegal immigration, and they traveled through, for example, Ethiopia, Sudan, and from Sudan to Libya, and all the way to the Mediterranean, taking boats from the Mediterranean, from Libya. Some of them did that. A number of them did that, actually. But usually, we didn’t have that mass migration like other African countries have. For example, like the Sahel countries that thousands of young people, hundreds of young people, are every day crossing the Mediterranean and dying many of them there. We don’t have that. We don’t have that.
Bashir Goth: But the good thing about Somaliland is that we are a very close-knit community, so people help each other, families help each other, communities help each other. So young people don’t get actually… They may be unemployed, but they will always have a place to sleep, a place to eat something, a little pocket money. They will always have that, because their family, their larger family, will be helping, whether they are in the diaspora or inside or wherever. So the social cohesion of the Somaliland people is very important and helps them. But that will only take you so far, actually…
Deqa Aden: Only so far.
Bashir Goth: If you know the Middle East, what actually caused the Arab uprising was youth unemployment. And the Arabs have a lot of money, but because of the political system, youth could not get employment. So that’s what caused the Arab Spring. But then when the Arab Spring took place, then it ended up with a disaster, because when there is a movement and there’s no leadership and vision, then it ends up with chaos. So that’s also a good lesson for other countries, so Somaliland youth also see that. And I don’t expect anything like that happening in Somaliland, or maybe anywhere in Africa in the future. But it’s a problem worldwide, even in the United States. We have a lot of unemployment here, especially now. So that’s a big problem.
Joshua Charles: True. Especially within the last three years, unemployment rates have skyrocketed within America as well as in other parts of the world. When I have conversations about Africa, it seems that many people find it easy to generalize certain characteristics of individuals within the continent. But in reality, there are so many different identities, just like any other part of the world. So when thinking about the communal aspect of Somaliland, how do you think religion reinforces that propensity of the collective society?
Bashir Goth: Religion was traditionally part of our culture. It was just part of the Somaliland people’s culture. Religion was never a problem. It was not something that was separate from the Somaliland culture. But in the ‘90s and after the ‘90s, an alien type of Islam came to the Somaliland people from Arabia, like anywhere else in the world, and that infiltrated into the community. And what you see today in Somalia and Al-Shabaab is actually an alien culture, alien kind of Islam that came to our region, came from Arabia, especially from Saudi Arabia, called Wahhabism. And that’s a radical school of Islam that doesn’t tolerate any other lifestyle.
Bashir Goth: So actually, we suffered from that for quite some time, but because of our traditionally strong foundations of Islam, we came over that. So we don’t have that problem. That’s why we don’t have in Somaliland any radical violence in our country. We don’t have that. So our traditional Islam came back, that’s a Sufi Islam, traditional Islam, that was part of the people’s culture that was spiritual. And we live with that. That’s our culture. That’s our culture.
Deqa Aden: Mm-hmm. And I think that’s also another shock to the world, how is Somalia a hub for one of the biggest terrorist organizations, and Somaliland is nothing like that, and they’re right next door to one another? So I’m glad you mentioned that it somehow all comes down to culture and the traditions and the infrastructure that was there before all these problems.
Bashir Goth: Exactly.
Deqa Aden: Speaking of research, one of the main gaps across Africa, even the most developed countries, is lack of investment from the government to invest in research. And research is the bridge that takes the continent and shares that information with the rest of the world. So often when people ask me, “What’s a Somalilander?” They always say, “We’re interested, but we know nothing.” And I always say, me too, I just know my lived experiences, but there’s not a book that I could recommend or something strong. Do you see any future for Somaliland investing in its own research? Because with all this wisdom you share today, or lessons, we have to put that into writing, for a book for the world to read.
Bashir Goth: That’s actually an advice that I always give to Somaliland universities when I meet them. Whenever I go back to the country and I meet them, I always tell them research, research, research. Because a university without research will not benefit the community in which they exist. Because they have to look at the community, look at the problems with the community, and they have to make research about it. Governments rely on universities for their policies. For some, like your school here, probably you produce so many papers on different policies of the United States. So this probably would be taken by the Congress or by politicians, and then they implement it. And that that’s very important. Whether it’s science, whether it’s political science, whether it’s art, everything.
Bashir Goth: So we are very weak in research. We have to build our research capabilities. We have to find funding. Public funding would be the best, because when you have private funding, then there will be an interest in that. But also, private funding will come on board. So I know for example now the universities of Amoud and Hargeisa, actually they started their own research departments, and they have went through a lot of training, and they’re doing good work now, but it will take some time until they pick up. I think Amoud and Hargeisa, both of them now produce some kind of journals, research journals where they publish their papers, and I hope that increases also. It will come.
Bashir Goth: But that’s actually what… Not only Somaliland but all Africa suffers from that. And I was actually thinking, probably Africa has to create their own research or scientific journals. Because if the best African paper comes out from any university in Africa, it will be very difficult, if not impossible, to publish in one of these scientific or academic journals in the Western world, because they have their own… It’s like clubs. So you have to be a certain race, you have to be certain something. You know, you guys. Otherwise, you cannot publish it. I have read a story where two actual researchers, they were Europeans, made research about that, and they couldn’t publish their papers. Then they took the names of famous, well-known academics, scholars, and they sent their papers with the name of these scholars, and they were published. Same papers. So, there is a racism and discrimination also in academic journals in the world. So probably it’s time that Africa, Latin America, whoever, have to create their own.
Joshua Charles: That would certainly change the tides of the academic space, especially how people from abroad, they often come to America, go to Europe, to advance their education, to get master’s degrees, PhDs, LLMs. But if there are some opportunities within Africa to contribute to the academic space in a meaningful way, in lieu of taking a trip outside of the continent, then I think there would be a lot of incentive from citizens from Somaliland, as well as from other citizens across the continent.
Joshua Charles: So just thinking about… Shifting gears a bit to the Central Bank. Infrastructure development… it sounds like there is tremendous potential for infrastructure development, and there are currently a lot of large projects in place that are scheduled to be done in the next year. Political stability is crucial to seeing the completion of these projects, as well as in the case of force majeure, say war or something like that, it’s crucial that infrastructure projects have a way to cross the finish line. So just thinking about the role of the central bank, what are some strategies in place that can be employed to actualize some of these infrastructure projects that are on the to-do list? And in what ways can these projects be employed that appeals to stakeholders like America, continued support from the UK, from UAE?
Bashir Goth: Actually, we have a central bank, but the Central Bank doesn’t have any role or have oversight on projects. They control the financial system of the country, for example. They looked at the country’s inflation, they have to control the inflation. They have to control the currency and the rate of the currency. They have the money of the state. They can give loans to the state or even private sector who wants that. And that’s their role as a central bank, like any other bank in the world does. But the oversight of projects and infrastructure and all these things have other departments, whether it’s ministries or independent departments, there are departments who are looking on that.
Deqa Aden: Mm-hmm. And now I’m going to ask you the last question. I think it seems like Somaliland is a really young country, and the current leadership and the previous one, you guys have sacrificed a lot to sustain the way it is right now. It’s a hypothetical question. If Somaliland was the most developed country in the world and you didn’t have to sacrifice anything, what path of career you would have chosen for yourself? And what would Ambassador Bashir would have been, if Somaliland was the most developed country?
Bashir Goth: Professor.
Deqa Aden: Professor?
Bashir Goth: Of a university. Especially on literature and probably international relations, but mostly on literature. Because that’s my…
Deqa Aden: Your passion.
Bashir Goth: Yeah, exactly. Yeah. That was my actual ambition when I was a student. But then when I finished university in Somalia and I left the country and I went to the Middle East and I was on my way to the United States, my father got sick. And I was the eldest of the family. All my brothers and sister were in the middle of school, and who would take care of them? That’s why I just started to work. But my intention was to be a professor. I was a good student. So that was my… But I did not stop. I’m a lifelong learner. So I don’t have the title, but I do a lot of things, so I don’t regret that.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Bashir Goth. This episode was produced and edited by Reema Saleh and Ricardo Sande. Thank you to our interviewers, Deqa Aden and Joshua Charles. Special thanks to UC3P and The Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on The Pearson Institute’s research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
12.04.22
Trust After Betrayal | Erin McFee
Root of Conflict
11.04.22
Gender and Conflict | Lina Haddad Kreidie
Episode: Gender and Conflict
featuring
Lina Haddad Kreidie, political psychologist and academic director of gender studies at the Lebanese American University
interviewed by
Hannah Balikci and Zareen Hussain, Pearson Fellows
Thursday October 13, 2022
Full Transcript
Reema Saleh: Hi, this is Reema and you’re listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You’re listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. In this series, you’ll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
How do war and displacement disproportionately impact women? In this episode, we speak with
Dr. Lina Haddad Kreidie, a political psychologist and academic director of gender studies at the Lebanese American University. Her research centers marginalized communities, mainly displaced and refugee women in the Middle East. We discuss her work with the Intisar Foundation, studying drama therapy as a mental health intervention for refugee women and how it’s impacted communities within the camps.
Zareen Hussein:
Hello, my name is Zareen Hussein. I am a second-year public policy student at the Harris School of Public Policy.
Hannah Balikci: And I am Hannah Balikci. I’m a first-year student at the Harris School of Public Policy.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: My name is Lina Haddad Kreidie and I am the academic director of Gender Studies at the Lebanese American University. And I am a research consultant for an NGO for the Intisar foundation. Intisar Foundation works with women empowerment for socioeconomically disadvantaged women who are impacted by war and violence.
Zareen Hussein: Could you tell us how you came to your work? What brought you to this intersection between gender, mental health, and conflict?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Just to rewind a bit, my degree is in political science, and I did a concentration in political psychology. So my gender focus and work on women came as a result, what we call experiential learning. And based on my own experiences and my own observations and analysis of the different theories and readings I went through. I found that women are invisible, mainly in the political field. And even when they are in, they are subordinated, they are used as tokens and not as effective decision makers.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So this brought me to try to explore more on the causes and the barriers that lead to such gender discrimination. I also wanted to see this in different cultures. So I’ve read a lot about gender inequality in the western world, but it was not enough explanatory basis to understand the gender inequalities in the Arab world. And my work now, I moved from University of California Irvine to Lebanon to do the work on conflict management and to teach in political science. But I wanted to base my research on gender, starting with women. But with my new position, I’m expanding to look at all marginalized communities and intersectional inequalities where we use race, ethnicity, class, disabilities, and women and men, because gender is not only about women. So this is where my research is landing now, and my academic and intellectual work is at the University. My teaching and the student-based learning process that’s taking place on campus is also linked to my work with Intisar Foundation and the approach of empowering women.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: And I noticed that this drama therapy intervention, which I was suspicious at the beginning, of its effectiveness, is an excellent and effective approach that brings in not only psychoanalysis, which I’ve read a lot about, and cognitive behavioral therapy and EDMR and all those individual approaches to helping people with psychological issues and specifically people who are impacted by compounded traumas.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: In cultures where psychological counseling is considered a stigma and where women are, and men, usually don’t see psychologists or psychiatrists because they would be stigmatized as crazy, and men would with their hyper masculinity, “No, I’m not crazy,” And women would be afraid to do so. And in academia also I noticed that even in my promotions and academic life, because I got married young and I had children, I would see myself and all the women around me as delayed in their progress. This is at the workplace sector.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: In the humanitarian field, I noticed that women are prominent and specifically in Lebanon where CSOs and the NGOs took the place of the government in terms of providing services. And it was usually women who started and founded and are active in such NGOs. So I noticed that there is a parallel of the role of women where in some sectors they are subordinated, they’re weak, but they are given the care, which is also the associated role that was subscribed to them since birth. Women are the caring, men are the providers. So yes, this is what’s happening, this dualism in functions in Lebanon where the NGOs are run by women, they are the ones who keep the social fabric of the society in a country that is broken by divisiveness.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So not to expand too much on this but to focus on mainly marginalized communities, which is a subject you are interested in, the Intisar foundation is the field work where I felt myself, I’m not only needing analyzing and writing policy recommendations based on synthesizing literature, but also I am doing it in the field. This is what really brought me to Intisar Foundation and this work.
Hannah Balikci: How did you first get involved with the Intisar Foundation?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: It was in a meeting at the Lebanese American University. Actually, my husband, who’s a neurologist and a psychiatrist, met with the CEO of the foundation and they were talking about their work to him because he’s a neurologist, and he said, “No, no, my wife is best, she’s a political psychologist, she’s interested in women empowerment and she keeps talking about gender issues,” so here comes the man. He said, “This is women empowerment, this is not my job,” although they wanted to recruit him. So he referred them to me and this is where we found each other, actually. And it was the best time where I could translate my work on the ground. And I met Sheikha Intisar AlSabah, who is the founder. She’s from the royal family of Kuwait. And one would think that they are not involved with the people, but she’s very much involved with the people. And for children we manage bullying, but for women it’s the drama therapy intervention.
Zareen Hussein: Before we get into understanding what drama therapy is, can you help, for those who don’t know, what is political psychology?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Excellent. Political psychology is a field that focuses on the micro level of analysis When we are analyzing any issue, whether it’s electoral issue, electoral campaign, leadership, decision making at the level of the government, the behavior of individuals and groups, political psychology explains the why question. Meaning, for example, to explain terrorism, we don’t judge, we explain why those groups chose to do this. So we look at the emotions, we look at the psychology of fear, we look at identity politics, we look at the cognitive behavioral aspects in the sense of the group-think aspect, the conformity aspect, what we consider as cognitive dissonance, meaning we have mental schemas, we have norms. So when something happens that contradicts our mental schema, we give it the deaf ear and the blind eye. And how we build empathy and altruism, and all those factors are part of explaining conflicts and other issues pertaining to human interaction.
Zareen Hussein: And that’s really interesting because, for example, when talking about ISIS, the uninformed thought is that it’s just extremists joining an extremist group where there’s a lot more caveats to that.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yes.
Zareen Hussein: So Dr. Lina, could you give us an example on everything you’ve just said, maybe in Lebanon or with ISIS specifically?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: You know, I will start with my own. As I mentioned, everything comes with experience. When I was in Lebanon in the ‘80s, I saw around us that religiosity has been increasing, and there is a resurgence of Islamist groups, Muslim Brotherhood and others. And women who did not wear any covers, we started seeing more women with cover. I said, “What’s happening? Why is this happening?” And then there was the political tension between the US and certain groups in Lebanon, and we started seeing hostages taken.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: And at every corner of the road, it’s the Islamists. It’s the Islamists who are doing the harm and so on. And I believe this because we saw that there is this. And Libya came to train certain Islamist groups. Iran came to train other Islamist groups, and the whole region was involved in Lebanon. And this is during the Civil War. So I wanted to do this study, but I could not because of the threats the professors had from Islamist groups. The professor I was working with was a British guy: he was kidnapped in Lebanon, and I thought it was because of the study he was helping me with, and it was not.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So I had the question of why blame Islamist groups? So to make the story short, to understand I wanted to look at the economic, the political situation. I could not find the right answer. It was always insufficient. So I thought into that. I went into the individual level of analysis, to understand the difference between how they view the world versus how the West views the world. For example, what does terrorism mean to them? What does self-sacrifice, a freedom fighter versus terrorist? What does democracy mean to them? Because we’ve learned that there is no democracy in Islam, but they do have an understanding of democracy completely different. They base it on justice, while in the US we base it on individual freedoms. So there are different understandings. So this was based on my political psychology background.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: For the ISIS situation, also the concept of yes, there are Islamist groups who are using Islam as a political tool, and they are vulnerable because of the marginalization they lived in. So whether they are men and women, who lately started joining ISIS, because we have these misperceptions that only men do that, but also women, yes with a lesser number, because they felt they were marginalized in their communities and they found an answer in this ideological, religious, emotional attachment. This could be an example, but the Palestinian camps and the Syrian camps are hubs of extremism. So when you have extreme poverty, marginalization, certain perceptions of people as being prone to being terrorists. So when you give them a certain role, they become the role, and it becomes them. So political psychology helps us understand how to explain, so we can solve the problem better. That’s the idea behind political psychology.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: In addition to, we did analysis of the Gulf War. And how a country like the US where we have leaders who are in power and they are supposedly intellectuals and the best in making decisions, they come up with defective decision making and it’s based on certain phenomenon that’s called groupthink. When you are working in a group and you want to belong into the group, even if they’re making a bad decision, the misperceptions of the situation, the in-group, out-group, “I love my in-group, I hate the other group.” So you tend to make defective decision makings and personalities and the right-wing authoritarianism and all of this.
Zareen Hussein: So definitely an us-versus-them mentality?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: It is the us-versus-them mentality.
Hannah Balikci: In regards to what you were mentioning about refugee camps, we know that women and children make up over half of all refugees, internally displaced and stateless people. Why is bringing a gender perspective to conflict and displacement important in the context of refugees, and what happens when it’s not taken into account?
Zareen Hussein: And also definitely in political psychology, why are the women not in that discourse?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Men usually are the ones in the war. So when there is displacement and forced migration, the majority are women who leave. And during that time women are disproportionately impacted because they are the ones who take care of the house. They are the ones who take care of the children. So when their husbands are not around, they have a double burden. They have to provide, and they have to care. So it’s both jobs are done on them.
Zareen Hussein: So it’s a shift in the gender roles, almost.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Exactly. There’s a shift. So this is one. On the other hand, if men are also with the woman in the house, and she’s not a single mom, as we mentioned, his role becomes less because humanitarian agencies with their mindset that we have to help the women. So it’s not the right approach because when you give the woman, I remember from my work in Jordan with refugees, the woman would get the 20 dinar to spend, and the male is sitting at home and he feels “What happened to my role? I am the man of the house.”
Zareen Hussein: Demasculinization.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Exactly. Demasculation. And his hyper-masculinity gets attacked and hurt, and this is where the toxic masculinity starts to work and he transfers it on his wife and children, mainly girls. And this is where domestic violence rises at times of crisis. So there is a need to definitely support men and women, but more so women because they are disproportionally impacted, and they are the backbone of the family.
They do both jobs when needed. They do revert to informal jobs, and they don’t ask for much, which is something that’s not good. Because they are used to, “I have to do it. I am the mother, I sacrifice.” Most of their work is unpaid, but they try to do everything when they need to. So it becomes their motherly work and their informal work where they get paid less. So they tend to be the ones hired more than men, but this adds to their trauma, this adds to their bad relationship at home with their husbands and brothers.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So there is a need, and supporting women meaning supporting the family and supporting the community. And I believe, if the mother is able to listen to her husband, not in the sense of being obedient, in the sense of understanding the background of his violence and being able to communicate with him better and not accepting what he does by being more self-confident, by reporting if she has violence, if there’s any violent attacks against her.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Because usually woman in those communities tend to be afraid of reporting because this might increase their violence. So with the drama therapy we do, we help them report. So it is important to make those communities more peaceful, to reduce the vulnerability to extremism so their children would learn from them the significance of communication, the significance of speaking up, the significance of finding other ways of expressing their anger. It doesn’t have to be transferring it on other people and so on. So yeah, that’s mainly some of the factors that are helpful.
Hannah Balikci: Great. You’ve said previously that women who have experienced trauma, such as war and displacement, usually don’t seek help because of their inability to know that they need help. What are the consequences, like you were just mentioning about the effects on their children, what are the consequences of not taking this trauma and how it impacts people into consideration?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: I think it is very important. First, to bring awareness to all, and more so to women because women are suppressed and, as I mentioned, they don’t report their situation. They feel that they are responsible, and they have to take it in: “I’m not going to get angry at my husband or report because I have to keep the peace in the house.” But they are actually destroying themselves from within. So they need to be become more aware of the need for psychological help. And this is something that needs to be done via NGOs or even for girls at school to start with this. So as this will bring more awareness and then the way they raise their children, the way they speak to their husbands and to their community, would be more effective. Just if you want to repeat the question because I think I missed an aspect of it.
Hannah Balikci: What are the consequences of not taking this trauma, and how it impacts people, into consideration?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: If you don’t treat psychological illnesses, they could become more physiologically destructive. Meaning, for example, post-traumatic stress disorder, the more it becomes severe, the more it impacts the brain, it affects the memory, it affects the emotions, they become more angry because of the low impulse control, they tend to be aggressive. I did a study on the link between post-traumatic stress disorder and violence, and there was a significant correlation between PTSD and aggression because people tend to react with anger and they regret it after, but they keep repeating it and they know that they did something wrong, but they cannot control their emotions. So imagine a community where, like among Syrians, every three Syrians in Lebanon, one has PTSD. Every four, one has generalized anxiety.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So if you have a community with all those psychological disorders, then you have a tendency for more violence. I know there are many studies on the macro level that blame Islam or blame the culture or blame economic situation. Yes, these could be factors, but if you have a healthy mental health or a healthy psychology, then you don’t have any psychological disorders, then you can manage the situation better. You can manage your poverty better, you can manage marginalization. We all, as women, we go through this. If we have the ability to deal with it in a healthier way, then we reduce use the problems of... There are many studies done in the US on the veterans with PTSD when they come back from war, and we have higher rates of suicide, we have high rates of domestic violence, specifically because the government is not spending enough to support them.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Imagine in countries like Lebanon or Syria or Iraq or Yemen where the government is lacking and they’re not providing. If NGOs are not active, or any institution, in helping such communities, then we are leading those countries into disasters. So yes, mental health is very important. I think reconstruction of zones of conflict or when you want to build peace, you cannot have peace if the levels of psychological traumas or compound traumas are not relieved, then we don’t build highways if we don’t have people that are productive and healthy.
Zareen Hussein: Absolutely. And I think using the US veterans example is perfect because I know our conversation is about women and how they respond to the lack of resources while also experiencing PTSD, like you said, there’s violence, domestic violence. But imagine on the flip side, men who are also in this exact same situation. There’s an immense high rate of suicide amongst US veterans, and they’re going through the similar things: PTSD, lack of resources. So it’s almost not even a binary gender situation, it’s just a humanitarian issue, but we’re addressing it through a gendered lens.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Exactly.
Hannah Balikci: Would you say that the PTSD levels of refugees in camps is a factor in terms of the gender-based violence that is... We know that gender-based violence surged during COVID-19 as a shadow pandemic, and it’s also very prevalent within refugee camps in general. Is the factor of PTSD amongst the camps, do you think, related to the increase in gender-based violence in refugee camps?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: There’s a variable, or a confounding variable. For the patriarchic system and the masculinity factor, it becomes toxic at times of crisis. Refugees live in crisis. When they live in a camp, it’s a crisis situation. And when males are unable to provide, so their masculinity factor impacts their relationship with their wives, and even boys who are seen as lesser than them. So definitely the gender factor, the patriarchal system. But then PTSD is an added factor because they have low impulse control, they have been going through trauma. And the trauma, it could be war and violence, but it could be also their inability to meet the masculinity expectations. So this is an added trauma for men, which I think should be also resolved.
Zareen Hussein: And Hannah, just going off of what you asked, I can also see how those suffering from PTSD in these camps are attracted to extremism. Because like you said, they’re demasculinized, they have these violent tendencies. And I’m talking about both men and women in this situation because a lot of women, young women, joined ISIS.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yeah, I agree 100%. And there are other psychological disorders, but there are studies that have proven that there is a link between PTSD and violence because of the low impulse control, and it depends on the level of PTSD, the severe ones versus mild or moderate ones. So yes, it is a factor.
Zareen Hussein: Dr. Lina, we’ve been talking a lot about what happens when there’s a lack of resources. You, alongside the Intisar Foundation, you work a lot on drama therapy as a, not necessarily alternative to CBT or EMDR but a…
Lina Haddad Kreidie: An intervention, a group therapy intervention versus an individual-based intervention. Definitely, psychoanalysis or the couch psychoanalysis or the CBT or the EDMR can help. Some of them, they have to be within a short period of time. For example, with PTSD, if you don’t really treat the person who witnessed aggression or who suffers from drama within a certain period of time, it’s helpless. It does not help, psychoanalysis or CBT.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Drama therapy applies also for people where the witnessing of the event passed for some time, so it has an added value. And it is group therapy, which is one of the criteria also from reading the VA history, that social cohesion, social support, is very important. In the US, we know that they talk about it in the family, it’s well reported, but in refugee camps they keep it a secret, they don’t even know about it. So when they are suffering from a problem and they go to an NGO for help, they start becoming aware. They tell them, “Oh, you need counseling,” or “You have depression,” or “You could have the PTSD.” And definitely the diagnosis is built only on clinical and not the other factors. So when we are using drama therapy, we are basing it on clinical analysis done by other NGOs and psychiatrists and psychologists. So it’s an intervention approach that has its own value on its own, because it can happen after a long period of time. It doesn’t have to be within this short period after the event itself.
Hannah Balikci: And I think it’s an interesting point you’ve made about drama therapy and the group aspect of it. How has it made an impact within the refugee communities you worked in and how do you evaluate? If you’re taking into drama therapy, how do you evaluate the pre and post impacts of it within the communities that you’ve worked in?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Drama therapy in itself is a very intensive program and the main purpose of this is to improve emotional awareness and self-awareness, to create a sense of belonging. Something that refugees, men and women, in our case, the women, have an identity crisis. In Lebanon, specifically, they are displaced. They’re considered internally displaced because Lebanon is not a signatory to the refugee situation, and Lebanon and Syria have a kind of relationship of less borders. They go into this dilemma, so they needed a sense of belonging, and drama therapy tackles negative psychological symptoms, focusing on providing structured and sequential mental health intervention.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: And there is a five-phase model, the way we do the drama therapy. The first phase... Do you want me to explain? Okay, the first phase, which is a dramatic play. It allows the group to develop a rapport and to build trust among each other and the facilitator. We have a drama therapist. The same one goes for the 12 sessions because they build trust with the woman. During this phase, what happens is name games. They get to know each other, and they would say, “What do you want to call yourself?” So they give, other than the real name, how they see themselves. And then we try to bring the women—first, there’s an individual meeting and then group meeting with everyone. And this game encourages participants to gradually build towards personal disclosure as they see and hear others in the group sharing their life details. There is one of the games that’s called image, where smaller subgroups are tasked with using their bodies and working together to create a still image that presents a certain concept.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: For example, I mentioned the example of four, and they would do the image and they would stand still. And you would be the ones watching me, then you would imitate me. And there is a group who’s not seeing but from what they are feeling, then they would do the same thing just from what they heard. And this is—we kind of train the memory from just using their sensories, like their hearing sense. And “What do you think?” So they would stand up and try to imagine what the people were doing, the other women were doing.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So it’s a game of senses, the vision, the listening, and then trying to revive their memories and to use their collective memories in explaining what certain concepts mean, what certain situations mean. For example, we show them a picture of people moving as refugees from, let’s say, from Ukraine, not the Syrian, and how would they see this? Do they see it as similar to their situation or is it different? So it’s bringing the reality on the stage and how they respond to it. So this is the first phase. The second is the scene work where we use games to introduce the participants to theater techniques that help them better manage and understand their emotions. To express yourself, how can you do it better? How can you manage your emotions? How you can explore yourself when I say anger, when I say being happy, all those terms, how do you express it? Then we do certain forms of meditation and the breathing exercises, certain physical relaxation exercises.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Then comes the third phase, which is the role play, which encourages the use of imagination to distance oneself from their own issues, to gain a different perspective, play the role of someone else, and then to build more group solidarity and sense of community. And here comes also guided meditation is used to encourage the participants to discover areas of themselves that they do not speak about or acknowledge openly. And here we have more advanced games like the life map, typically used where one participant uses the space within the room to map out her life in a monologue style, highlighting the life-defining events that she experienced. This exercise is performed while the rest of the group seated in an audience formation as witnesses, which introduces the participant to the idea of exposing more personal aspects of her life to others, so this kind of exercise. The fourth phase, which is culminating enactments, uses previously developed skills such as personal insight, memory, recollection, and trust in the group to give the participant a safe space to openly express their personal issues and experiences. And this is where the play comes and how they act their experiences.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Which takes us to that dramatic ritual, either by singing… There is Fairuz, in Lebanon, a very well-known singer, and her songs come from themes. So we use the theme of her song, and we give them different songs and then we ask them, “Which one would you choose?” And interesting that they choose the ones that after we have looked at them and analyzed, we think that this is the song that would fit or this kind of group game that would fit, and they would choose the same one. So after this song time then we kind of create a play or a collection of vignettes.
Zareen Hussein: Dr. Lina, I think it’s really interesting that you bring up Fairuz, who is such a famous singer in the Middle East and originally from Beirut. Which leads me to ask, when you’re doing drama therapy in the five phases, how important is it to consider cultural context and cultural nuances? Because in America, mental health is getting more and more recognized day by day, but still a long way to go, whereas in some countries it’s nonexistent. So using Lebanon as an example, can you talk to us more about the controlled context that’s considered while treating people with drama therapy?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yes, I think this is very important. Drama therapists that do the work are trained using books that come from the western world so-
Zareen Hussein: In Western, in America?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: American, European. There are more European works on drama therapy and art therapy. So this is one aspect of it. Then they have to take this and customize it to really the fit the group of women they are helping. And believe it or not, it’s not only about the Arab culture or the Islamic culture or the patriarchic system in that part of the world, although there is this big umbrella of such a culture. But doing drama therapy in Chatila camp is different than doing drama therapy in the north in Tripoli, in Akkar, or doing drama therapy in a town in the mountains.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: They have based on different religious backgrounds and sectarian backgrounds and ethnic backgrounds and different socioeconomic needs. So we customize to that level and this customization does not happen before, it happens after we meet the woman. We do the biographic background and listen a bit to them. And of course, the drama therapists who are doing the work are from Lebanon and they know the cultures and they work in theaters and they do playbacks. They are highly involved in aspects of coexistence and helping resolve conflicts, so they are experts on this. So yes, definitely, the cultural nuances are very important. We cannot parachute norms, values, ways of dealing with people.
Hannah Balikci: Going through the different cultural differences within Lebanon itself points us to the fact that Lebanon currently hosts the largest number of refugees per capita and per square kilometer in the world, currently estimated at 1.5 million Syrian refugees and around 300,000 Palestinian refugees, if I’m correct. Do you have any insights, or I think, could you go through just the general background of the camp that you were working in with drama therapy and the different populations you were working with and similarly to the cultural questions, how the camps…
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Culture?
Hannah Balikci: Yeah. Could you go through how, within the camps, the cultures of the different communities that are living there coexist and how drama therapy has impacted the communities?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: I think this is an excellent question. I mentioned that there are different ethnographic cultural differences within Lebanon, based on the geographical location, based on the class level or sectarian or religious background. The camp is a small area, let’s say Chatila camp, because we did another camp. Chatila camp hosts Syrian, Palestinian refugees. Palestinian refugees are as old as 1948. Syrian refugees started to come to Lebanon in 2012. And Lebanese who are below subsistence level, who have no ability to rent or buy outside the camp, and they usually go and live anywhere. It’s not that you have to pay. In addition, all those who are running from justice or criminals who hide in the camp because they get the protection there. Nobody would come, the police, no one will go in to take them. So it’s not secure place. But all those challenges, all those, I would say traumas, live together in this community. So how to deal with that culture.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: The first study we did, we on purpose chose only Syrian refugees. Then in the second group we have second Syrian, Palestinian and Lebanese women. The first phase when we met them individually, they would talk about their life, their situation in the camp and each would blame the other. So they were blaming each other. “They took my space and this is where we live…” The Palestinians talking about the Syrians and the Syrians saying that the Palestinians hate us and then the Lebanese say, “This is our land.” All of this was happening.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So the challenge was putting them together and creating a common space for people of different perceptions, different fears. They have traumas, violence, displacement, etc., etc. But they all have comparing themselves to the outside world in the sense of outside the camp. So we started telling them, “You have similar situation.” And then we would shed light on their humanity and on their needs. So we bring them together on that factor and then they start feeling comfortable and this becomes a safe space. And at some point, we allow them to tell the other why they hate them, to speak openly about that, and this creates tension. But then they started laughing at this situation. “How come we all have the same problems? You have the same problems with kids. I have the same problems with my husband and with the Lebanese people,” and so on. So they started taking it with more manageable way, and it created friendships and trust. And this is where we would like to follow up on this later on after we finish the sessions. We don’t want this to be stopped there.
Hannah Balikci: Great. It sounds very cathartic, especially for women. It’s like going through, as you were going through with the five phases, women unpacking trauma, especially older women have more trauma, we know.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yes.
Hannah Balikci: Did you find that between the ages of the women that you were working with that it was more impactful for, say, older women versus younger women or the ranges that you were working with?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: In the first two studies, we noticed, based on observation, that young women tend to be easier and faster in responding to our goals. However, the study that we are doing now to compare different groups and to compare different age groups to see the significance of the change pre and post the therapy. Sometimes young people can make it a fun thing and dancing and playing games and maybe at the end the impact is not that high. But while older women, when they are so impacted, a 20% change might be a relief, might be a positive, might be more significant. So this is the psychometric analysis we’re doing now to see the pre and post change, based on the age and different demographics.
Zareen Hussein: Dr. Lina, this week you’re at University of Chicago as part of the Pearson Global Forum, a day-long conference at the university on discrimination and marginalization. You’re speaking on a panel focused on the past few years, addressing the crisis that is going on in Lebanon. Firstly, could you give us some contextual information? So for those who don’t know, what has been happening in Lebanon over the past years, and then what are you going to be speaking at the Pearson Forum?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Lebanon, you said the past few years, but I could go back to the days of the inception of what’s called the Nation State of Lebanon. Since its inception in 1943, Lebanon was created on the wrong foot, meaning the different religious groups were not taken into consideration in a way where they would come together as a nation. And it was done by the French for Lebanon. So the Lebanese elites and the Lebanese people were not involved in the Sykes-Picot agreement, and they did not sit at the table. It was decided upon them, with the context that we need to protect the Christians in Lebanon because the Christians in Lebanon represent the Eastern Christians and Lebanon is the symbol for that.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: And the Maronites were good collaborators with the French, so give them some benefits, while the rest would be added to the system. So by having such a confessional start, they called it consociational democracy. They thought we are in Belgium, but it’s not because it only divided the political representation and among the elites of the Lebanese, so the elite Maronites, elite Sunni, elite Shia, elite Roman Orthodox, the Jews. So it did not take into consideration how this could circle from the top elite to the people.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: And so the elites took over in building the relationship with the people. So the relationship was the clientele system. Each felt that there’s a threat from the other sect. So they need to collaborate to create an equation where they politically can work together. And they all had, they were on the verge of “If I don’t protect my sect…,” but actually they were protecting their own self-interest to stay in power, “then someone will take over.”
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So this inequality between the different sects, mainly between, let’s say, all Muslims and all Christians, was more obvious when the Palestinians came to Lebanon and they were allowed in to form a military movement, with the Arabs accepting this, with the Americans and the Europeans saying okay, not explicitly saying but implicit, by not saying no. So the Palestinians formed the Palestinian Liberation Organization in Lebanon, and they started their mission of fighting Israel from Lebanon. At the same time, the Lebanese government did not give the Palestinians who came to Lebanon their rights as human beings. They only dealt with them as refugees who have a cause for right of return.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So if you give them citizenship, if you give them work permits, if you give them all those aspects, they wouldn’t go back. So this will take away from the cause. This led to marginalization. This is the Palestinians. It led to the Civil War. This is a factor. The inequality between the different Lebanese sects, the poverty, the elites were in power were rich, the rest were poor. So we have a recipe of a civil war, and this is what happened during the Civil War. So when the Civil War ended, to solve this problem, they managed this problem by keeping the same war lords in power and creating a new agreement called the Taif Accord, which they said, “Equal representation between the different sects in the government,” but the president is Maronite, the prime minister is Sunni, the Speaker of the House is Shia, so a confessional system… saying in the Taif Accord, “But we need to abolish the confessional system, gradually.”
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Never happened, because managing the problem with the same people who were the warlords stayed in power. They have no interest in changing the system that makes them superior to the people under them, the constituencies. “I’m protecting our sect.” You know, now every time a politician is blamed of corruption, if he’s Maronite, the patriarch will come out say, “He’s a red light. You cannot touch this person.” If he’s as Sunni, the Grand Mufti of the Sunnis will say, “No, this is our…” So you cannot reach them because of the fear aspect that’s present and the people would come and stand by them because—
Zareen Hussein: Tribalism, almost.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Exactly, it’s like tribalism, but based on this confessional sectarian fear. This is where political psychology comes. So every time the problem is managed, it’s managed in a wrong way, by keeping the confessional system, by maintaining the corruption system where the elites use their dirty games by saying, “I’m helping my community,” but at the same time, they’re actually stealing the money. They’re using victimization and fear to promote their own interests rather than the public interest. Same applies for those political elite, they not only rule in the public space, but they also own banks. They have shares in the banks, they have shares in every big business where the public benefits from. Because in Lebanon the electricity is public, the water provision is public. There’s a social security system, of course, that is definitely government. But this social security system is also very discriminatory because you only provide social security to people who are employed. So I am employed, I pay, I get social security.
Zareen Hussein: And I imagine that excludes the refugees.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Exactly. It excludes refugees, it excludes people who work in private businesses. Because of that corruption, there is avoidance of paying taxes, so you don’t pay social security. And if I have a private business, I hire people for three months, I fire them, I rehire them, so I don’t pay social security fees. See? So there is this culture of corruption that’s adding to marginalization and to setting the foundation of conflict and instability and fragility of the government and the country.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So even when Rafic Hariri, late prime minister, came to Lebanon to save Lebanon, to reconstruct Lebanon, also he reconstructed Lebanon on a wrong basis because he turned Lebanon into a corporation. Many people owned property in the downtown area that was completely destroyed during the war. And he built a beautiful facade, beautiful buildings, and roads, but the Lebanese people cannot afford to live there anymore and to even go to a restaurant there. So it’s not for the Lebanese, it’s for the image of Rafic Hariri and the elite in Lebanon. And it was mainly personified in him and in his entourage. So some actually called his work as effective corruption, which is still, but you’re feeding the people at the same time. It’s not Robin Hood because he made so much money out of—
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yeah, he just made so much money out of it. And that, the Lebanese government, 100 times more than it used to be before.
Zareen Hussein: It’s almost as if the twisted assumption of what people think socialism is.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Exactly.
Hannah Balikci: Given the current situation in Lebanon, we also wanted to give you the chance to share briefly about both your fears and hopes for the country. What is the biggest challenge and fear at this point, and what is your biggest hope?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Okay. Definitely, Lebanon is in almost a failed state. The only foundation that’s kept in Lebanon is the military. Lebanon was based on the banking sector, the tourism sector, the health sector, the educational sector. The educational sector is losing a lot. The banking sector is down. The health system is unable to provide for the people, only the military. So there is hope in keeping the military standing, although there is a lot of dissatisfaction among the soldiers and the people in the military because their salaries, if they used to get paid five million, five million was around $3,000. Now it’s $125. And the prices in Lebanon are international because we are not a country of industry. We are a country of services. And if you don’t produce, you buy everything. We import most of the products, so they are poor.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: There are some external supports. The US supports them, literally just to keep them standing. So we need to build on this. But at the same time, the banking sector, the IMF is highly involved in putting conditions on the same political elite to reform the country before any loan can be given to the country. And I have a problem with those two. First, the political elite have no interest in reforming something that threatens their power. Two, I have no hope that a new liberal system that takes away the support of the government and by making people pay more taxes to be able to pay back the loans will really help.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Because we have many examples of where the IMF came up with solutions for underdeveloped countries or countries in conflicts that really flourished. So actually, it maintains the status quo of poverty and just live and let others live in a way, just barely minimal. I have hope in the Lebanese people that are trying to manage their everyday life. I know that everyone… there is a few who have abilities, who have the fresh, what we call the fresh dollar, the money that comes from abroad versus the dollars that were put in the banks before 2019 and are stuck in the banks, because the banks loaned them to the government, the government went bankrupt, so there’s no money to give back to the people.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So there is a bubble. There’s something happening on the bottom of the country where people are managing their situation. So what they need is external support, not the way it’s being conditioned. Because even with their power to adapt and build, they still live in this culture of corruption. So they’re survival of the fittest. It’s the law of the jungle, survival of the fittest. This is what’s happening in Lebanon. So to create a new system where what people are doing becomes institutionalized in good governance.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: We need new policies, we need new political establishment to say, call it establishment. We had hope in the 2022 elections to have a change. But it seems that the fear of each other made many of the people who went to the revolution… we thought that this would be the change. And it failed drastically with very minimal… I would say changes only from a woman’s perspective. Because women became more seen and their issues became more on the table, to be discussed. They’re still on the menu, but women are not sitting at the table to make decisions.
Zareen Hussein: Not yet.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Not yet. No, not yet. Even now we have many women ran for candidacy, but they did not make it because they need the financial abilities, they need networking and so on. So not to delve into this, there is hope in the people. There is hope in the Lebanese expats. There has been a major exodus of highly educated Lebanese people who still have hope to send back money and help Lebanon. But this is not enough. We need more institutionalization of good governance from the bottom up.
Zareen Hussein: And just a background for American listeners: Dearborn, Michigan is the highest concentration of Lebanese expats and diaspora outside of Lebanon.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yes.
Zareen Hussein: So their work connects back to Lebanon country.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yes, yes. A lot. Many of the Lebanese, not only in Dearborn. There are 12 million Lebanese expats all over the world. In the US, I don’t know how many, I don’t know the number, but there’s a good number of Lebanese who actually send money to their families. After September 11, this became less so because of the fear of money transfer.
Zareen Hussein: Of course.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: And, “Oh, you’re sending to Lebanon. Who are you sending to?”
Zareen Hussein: Of course.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: So there was those restrictions, but still family support more than big money that’s coming in. But what we need is our projects… first of all to get those political elites in power out. It’s time. It’s time.
Zareen Hussein: It’s time. It’s been 80 years?
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yeah.
Zareen Hussein: It’s time for an overthrow.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: It’s enough. Yeah, exactly. The same warlords, the same families, little change, but still, as if you go into the swamp and you become part of this culture.
Zareen Hussein: Thank you, Dr. Lina.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Thank you.
Zareen Hussein: It’s been insightful, impactful, and as women in the public policy sphere working on conflict and refugees and just two days ago was World Mental Health Day.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Yes. Monday. Yep.
Zareen Hussein: The intersection has been profound. Thank you so much.
Lina Haddad Kreidie: Thank you.
Zareen Hussein: I’m Zareen Hussein.
Hannah Balikci: I’m Hanna Balikci.
Zareen Hussein: And thank you, Dr. Lina Haddad Kreidie.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Lena Haddad Kreidie. This episode was produced and edited by Reema Saleh and Ricardo Sande. Thank you to our interviewers, Hannah Balikci and Zareen Hussein. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute’s research and events, visit thePearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
10.07.22
African Political Economy
Reema Saleh: Hi. This is Reema, and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy
Podcasts. You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and
the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and
practitioners who conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of
the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in
collaboration with The Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research
institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Reema Saleh: The following is a PSA from the University of Chicago's Pearson Institute for the
Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts, featuring The Pearson Global Forum, an in person and
virtual convening on discrimination and marginalization. Join us to hear from global experts as they
discuss various topics, including the social cost of discrimination, the crisis in Lebanon, and bias in
media coverage of conflict. This event is free and open to all on October 14th. More information at
ThePearsonGlobalForum.org.
Reema Saleh: How does African philosophy shape African political institutions, and how have they
evolved separately from European models of statehood and development? In this episode, we speak
with Dr. Francis Njoku, professor of philosophy at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka and a visiting
scholar at the Harris School. We talk about his research and how homegrown solutions to African
problems can come from within.
Christelle Inema: Hello, my name is Christelle and I'm a first year MPP student at the University of
Chicago. I'm originally from Rwanda, and my policy interests are at the intersection of data analytics,
social equity, and development.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Hello, my name is Francis Njoku, professor of philosophy from the University
of Nigeria, Nsukka. Presently I'm here doing a one-year sabbatical at the Harris School, and it's been
a very great experience.
Christelle Inema: So it's very nice to have you here and to get to interview you as a professor and
also a visiting scholar. So my first question is: you're a visiting scholar with The Pearson Institute.
Can you talk more about your work here at the University of Chicago, like the classes you're
teaching, the research you're doing?
Dr. Francis Njoku: Yeah. When I arrived here in January, so we started a course on African political
economy or political theory. I taught with Professor James Robinson, and it was quite an interesting
course. We were able to discuss part of African philosophy, African political theory and some of
them deal with African existential problems. It was interesting, we were able to interact: it was
audited by a diversity of students, and it was very enriching, I know. So I think so far my experience
has been great, and our research has continued on African themes like religion, politics and race and
African philosophy. Because I've always thought that part of the way to solve an African problem is
to find the elements from within and then address them. It must be a solution from one who's an
insider actually. So that's what the research is going in on looking in Africa, the non-philosophical
purpose of materials in Africa, see how they can indicate towards a way to solve an African
problems, especially sociopolitical problem.
Christelle Inema: Yeah, that's an amazing answer and to that I have a couple follow-up questions.
The first one, what does it mean to examine African philosophy and how do you define it? And then
the second one that actually ties into using African philosophy, in terms of thinking about
development. Why is it important to examine the philosophy underpinning African development,
and how have you done that in your research and your work?
Dr. Francis Njoku: So I don't have to take a [inaudible]. Well, African philosophy is a certain
gateway to human reality. As I start to say that, everyone deserves to know, while you say that, but
to know this or that is a situated experience. So to talk about African philosophy is to take a
standpoint, look at the universal human reality from a particular perspective, because you can't begin
from nowhere, there is no place or position exposition. So if we move from African experience,
African environment and there is the universal human reality, then Africa will make her own specific
contributions, because our people say that the firewood in a place cooks for them. So if you want
homegrown solutions to African problems, it is better to begin from within, to look at African
environment of occurrence and find the instrument for solution and then those same instruments
will cast light on how to understand the universal reality.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So that's why—talking about African philosophy, there are many ways where
people have seen it differently. But just, and I call it an aesthetic viewpoint to understanding, asking
the right questions, taken off from ones point of view and then looking on with the universal
question of knowing, being of knowing reality, no matter the shape reality presents itself. Reality
here, I mean, anything about God, environment, man, human institutions, all this come under the
heading of reality. And to solve the problems… as it faces each particular group, there is an
emphasis to begin from one’s standpoint and then find solutions, instead of waiting for solutions to
be imposed from outside. I'm not saying that when you must have found you have solution within
your own environmental occurrence, that it cannot be generalized, it can. But as a human
standpoint, you have to begin from a specific point to address the issue.
Christelle Inema: Thank you for your responses, and it really, I can relate to that as well, as a fellow
African. So my other question touches on democracy, because you're talking about finding solutions
to African problems from within, from thinking about African philosophy, but the concept of
democracy comes up a lot whenever we talk about development. So why is democracy important to
African countries? And another question is, why is it not important to African countries? Because is
it important? Is there a way to disentangle African democracy from western countries and find a way
to actually build institutions that cater to our needs?
Dr. Francis Njoku: Yeah. Democracy is a form of government, and surely Africans would like that.
But when I talk about homegrown solutions, I think it's better to look at African institutions and
African people, and then see the specific form of government that can be well adapted to it. So we
have this understanding that democracy works everywhere, whatever that means. Even autocratic
governments call themselves democrats, so I don't know what that means. And if you look at history
of sociopolitical theory, not many like democracy. If you go back to Aristotle and Plato, actually
democracy is actually a degeneration of the third best in terms of, I mean, systems of government.
Someone like Plato who think that their best form of government to be a monarchy or aristocracy,
and then you have their degenerations. So the best term from political degeneration started, it gets to
democracy, which is the worst. It's not even the third best, but the degeneration of the third best.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So I'm not saying the democracy, if you, the only thing that salvages democracy
in all these things is a rule of law. The problem with African countries is that people don't obey the
rule of law, if you obey that. But coming down home, my people say that if you know the partridge
egg, you know how to handle it, call it the egg of a dove… first, why do you have to know it? If you
see a set of egg, you know that the egg might resemble that of snake. One is to have the caution to
distinguish snake eggs from the eggs of a dove. If you make that fundamental mistake without
distinguishing well, you are in trouble. The wisdom there is, you need practical reasonable need to
make proper distinctions. Not only will you use that knowledge to identify something, but you need
some practical reasonable needs to know how to handle it.
Dr. Francis Njoku: If you don't know a situation, if you don't know who the African is, it is difficult
to address realities about him, it's difficult to manage him and his affairs. So the first philosophy 101
about the African is to have these two versions. Knowledge of what is doing and practical reasoning
as to how to respond to those problems. Because if this is the egg of the snake, certainly you don't
collect the eggs and put it inside your pocket, already that your knowledge is translated into rules of
action.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So if you look at the African environment, look at the institutions, and then you
can begin to divide a form of government that derives from what people know. I use the e-work
example, our people are very egalitarian, and if you look at available instructible institutions, people
like to come and discuss their problems, instead of waiting for someone to oppose it. Discuss, no
matter your opinion, make your thoughts known, they can agree and disagree. At a point, they have
a consensus, they agree on what to do and everyone works towards that.
Dr. Francis Njoku: That is also a form of democracy, should mean government of the people. But in
actual sense, if democracy is government of the people, this is the initiated democracy from
grassroots level, because people will gather and discuss and take a position on a particular issue.
Unlike modern democracy, where the so-called people who claim to be representatives of the
people, impose it on the people, make laws in their so-called headquarters and then bind them. But
democracy, if one would be serious, the people are sovereign, and this is the sovereign that makes
the laws, as simple as that.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So go back to the roots, the people make the rules, and those guys over there are
their representatives, not the other way around, you make a rule, impose it on people. That is why
consensus democracy you might call it, or what I call initiative democracy, is better than the socalled
representative democracy which we cooperate. And that democracy now has been hijacked by
people with all kind of influences, money and the rest of them. And each year you see a dichotomy
between the people, the so-called sovereign marginalized by their trustees.
Dr. Francis Njoku: If you look at Loc, Loc System will say the people formed a political society, so
the government accounts to them, those they appoint to rule them or to work in government as
trustees. So the agreement was meant, the people made an agreement, not with the government,
they didn't make any pact with the government. They made a pact with themselves and then
appointed trustees to take care of everything. But I don't know whether that is what you see in the
so-called representative democracy. I'm not saying it might work, but it might not work. I'm not
saying that it might work in that place, but if we want to have an African blend, we must pay
attention to this understanding of reality from within, from the grassroots. People initiate political
action and then there it develops to the center. That's the point I'm making.
Christelle Inema: Yeah, and that's perfectly explained, and I truly believe that kind of democracy is
how people can actually gain access to the institutions and define what development also looks like
for them.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Yeah. You see, if you create a social reality through dialogue, construction of
reality and people will see themselves as part of it, it is sustainable. Now from there we can derive a
system of development or government. Now if people come together, make decision, and take a
decision: its Africans are known for making pacts or covenants. They give the roles to themselves,
they agree on something, they have a social pact for it. Everyone knows that, and I used to call it
covenants, a solemn promise made by them by an oath. It doesn't have to have involve blood, but
the important thing is that people come together through their differences, their dialogue. They may
have even enemies before, but important thing now through dialogue, discussions, they're able to
create a central reality and bind themselves to it.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Now if you have this form of thing, if you have this form of this setting, things
come up. Now you begin to have a new reality created that will be a basis for future relationship. If I
make a pact with you, a social pathway agreement, an ethics of encounter will come up. How I now
relate with you in the new dispensation, and also, some system of laws will come up, it's no longer
business as usual. So from there we can make laws about ourselves, about our institutions. We have
ethics of encounter, how we relate to one another, these things they match. And what is very
important, one element that is always there in covenant making in Africa, is what you call the third
person, the witness in a covenant. In marriage ceremonies, in pact between communities, there's
always a witness. Now the witness is not a member of that pact, he's there as a witness, the pact
between those persons. He's there to ensure there is impartiality.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Now if at the end of the day, the covenant runs to into a problem, those who are
involved, the participants will call the attention of the witness, who will come and try to reconcile
them. So the system of covenant has an inbuilt mechanism for taking care of conflict resolution.
They come here because the other man has fallen away from their pact, then you carry on, gone. No,
there are systems, even in marriage, if the union is not working, you report to the parents, if they're
not, the parents will go back through the witness. There are steps, it gives the human that robust
human situation to come back again.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Then another thing, when I propose that theory is, if you have created a reality
where people come together as participant in a covenant… there are two possible systems of
government that can emerge. With a covenant you have created some kind of society, two systems
of government that can emerge. First, I call the first-person perspective. You can elect a member of
the covenant, those participants, one of them to take care of the goods of the members. So if you
know you are organized, you are managing property, a common good you are also a part of. So
there's every indication that you do it as your thing, because you have a share in it, so you are
engaged.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So that's one system. So see a leader as someone who knows your “doing” is part
of the game, is part of that common good, he's sharing in it. So you put everything you have in it.
That's one form of governance. So if our leaders can see themselves, not our people who bought all
kinds of ways and then got there, and they don't talk the public good as they're good, they don't see
themselves as part of the whole, they're there to represent their own interest. That's part of the
problem in Africa.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Another system of government is from what I call the third-person perspective.
This is built on the witness, who is called to be a leader of the covenant group administer the goods
of the covenant. In the 15th-century, Italians had this, they call it the podesta. So the podesta was a
member of another city, for example, maybe someone from Massachusetts, Northern American
maybe, you call him to Chicago to be the mayor, but he was a paid worker. So his job is there to
grant justice and be impartial. He's not part of that covenant, but he's paid to make sure that the
rules are followed and justice also. So if you use this third person perspective, you are invited now,
paid, to administer this set of rules for the people. You are likely to do it well, you are paid, you
don't have any sectarian interest. Basically, you just take the position of the witness, whose position
in the covenant was to maintain justice, to make sure that no side cheats the order.
Christelle Inema: That's a very interesting take, actually, that I hadn't thought about, because usually
we think of leaders as having to be from the communities in order to lead well. But I also think
there is power in having someone from the outside, who actually has no stake in it, who is able to be
impartial. And another thing you touched on that was really interesting, is people coming together to
solve their own problems. And I saw an example of that from Rwanda, where I come from, where
after the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, people came together under Gacaca to actually solve the
issues and talk. Do you see it happening elsewhere in Africa? For instance, in Nigeria, there has been
some conflict over the years. Have you seen any indication that that can happen, or what would be
the best way to bring people together when conflicts are still emerging to this day?
Dr. Francis Njoku: See, Nigeria has not faced that. People have been calling for a national
conference, that the constitution being used now is a fraud. Nigeria government doesn't want to
listen, because too many people are benefiting. People want to talk, that's why people, some want to
go, so we cannot be in this union again, there's nothing there for us. Based on discrimination and all
kinds of evils, so let's dissolve it, but Nigerian law doesn't want to do that. But that call, people call
for discussion, it's an African way, at least for discussion. Let's go back to the drawing table to see
what is happening, you know. Look at what happened in there, people came back and discussed,
took on to unbelief, but Nigeria doesn't want to serve them.
Dr. Francis Njoku: What our problem is that this is something from, is not a system that is from our
side. Given our people, the way we behave, the institutions, we can come and discuss and say this is
what we want. We don't need to stay there and let another person to come and do it for us. No, it's
our own problem, we can solve that. And you create a disposition that some of those people already
know. They know what it means to have covenants, and they take it seriously. Those pacts, they take
relationships of in-law, friendship, they take it seriously, and they know when you make a pact with
people, you can collaborate. There's nothing to fear, they're not going to poison you.
Dr. Francis Njoku: The closest you want to come in a covenant relationship is brotherhood. If
someone is abroad, you can't get closer than that, because it is stupefied by the sense of blood,
closeness of familyhood. In Nigeria, we talk about familyhood, everyone's talking about familyhood,
the which man has familyhood, you treat other person as your family. The basis for familyhood is
actually blood. So what they're doing in that covenant situation is a ritual in a very performative
sense, to say that this communion we have shared this closeness we have now: we define it as a
blood closeness. This water we drank individually from the same cup. We have done that as a
member of family, and we hold it that we have shared somehow in that same blood that holds
family together. That's the performance—and since we have said it, committed ourselves, then it is
and then you begin.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So imagine in a country where those diverse persons take themselves as brothers,
they are people that can relate with, you know. It's going to change, but in Nigeria it's not there. No
one has been persecuted in Nigeria for discriminating against another person. Your name says what
you did. In fact, if you mention your name, that you're from Nigeria, if you mention your name, I
can tell you where you're from. Whether you're from south or east to west, which doesn't happen
here. You can answer to Jackson or anything you like, but Nigeria, those names.
Dr. Francis Njoku: And another thing I observed, I said, that's not been strong civil society as a
nation, people saw themselves. I mean, the British came, and they organized a certain society for
their own economic end. So the various people from various tribes came, found themselves together
in the capital, and we are working. But when the white man left, there was nothing to hold them
together. The Yoruba man does not see the Igbo man as his brother, now the Hausa man seeing the
ethnic person as his brother. There was no civil society. The civil society like law will say is an
intermediate group coming out from the state of nature. We are not yet at a political society, but this
is a society of peace. We want to live in peace, even if there is no government, we live in peace to
safeguard our property. So that was not there, because the people don't see themselves as people
who have the same end of security for themselves, there is not. That's why everyone wants to be at
the center, because if you are not there, you are forgotten. All the tribes cannot be at the center at
the same time.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So it goes back to that we lack the civic of political disposition to be a state or a
nation, we have not harnessed that. Even with the present agitation of groups, if you don't develop
the right dispositions, socioeconomic, or moral dispositions, social dispositions, for people to live
together as a people, it wouldn't work. A nation is a choice like a family, you choose the person you
want to marry, you marry, you have kids, have families, families form communities in the nation. It
is a choice. It's part of the principle of human action.
Dr. Francis Njoku: In fact, when [inaudible] was writing about operations of reason, he looked at
human reason at four levels. And he wants to see where he would locate the civil society, the family.
So he said there are four operations of reason. First is the operation of reason in the natural
sciences, who check at the time were called natural science and now maybe physics, chemistry. If
you are studying soil, you're not bringing anything new, you just want to know the contents of this.
That's one operational reason. The second operational is what we bring into our thinking, like logic.
You know, you want to know the correct form or the laws of human reasoning. Now, I'll leave the
third, I'll come back to the third. The fourth one is a level of mechanical sciences where you bring
through your works, you bring an implicit image in something. Like these three, you can use it
instead and cover something and get an image.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Now the third one, which was this major point of his commentary on the
network analytics of Aristotle. He said, this is what we bring in through our deliberations and
choices. And in this third level, he comprehends politics, economic sociology, ethics, and here he
comprehends family, civil society, the state, because these are products of decision. If you want to
marry, you decide. The state is not an act of chance, it's a natural thing. Family is not an act of
chance. And when you bring it about, remember when you are making choices to do human action,
you decide to do it at your end, find a means to realize in it, and then get the right dispositions. If
you're driving to Michigan, and you'll be driving like a mad person, you won't get there. So you need
the required dispositions to actualize your end. So your end is the state. There are dispositions
required of citizens to bring about the good, or reach the end of the state.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Part of the problem of African nations is this inability to train their citizens to
have the right dispositions as it is even as leaders themself, because there are the right dispositions of
leaders. Plato said that the leader is like a ship captain, who's exerts himself driving the ship, the state
to safety. If he doesn't know his way, as if he lacks the proper dispositions, he will ruin himself and
ruin the ship. You see that? So he is not magic. So some Nigerians like to pray, Holy Ghost fire
there, keep… You need appropriate disposition, there is a disposition for being a student, a good
student, you want to have first class. Every day you are sleeping, you're not reading, that is not the
right disposition.
Christelle Inema: Yes, you are right and you talk about a nation is a choice just like a family.
Dr. Francis Njoku: It's a choice.
Christelle Inema: So do you see something or any dispositions that different ethnic groups in Nigeria
have that can potentially bring them together to make that choice?
Dr. Francis Njoku: They have to decide to come together, to work together, to get that themselves
are the same people, that have the right disposition. Not to discriminate on accounting anything, to
stand in for others, to try and to work for common good. You don't just get Abuja if there's no one
there, you take the whole thing. Your job, you only give the people from your own ethnic group.
They are criticizing the vice president of Nigeria who wants to run for the president. That since he's
been there, all the people he's been helping are members of his church. That's not the only thing in
the church in Nigeria. You understand me?
Dr. Francis Njoku: So if every Nigerian stands in for the other, people are not bother. If you are
there, and I know I'm represented. So I don't have to be there, my brother does not have to be
there, everyone is there for everyone else. So we need to cultivate that attitude of one. In fact,
Nigeria, I shall tell people, Nigeria is a state that calls ourself a nation. Nigeria calls ourself a nation.
The people of over 250 tribes, they are calling it a nation. That's in Nigeria: a nation is a people of
the same, maybe blood, ethnic ancestry or something. So how do you make a people of over 200
tribes a nation? It means that you have to cultivate, you have to make everyone realize that they
belong. You know something you do have because Nigeria's actually a state. Now if you recognize
that Nigeria is a state, what do you do?
Dr. Francis Njoku: Aristotle said, dissimilar form a state, similar do not form a state. A state is made
up of different kinds of people, is a place of diversity, they come together. So that's why they need
their dispositions. In fact, one of the social virtues is friendship. You need the dispositions of
friendship, justice, equity, to soften the rough edges so that people can unite together, so that the
dissimilar form a state, unlike Plato. Plato had a homogenous state, and he says, no, the state—if it's
so homogenous, you end up becoming a military continent. That's what you have in Nigeria now,
some group wants to run the whole place. So from presidents to everything, they own everything.
They cannot be a state; a state is a place of diversity. I have the Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, is mixed. You
know what, you corner more to culturalism and the rest of them. That is the basis for a state,
because actually as I said, our diversity can bring us together and we have a great blend.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So African countries, I don't know any African country that is one state ethnic
group now. I don't even know which, even Israel is mixed somehow, because I'm sure there are
some Ethiopians who have Israeli blood or something like that. So it's difficult to have, most states
now, even the so-called one ratio state, difficult to have one single. So even if it is one person, the
whole label, even Igbo groups within themselves are not a homogenous group. They have all kinds
of migrated groups and all kinds of means of origin. Even though you will say that they belong to
one race, we still have to manage diversity, even in the same family. Some like to do medicine, others
have disposition for engineering.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So there must be diversity, even as a person, sometime you want to go and walk,
instead of flying. It is part of it, just that the degree of management and the degree of extension of
diversity. So if we harness these things together, we can come—it doesn't mean that there wouldn't
be friction. That one person who made a distinction between the politics and the political. Politics
are about management of the state, but the political in terms of human beings have sociopolitical
tensions between groups who continue to be there or workers who continue to protest. Some
groups social, some human right groups who continue to protest about certain things, those are
tensions that go with civil society. They must be there, even when we have solved our political
problems, they are human sociological problems.
Christelle Inema: So this brings me to a question that ties into one of the democracy that you
presented, where you can bring a third person like the witness. So in this case, with Nigeria having
over 200 ethnic groups and diversity. And maybe this is a trick question, I'm not sure, it's for you to
decide. But do you think there would be a better approach to a way to govern, like bringing
someone else in because they're not going to have any stake in any of the ethnic groups that are
available? And if we decide in this world that we are making that that's the way to go, who do you
think would be there? What kind of qualities would that person need to have to be able to bring
Nigeria together?
Dr. Francis Njoku: This is a model, those are models of… theoretical models. But before you do
that, you have to do the groundwork. Whether it's a Yoruba man there or a Hausa, you have to do
the groundwork, that people are where their profit virtues. And they consciously make that choice,
make a pact, and respect it. So it doesn't matter again, whether the person there is from north or
south because he knows the goods on which the society is built, and he pursues that common good
that he is also a part of his group. It is a theoretical standpoint.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So if I see myself as a leader now, then I need to commit myself, I see that this
thing I'm doing, I've also a stake in it. It's a different disposition, I'll do what? But if I also see it, the
same leader there that now these things, all these guys, not come from my own ethnic group. So my
role is to be impartial and make sure that everything gets. So is a theoretical position, it's a
rationalization. The same person can see himself as a member of covenant… good, he'll work with a
lot of zeal. The same person also can see himself as a safe guarder of the covenant. He's not there to
manipulate. So it's a theoretical… and whichever disposition that a man is, from these positions,
whichever disposition is good enough to manage the affairs of the group.
Christelle Inema: Yes, and as one of my last questions, I'm just interested, it's going to be a fun
question now. What book would you recommend that relates to Africa, African proverbs and issues,
the best, your favorite book?
Dr. Francis Njoku: Well, I don't know what you mean by that.
Christelle Inema: I don't know, any fiction, non-fiction, just for people who are listening to the
podcast too.
Dr. Francis Njoku: Well, there are kinds of books or novels that talk about African proverbs, it
depends on what you want and what you want to do. When I use some African novels, for example,
what I've been doing lately is to rationalize, to derive philosophy from literature, from what African
writers are saying. When you read James Ngugi, Weep Not, Child, or Achebe's, Things Fall Apart, and
the rest of them. They say literature is not philosophy, but it can give you materials for
philosophizing and so it depends on your interest. And some of African realities are documented in
these novels in… it depends what you are looking for.
Dr. Francis Njoku: When I came back from Israel, I'd say that I was going to do something for my,
I have to articulate the philosophy and do it from, with using the materials I have. I listened to
folklores, to proverbs… we have stories, in some of mine, I tell stories. Then I think our job is to
draw or make explicit the philosophy implicit in this non-philosophical. So it depends what is your
interest. See, if you're interested in literature, I have a body of literature, and there are also some
who, like I said, will be blaming the white man, no problem. I know that we can blame, and there
was a lot of manipulation of African reality. But I think it's a long time, we started to find the
solution from within. If we do what we are supposed to do from within, then we'll be strong enough
to face the external learning. There is no free meal in international market, no. You understand me?
Dr. Francis Njoku: And there's something Euphrates said, he said that we should be careful. Some
people… the first devastation of Africa was when the colonial people came and imposed their rule
on us, but he said there's a second one, he warned people. The people will be talking about African
unity, you think they're interested in your unity. No, they're not interested in your unity, they lend
you money, they're not interested in that. Sometimes they lend you money, bring their own
expatriates to undermine the whole project. We experience that in Nigeria with the Romans, with
Ghana, and the rest of them.
Dr. Francis Njoku: There's a folk story. The lion visited the sheep and asked the sheep if any of the
children could come and babysit for the lion family, imagine that. So the sheep thought long and
hard, he said, "Okay, no problem. That should get back to the lion." Then when the lion left, the
sheep called the children and said, "How many of you, how many times will someone do something
to you before you retaliate?" They began to answer, this one said, "If you do something, the first
one, I will ignore you. The third, the fifth, maybe the tenth one, I'll retaliate." The sheep watched the
children answer. The particular child, we'll call it the lamb with luck, or the lamb with practical
reasonableness. He said, "Mom, before you do something for me, even if before you think to harm
me, I'll retaliate." He said, "You are the right guy to go and babysit for the lion."
Dr. Francis Njoku: Our leaders are there. How can you be complaining? We know out there is a
state of nature. So leaders have responsibility to represent their families, their country, you need that
to be able to… we know there's danger out there, but we have to navigate it. The president,
Nigerian Minister of Transport, they signed an agreement with China, and the thing was that Nigeria
could see sovereign to Chinese, they say, "But what about it?" He didn't read, or they didn't read
their thing written in Chinese, and they're representing their country, their own people.
Dr. Francis Njoku: So it means that even the children, they came and raped our mother. Still the
children have disappointed the mother, the land. So if you're expressing dissatisfaction, both with
the present children of Africa, we have disappointed. Because some have gotten education to reason
at the level of the so-called external people. Still, because of the little benefits you get, then you sell
the whole continent. When you are there in the position to do something for your people, you
sabotage it. Now it is high time we stopped concentrating on—for the meantime, for sake of
argument—concentrating on the threat from without and then concentrate on the threat from
within.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Francis Njoku.
This episode was produced and edited by Reema Saleh and Ricardo Sande. Thank you to our
interviewer, Christelle Inema. Special thanks to UC3P and The Pearson Institute for their continued
support of this series. For more information on The Pearson Institute's research and events, visit
thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
09.07.22
The American War in Afghanistan | Carter Malkasian
Reema Saleh: Hi. This is Reema, and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast.
Reema Saleh: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world, and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with The Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Annie Henderson: What should we learn from the aftermath of the U.S. war in Afghanistan, and what decisions could've brought a better outcome? The fall of Kabul to the Taliban marked the end of America's longest war in history, with the former Afghan government being able to retain control of the country. In this episode, we speak with Carter Malkasian, a historian and author of The American War in Afghanistan: A History. It provides a comprehensive history of U.S. intervention, conflict, and withdrawal over the course of the war.
Carter Malkasian: Hi. I'm Carter Malkasian. I like to think of myself as a historian. I am a professor at The Naval Postgraduate School right now. I've spent lots of time in Iraq and in Afghanistan, and that's what I wrote a book on, and I try to speak Pashto here and there, and try to study Afghanistan, study other historical topics. I think that covers me pretty well.
Annie Henderson: To start our conversation, the war in Afghanistan spanned across four U.S. presidents. Can you give us a brief history of how the U.S. approach to Afghanistan has shifted over the past 20 years?
Carter Malkasian: Yeah, that's no problem. If you want to talk about our approach in broad strategy, we started out in 2001, after Osama bin Laden attacked the United States, wanting to go into Afghanistan, capture him, destroy Al Qaeda, and topple the Taliban movement that was associated with Al Qaeda, but we often judged as being one in the same. In reality, they weren't, but we kind of thought that at the time. But we went in with just a small number of troops, at that time. By the beginning of 2002, there was still fewer than 8,000 U.S. troops in the country.
Carter Malkasian: After we removed the Taliban, then we had to help establish a new government in Afghanistan. That government ends up being run by Hamid Karzai. Our idea is, at that time, we want to continue to maintain pressure against terrorist groups. We're also going to help build a democracy. During these first years, we kept a small number of troops in the country. We tried to do a few things with helping democracy, and slowly, we started doing a little bit more to help with nation-building, and we did things to help with women's rights.
Carter Malkasian: We didn't want to have too large of a footprint, because we thought that wouldn't be sustainable, and we were overconfident, and thought the Taliban had been totally defeated and weren't going to come back.
Carter Malkasian: This starts to change in 2006. The Taliban had reorganized by then, and fighting was breaking out throughout large parts of the country. So, we slowly start to send more troops into Afghanistan so that we're getting upwards, by 2009, we're approaching about 40,000 troops in the country. The goal has stopped being just to create a democracy and do terrorist operations. The goal has now become to… The goal was originally to defeat the Taliban, but now, that goal reemerges. That goal returns, because we had though the Taliban were defeated, and it turned out, they weren't. So, between 2006 to 2008, the goal becomes, we are going to actually defeat the Taliban and remove them. We don't want to send too many troops to do it, but that's our goal, and we're not going to stop until that's done.
Carter Malkasian: President Obama comes in, and he shifts some of that strategy. He is willing to send in more troops, and so the number of troops under him, between 2009 and 2011, raises to 100,000 U.S. troops in the country, which is the peak level that we get to. But his goal is not to defeat the Taliban. His goal is to break their momentum, make sure we defeat Al Qaeda, and to help the government enough that it can stand up on its own.
Carter Malkasian: So those forces and that stays in place until 2011 when President Obama starts to begin drawing down our forces. He draws down the forces down to about 9,600 by the end of 2014. He also wanted to get out, but he wasn't able to do that. Our goals in Afghanistan at this time again shift dramatically. Our focus just becomes on giving advising and assistance to the Afghan security forces. Our goals become to continue to operate against terrorist groups, but our goal certainly isn't to defeat the Taliban. It's really to stop having combat with them at all.
Carter Malkasian: That changes again in 2016, for a variety of reasons. Really, the strategy then turns into is we don't leave Afghanistan. We stay there, and the idea is, we'll have a small number of troops, and it's always around 10,000. We stay there. We prevent things from going bad, prevent the Taliban from taking over. Goals like nation-building, human rights are really not there. Now, protecting democracy and protecting human rights, that does kind of retain itself throughout. Democracy is more explicit than women's rights. Women's rights is more of an implicit goal that continues to exist in Afghanistan.
Carter Malkasian: Then finally, by the time that Trump comes in, the strategy changes more. We enter into negotiations with the Taliban to try to leave within 14 months. President Biden comes in, and we do that. So, that was a very quick overview of the war, and I'm not sure I covered everything you needed me to cover.
Annie Henderson: No, I think that's very helpful, and some of it is, we're trying to just ground people in so many different events that's happening. So, just trying to give people a good sense of where a couple of things have been happening. One thing I'm really curious about is, one of your books is War Comes to Garmser, is that how you--
Carter Malkasian: Garmser.
Reema Saleh: Garmser.
Carter Malkasian: It means hot place in Dari.
Annie Henderson: Well, it's in Southern Afghanistan ...
Carter Malkasian: Yes, it is.
Annie Henderson: So it is very aptly named, I assume. This was modeled after War Comes to Long An, which is a book about the Vietnam war. So, I'm really curious, as a historian, how do you view the comparisons that have been made between the Afghanistan and the Vietnam wars?
Carter Malkasian: On the one hand, when you're talking about how the U.S. does strategy and policy, you start seeing similarities, the length of the war, the fact that the earlier part of the war, we don't have a lot of forces. Then, we increase the number of forces. That increase in forces doesn't produce anything. We have phases of the war where we think counterinsurgency will work or nation-building will work, just like we did in Vietnam, and it doesn't succeed.
Carter Malkasian: We eventually get involved in negotiations with the adversary, and yet those negotiations follow a startlingly similar path, that in both cases, we're trying to get the adversary to concede, and in neither cases do they do that. In both cases, we're trying to trade our withdrawal of our troops to get the adversary to do something, and in both cases, we get very little out of the adversary, further withdrawal of our forces. In both cases, the end is a humiliating withdrawal from the capital of the country.
Carter Malkasian: Now, on the other hand, there are dramatic differences between Afghanistan and Vietnam, which are probably more important. At its height in Vietnam, we had about 600,000 troops on the ground. 100,000 is the height here, and for most of time, we had far fewer than that. 58,000 Americans died in Vietnam. In Afghanistan, it's still incredibly tragic, but the number is just shy of 2,500. So, there's a dramatic difference in that.
Carter Malkasian: Also, Vietnam, we have the draft, so people can be conscripted to go and fight. There's no draft in Afghanistan. In Vietnam, we have protests and riots throughout the country on a regular basis against the war. I challenge you to think of a single protest against the Afghan war. I don't even know of one at Berkeley, where I did my undergrad. I suspect there was one, but it's an indication of how the war had incredibly low salience for the America people. The American people maybe didn't think the war was necessary, but people weren't standing up to stop it. There was no real political cost for presidents staying in, somewhat of a political cost to getting out, if things went bad. So, these are fairly significant differences between the two.
Carter Malkasian: The other thing to really remember is that Vietnam did not involve a direct attack on the United States. The domino theory, that doesn't come from a direct attack on the United States. Afghanistan did have that, so that creates a greater reason to stay.
Carter Malkasian: I think, to nail the difference even more, that Afghanistan was a forgotten war while it was going on. It's likely to be forgotten quite soon. It's already being forgotten. Vietnam's not going to be forgotten. It's a part of the culture. It's deeply embedded in how America thinks about itself. So, that is also a dramatic difference between the two.
Annie Henderson: Can I ask why you think that is? I guess growing up, I don't really think of anti-war movements against the war in Afghanistan. I think that is a very marked difference, and I'm not sure why.
Carter Malkasian: The easiest way for me to say… The easiest ways to say it are, not as many Americans involved, not as many people having a son or… well, women weren't conscripted at that time, having a son drafted, being sent to go to the war, and possibly dying in the course of the war. Versus here, American service men and women volunteer to join, and they're sent out by choice, and those numbers are much smaller than the number of people who were going to Vietnam and being exposed to combat. So, that just means, on its own, you have a smaller base of people who are going to be most affected and most upset.
Carter Malkasian: Then, you have how we've treated the war because the war involved an attack on the United States, I think the press did certain things differently. There aren't pictures on the TV of wounded U.S. soldiers, or marines, or sailors, or airmen. That was the case during the Vietnam war. So, you don't see these highly traumatic pictures of what's going on. Now, there's battles and other, and there's plenty of coverage of it, and you can read about many things, but that level of really visceral feeling isn't there the same way. So, I think those help us understand it in a way that, how that's different from Vietnam.
Reema Saleh: Coming into your career a little bit more, you spent two years in Garmser, which is in Southern Afghanistan, as we discussed. You were there as a political officer with the State Department. What was your experience like, living in Afghanistan, meeting with the people there?
Carter Malkasian: It was one of the greatest experiences I have had, I think, because I got to go out, and you saw the Afghans every day. You saw the people coming into the base for something, and you'd go out places, and you'd go to the districts just about every day to see all the people that were coming into the lineup to go talk to, whether a village elder, someone coming in with a problem, policemen, religious leaders. They would be there to talk with.
Carter Malkasian: Then, occasionally, some women would come in. We had a few of the women on the team, and they would do most of those conversations, but sometimes, I was lucky enough to get to hear. That's very much a hidden part of Afghanistan, for most of us. You may see some women, especially if you're in Kabul, but if you're in the villages, you're not seeing many. You're not really supposed to talk to women.
Carter Malkasian: There's a lot about Afghanistan we still don't know, but there's a whole part of their society that was secluded from us, partitioned from us quite purposefully. It's disturbing in many, many ways. I say that in a sense that, I was lucky enough to see that, to have some small, very, very small window into that.
Carter Malkasian: Then, we would go to the villages, and eventually, things were good enough in the district that I could go to the villages without marines and go with the Afghans there, and spend time in those areas, and whether walking in the fields or sitting in a compound. When it was getting close to the time I was going to leave, kind of wondered how I would leave. I was sitting in a meeting. I was looking across at a variety of tribal leaders with their turbans on, and we were discussing politics and where things were going. I thought, "Wow, how am I going to leave this?" This is so unique, so different, in such a completely different, engrossing environment, that I thought, "How can I leave this?" But it's best for everyone's health if one does leave. If you stay somewhere for too long, I don't think it's a good thing.
Carter Malkasian: Then, I kept in touch with many of the friends there over time. Their lives are shorter than our lives are. They look at life a different way. There's many more things that are going to cause them to have an early death, and they know it. A lot of it's very, very random. They can't control when their time is going to come, not that… none of us can really control it, but they can't reduce it much. So, the next day is of much greater value than it is to us. Enjoying the moment, enjoying the night, enjoying the meal, enjoying the music, matters more. Worrying less about working every single day matters, because working every single day may not matter in the end, because something random can happen.
Carter Malkasian: You notice it in terms of, you have a certain… you're used to, in the United States, the rate at which people leave us. But in Afghanistan, if you're there for a while… Yeah, so that two years wasn't the only two years that I stayed there. I went after that, and then I kept in contact, and then I went there again. But you notice that the rate of people who are dying, who you know, is much greater than in the United States. That just enforces to you about how their lives are different.
Carter Malkasian: That also makes us understand how people feel about the Taliban right now. Why do they want to increase the risk that they're going to die early, increase the risk that they're going to extend the war? If letting the Taliban come in gives them a few more days of peace, it just helps one understand that situation.
Reema Saleh: I think that's a very interesting take. It's very refreshing to hear from someone who looks at this through a human lens, instead of, I think there's a lot written on how the Afghan people feel that comes from I think more… lacks a level of empathy about how they're actually living and experiencing their lives. So, I really, really liked what you have to say about that.
Carter Malkasian: Thank you. I appreciate that.
Annie Henderson: President Obama announced the beginning of troop draw-downs in 2014, and this was right before he became Special Assistant to Joint Chief of Staff Chairman General Joseph Dunford. How did this announcement impact your role and your work?
Carter Malkasian: President Trump's announcement or President Obama's?
Reema Saleh: Did I say President Trump or President Obama?
Carter Malkasian: President Obama in May of 2014?
Reema Saleh: Yes.
Carter Malkasian: At that time, I was in Afghanistan. So, I remember that specifically. That had come after a long period of discussion about what the U.S. policy was going to be in Afghanistan, and how many troops we were going to keep, because it wasn't known if we were going to down to no troops, if we were going to keep maybe 10,000 troops, as roughly was kept, if we were going to have 12,000 troops, and what the role of those troops were going to be. There was a lot of concern that we would leave entirely, and the country could fall apart, a lot of it's on the part of the Afghans, and some in the U.S. government about that.
Carter Malkasian: So, there was careful negotiations, careful discussions about that, that were very well-handled to make sure they didn't get into the press, and they weren't politicized. Well, everything's politicized, but that they were less politicized than other things were. That ended up coming out that we would have a draw-down, down first in that year to 98, 9,600 and then that number would stay until 2015. Beginning of 2016, we would drop down to 5,500. Then, at the end, we would leave.
Carter Malkasian: Honestly, the sense that we had at that time was, we're pretty much doing things on track. That this will allow the Afghans to have some more advising, some more time with the Americans. It will help cover our security interests during that time. And then, the U.S. forces will leave. At that time, it also wasn't clear okay, so how many forces will stay at the embassy? What kind of role will they be having? So, it was kind of well, the future could… this could play out in a certain way, and we move forward.
Carter Malkasian: There wasn't a lot of negative reaction to that decision, at least where I was. It was, we're moving forward, and this is how things are going. Now, later on, those decisions get reversed, and they were reversed, like I mentioned before, because the Islamic State threat, but also reversed because the deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan, as the Taliban were taking more ground, so that if you're not there, if we go down to zero, then the Taliban will be able to succeed, and that will create terrorist threats upon the United States. That was the thinking.
Annie Henderson: So, as you move into this new role as Special Assistant to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, could you maybe just inform our listeners how civilian and military leaders work together on a conflict like Afghanistan? I think this is one of those things, as an expert I'm sure is very clear, but I think to a lot of people who are not familiar with how the U.S. works on this particular issue, it'd be really great to get a lay of the land.
Carter Malkasian: All right, so first of all, my role as a civilian is, there was to advise General Dunford. I was not a decision-maker. I was just someone advising him, really advising him for the advice he was going to give, or how he was going to interact in an engagement with a foreign leader, or maybe getting information for him, to help do things. So, I wasn't a policymaker myself.
Carter Malkasian: Now, how civilians and the military interact, the military has different high-ranking generals and admirals, which are often called four stars, and that's for the number of stars that they have on their collar, and sometimes on their… this is not a lapel, this is a shoulder. Those generals have a great deal of influence. Some of them command a service, like the Air Force, or the Marine Corps, or the Navy. Some of them command large commands, like Central Command, that you may have heard of, that handles the Middle East, or IndoPaCom Command, which handles all of the Pacific and out into the Indian ocean.
Carter Malkasian: Then, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, he is a forcer. He's the most senior of them. He doesn't command them all. The person who commands them all, the way that chain of command works is, it first goes to the Secretary of Defense, so he has authority there, and then the President has authority there.
Carter Malkasian: Now, when a decision on a policy issue is made, it's usually made by the National Security Council, which at its highest level is going to be the President, Vice President, Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense civilians, and then usually the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as a military representative. Sometimes, other generals may be there too, like the Centcom Commander and the IndoPaCom Commander, just depending on the situation. But when those decision are made, it's the President gets ... and there can be other people in National Security councils, like the Intelligence Director will be there. I'm just trying to give a general sense of what that looks like.
Carter Malkasian: The President makes the ultimate decision. The job of the military, the military cannot decide to enter a war, to leave a war. The military does not set policy goals. It doesn't say, "This is the reason we're in the war, and this is the reason we're going to attain it." What the military does is designs how to attain it and often gives options to the President or Secretary of Defense about how this can be attained.
Carter Malkasian: Now, for any particular issue, the chairmen or other military can offer their advice to the President about what to do, but that advice generally should stay out of… should definitely stay out of domestic politics, and should also stay away from policy goals. Everything's blurry. The domestic policy is not blurry, but the policy goals for the war that's very blurry, in terms of what's involved, who should have say in what, and who should be doing others. But in general, the military leadership should try to stay away from talking too much about the goals of a war.
Carter Malkasian: Why? Because you don't want the people who… Well, the main reason is, you don't want… the crucial thing is, you don't want them encouraging us to get into war. War is their business, so we want to keep that separate. But there's other reasons too, if there's anything about getting out of a war, it's perhaps best that the military is not giving advice on that, that that also works well for the President or what the goals of a conflict are. So, at the highest level, the civil military interaction works like that.
Carter Malkasian: But it works its way onto the lower level too, because within the Department of Defense, there's the military side. There's a whole nother office called the Office of the Secretary of Defense. So, they have lots of civilians in there, and they will help set policy goals, help with planning, help with giving… managing the force and making sure the policy goals are implemented, and then helping the SecDef, the Secretary of Defense, shape what he wants to do, and create his plans for what he wants to do. The military is kind of working in the same direction and will either give their advice separately to the Secretary of Defense or will work with OSD to give a common set of advice to them.
Carter Malkasian: Now, within these groups, I mentioned that there was the National Security Council. The National Security Council is a word with two meanings to it, which can be confusing. One is the National Security Council I just referred to, with a small number of people involved in it, one of whom I forgot to mention is the National Security Advisor. So, if you've heard of Henry Kissinger, I'm sure, or Brzezinski, more recently H.R. McMaster, Condoleezza Rice, Susan Rice, they were all National Security Advisors. Their role is to advise the President on national security, but probably more important, to coordinate that National Security Council meeting and the interaction between those other major players I mentioned at that National Security Council.
Carter Malkasian: Okay, so the other need for the National Security Council… I mentioned that one. The other one is the staff that serves the National Security Advisor and the President on national security issues. So, that staff that exists, they help coordinate those meetings, coordinate between all these different… the Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, Intelligence. They help do the coordination between them, and they're often the ones that write the papers, that will go to the President and explain the issue in the first place, or write papers that explain what the decisions were of the various meetings.
Carter Malkasian: So, there's a combination of military on that staff and civilians on that staff. The civilians will interact both with the military on this stuff, plus they'll interact with the military and the Department of Defense. So, they will be creating their own issue briefings and their own ways of addressing topics that they are then talking to the military with.
Carter Malkasian: The last element of the civil-military relations, as I try not to turn this into a total lecture, is a relationship between Congress and the military, which is extremely important. In fact, the relationship with… You can often forget just how important that relationship is, because Congress confirms who… the three and four star generals up. They were confirmed by Congress. They have to report to Congress. They have to share essentially any information that Congress wants. There are certain political things and certain decisions that can be kept quiet or held in a classified session until it's coordination necessary that Congress needs to know.
Carter Malkasian: But Congress has a right to know these things. Congress approves the budgets. So, that is an important mechanism of authority, and checking and balancing against the military. But it's the answering to Congress that also ensures that the military is not overstepping its bounds and is probably more powerful in that respect than certain other elements of the government. The President is very powerful, and the Secretary of Defense is very powerful in that way, as well, but it's the combination there that plays a very big, big role.
Reema Saleh: Yeah, so I guess how did the wants of civilian and military leadership balance each other out, at the time, I guess, different aims kind of interact?
Carter Malkasian: They played out in different ways throughout the conflict. Early in the, say, in the Bush administration, it often played out with the civilians getting what they wanted on things, and that it's often highly criticized that in 2003, the military didn't have enough of a role in giving advice and setting planning, and allowed an invasion to go forward that shouldn't have gone forward because the military didn't defend its ground, didn't argue strongly, didn't show how difficult the situation could be, when many, many knew that.
Carter Malkasian: So, that later leads to a little bit of a recalibration at the end of the Bush administration, in which President Bush starts relaying on General Petraeus to get things done, because he feels that General Petraeus can actually take action, and he removes Rumsfeld. So, the generals, General Petraeus, McChrystal, some others, Mullen, who's then the Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, they're able to have a lot of influence. Then, they have the success in the Iraq surge.
Carter Malkasian: It doesn't go as well in the early Obama administration. In the early Obama administration, there's a great interest on the part of a lot of the military in sending a large number of troops into Afghanistan, trying to resolve the situation in Afghanistan. They feel they can do that because of the success of their operations in Iraq previously. So, the same generals that had gained influence, the same generals that had gained influenced under Bush come into the Obama administration with that point of view, with that mindset, and that leads to friction with the new incoming Obama administration.
Carter Malkasian: In this case, a lot of military leaders feel that Afghanistan is very important to go into, to resolve the situation there, whereas President Obama, in his book A Promised Land, discusses this in great detail. It is a great book. He is more worried about the country as a whole. He's worried about the recession that's happened. He's worried about his healthcare package. He's worried about all the other things he has to worry about as President.
Carter Malkasian: So, he doesn't want to commit large numbers of forces to Afghanistan forever, because it costs about a million dollars a year for one soldier in Afghanistan, which that means for 100,000 troops, that computes, with a little bit additional that's there, it computed to 100, 120 billion per year. So, over the total, over the whole tenure, the petroleum dollars, that's the size of the Economic Relief Package. So, he thought, I'm not spending this kind of money on an engagement in Afghanistan, compared to economic relief for the American people. He was not comfortable with going in that direction, so there was friction there.
Carter Malkasian: Then, there was more friction because the military didn't present a lot of options to the President. One of the most important things that should be presented to leaders are options, different ways to go about solving what a problem should be. But they didn't do that, and so that made it hard for President Obama to have choices on what to do.
Carter Malkasian: The biggest problem there at that time was what Biden and others defined as, the generals, to a certain extent, wanted to… inadvertently or purposefully boxed in the president, because they started talking on TV about how their option, which was counterinsurgency and sending more forces, was the best option. They did it in front of Congress. There was an op ed; McChrystal did it in London. There was a leak of McChrystal's assessment that this should be done.
Carter Malkasian: So, what all this does is, it makes it much more difficult for the President to do whatever he wants to do, because the military has laid out there, "This is my plan." So, if the President doesn't do that, and anything goes wrong, all the critics are going to say, "You didn't listen to the generals." The new President incoming, so it's even more difficult to deal with these problems. You asked about the friction between the civilians and the military. That is a foremost example of the friction, the difficulties that existed.
Carter Malkasian: Later on, it improves, probably because some of those generals left, for various reasons, and it improves because the generals that followed them, and the admirals that followed them, were much more concerned about maintaining trust of the White House. Also, they were just less… They believed less that you could actually win in Afghanistan.
Carter Malkasian: You talked about the 2014, Obama's decision to withdraw in 2014. That whole process was managed very carefully and kept secret because everyone was so aware that letting it loose previously had been problematic. Everyone's intent was, we're going down the same path, and we're going to find the best solution. We're not going to get stuck into arguing for whatever option we particularly might think is best. It's not about what options is best. It's about laying out a way forward that's a good process and doesn't create problems and issues. So, that went better. Anyways--
Annie Henderson: No. That actually is really helpful, because I was going to ask you about your personal experience. You mention transitioning between Presidents, and you've served under both Barack Obama and President Trump. So, I'm curious, how was that transition for you personally? What was it like, switching your advice from one president to another?
Carter Malkasian: Because I was advising General Dunford, it wasn't that hard for me, because I didn't have to… I had the same boss. I had the same leader who I was giving advice to. I was working in the military structure, not in the civilian structure. Civilian structure requires lots of new leaders. The military structure just went about doing its thing, right? They have a whole process for when generals come into certain places, and officers come into certain places, and they go to a new place. So, that process just kept on going the same way it was before.
Carter Malkasian: People know that the Trump administration was very turbulent, but I was in a place where I didn't have those similar experiences because I was there advising the same boss that I had had previously. Did the issues change? Yes, the issues changed. The approach to Syria was a little bit different. The whole North Korea crisis with Kim Jong-un, and shooting missiles into the air and fiery rhetoric, that was all there. We worked a great deal to try to make sure that situation was dealt with responsibly. Over time, President Trump shifts the Afghan policy even more to talk about getting out, and so I was involved in those negotiations. So, there's no doubt we were dealing with different issues.
Carter Malkasian: But personally, it wasn't that tough. Look, there's all kinds of other ethical and other issues regarding that administration, but I was divorced from that because of the place I was in, which gave one a comfort in what they were doing.
Reema Saleh: Let's talk about the withdrawal. You were part of negotiations with the Taliban under President Trump, which resulted in the Doha Agreement in 2021. Could you talk us through these negotiations, and what was this approach to ending the war in Afghanistan?
Carter Malkasian: First, there was a realization that… this was about 2017 actually, that a lot of the military operations should be support negotiations, that a negotiated solution could be a way out of the conflict that satisfied everyone's interests. At that time, the idea of withdrawing all of our troops wasn't really… that wasn't really there in 2017, although some people, myself included, said, "Look, you're not going to get a deal unless you do that. The Taliban are not going to stop fighting if there's U.S. soldiers, so whatever the deal involves, it's going to have to involve withdrawal of our forces."
Carter Malkasian: There's President Trump, who kind of enforces that and wants that to happen, such that Ambassador Khalilzad then… after negotiations start, which is really in the autumn of 2018, then he puts that on the table, and then things start shifting, where the Taliban are willing to give a little more.
Carter Malkasian: What we wanted from the Taliban was for them to… We wanted a few things from the Taliban. One was that they would guarantee that they wouldn't help assist Al Qaeda, wouldn't let Al Qaeda launch any attacks from Afghanistan on other countries. So, that was one of the most… That was negotiated intensively, and of course, we want as many guarantees as we can get. They want as much freedom of action as they can get.
Carter Malkasian: So, that goes back and forth. But the Taliban did promise, "We won't train, equip, recruit, fundraise, allow any of that to… allow any training, equipping, fundraising to happen inside of Afghanistan. We won't allow there to be attacks from Afghanistan on other countries." That was in return for the idea that, at some point, we would completely withdraw our forces.
Carter Malkasian: We wanted a ceasefire. We also wanted there to be a political settlement between the Afghans and the Taliban. We wanted them to come together, go through a new political process, write a new constitution, set up a new government, so that it would be inclusive and all sides would be brought together, a negotiated end to the fighting.
Carter Malkasian: Now, to make that happen, eventually, it's decided to withdraw ... within 14 months, to withdraw all of our forces. So, negotiations go in that direction. Look, dealing with the Taliban, it was fascinating. It wasn't my first time dealing with them, but I can tell you that they were very committed, believed in their cause, believed in establishing Islamic law throughout Afghanistan, were deeply religious, not fake. They really do pray five times a day, and they really are committed to Islam. Four of them had been in Guantanamo Bay prison and had been released earlier, and they were now part of the negotiating group. They were, of course, interesting to talk to. Some of them didn't seem to like Americans very much. Others were more okay with talking to Americans. One of that group was particularly athletic and enjoyed playing football and such, which was interesting.
Carter Malkasian: The Taliban generally were standoffish, and that's kind of a combination of two things, I think. One is that we were their adversary, and the other is, they are established, accomplished people in their own respects, so they just might've felt that that was appropriate to do. But they could, at times, be warm and interested, and I certainly learned a bit about Islam from them, and certainly learned a few new words from them. So, that went really well.
Carter Malkasian: But anyway, so the agreement was signed in 29 February of 2022. A friend of mine calls it the Leap Year Agreement. That stipulated the withdrawal in 14 months. What it wasn't able to stipulate was on a firm ceasefire. It wasn't able to stipulate real political negotiations. It said political negotiations to start by 10 March, I think, so it was about 10 days. It had certain small requirements about what those negotiations should establish, but it wasn't detailed and firm about it. It didn't say that you need to have a constitution by now, or that we will only withdraw if these things are met.
Carter Malkasian: So, it's open-ended. It's what in diplomatic terms is called constructive ambiguity, which is the idea that if two sides don't get on very well and have lots of differences, if we can just look at, what is a common goal we have in the future, and say, "Okay, we're both after that goal," then we can at least advance in that direction, and the process can get moving. Without specifying what each side is going to give, what the negotiations are specifically going to look like. We just have a broad agreement on principles.
Carter Malkasian: So, that was the idea behind this, but in the end, there weren't enough details in it, I think, for it to survive. So, after that's signed, well a few things happened. First, the Taliban are intransigent, and they won’t—and by this time I’m not part of the negotiations anymore—the Taliban are intransigent. They are not going to concede on any further movement until they get every single thing that they want out of the Afghan government.
Carter Malkasian: Another part of it is that the Afghan government, President Ashraf Ghani, wasn't terribly interested in making a lot of concessions, partly because he thinks, "I don't have that much more left to give. Why am I going to give more? We have to start negotiations some time, and they're making me give everything before I get to negotiations. I'm not doing that." His position is certainly understandable. Whether it was right for us or turned out the best is perhaps a different question.
Carter Malkasian: The third reason though that things didn't go well was that President Trump withdrew our forces ahead of the schedule. We have a certain rate of what the draw-down was supposed to be. He went ahead of that rate. As we withdrew more forces, we were less able to hold things together on the battlefield. So, the Taliban could sense that they were gaining more ground and could sense that we were not going to be determined… that we were going to carry out the 14 months, or something close to it. So, there wasn't a lot of reason for them to continue to negotiate with us. We were losing our leverage.
Carter Malkasian: So then, by the time President Biden has to make a decision, he's judging between go to zero or keep 2,500. Well, keep 2,500 could perhaps have done some things, like still going after terrorists and such, but 2,500 wasn't going to be enough to convince the Taliban to come seriously to the negotiating table with concessions, because they knew at 2,500, they could control a lot of the country.
Reema Saleh: This actually leads into the next question we're hoping to ask you, which is, President Biden did largely stick to the agreement that was laid out and the plan I think that had come out of those agreements. So, I'm really curious, did this surprise you, or would you say that President Biden had any kind of additional changes to that plan in any meaningful way, besides pushing back the timelines?
Carter Malkasian: He pushed back the timeline. It depends how you look at the agreements, is a better way to say it. The agreement by one point of view, the view that Zalmay Khalilzad the envoy often said, was that nothing's agreed until everything's agreed, which meant that if the Taliban don't meet what we want… They even say this verbally. You can hear Pompeo say this and Khalilzad say this, "If they don't come to a political settlement, well then we're not withdrawing. Our withdrawal is conditioned upon them meeting what has been agreed upon at Doha." Now, some of the things agreed upon at Doha, if they're not written down, they become fuzzy and ambiguous. So, we would say that.
Carter Malkasian: But the biggest thing President Biden basically did is, he moved off that point, and we were withdrawing. I guess we could debate whether we see it as a fundamental change or a minor change in what was done. But he moved off that. Now, between the… At the time, I thought the decision between staying and leaving, they're both viable options. We could have done either, but leaving, from a strategic, big picture view appeared to be the more compelling of the two choices. Again, that doesn't mean staying was not viable, or ridiculous, or crazy or something. It wasn't. It could've been done.
Carter Malkasian: It wasn't going to solve the war. It wasn't going to end the war. It was just going to protect our interests. Even me saying it that way is the wrong way to say it. It puts greater insurance against our interests. We don't know if it protects it or not. There's greater insurance against it. So, that's a viable strategy, but leaving was also a viable strategy, and given, for all the reasons that I talked about previously, by this point, much more compelling to leave.
Reema Saleh: Was this approach popular with the military? How did the military leadership view the process of leaving?
Carter Malkasian: I think that probably varies a little bit, and I wasn't privy to the discussions in 2021 in any serious kind of way. So, I can tell you that the decisions to leave and to go forward with negotiations, and press forward with negotiations, that the generals whom I worked with, General Dunford, General Miller, General McKenzie, General Votel, they were all behind the negotiations. They did not argue against the negotiations. They did not, when decisions had to be made about negotiations, I mean including the final agreement, they didn't say, "Oh, we're not going with this. We reject it." Because they believed that it was the military's job being in support of the diplomacy, they supported moving forward with the negotiations and with that final agreement.
Carter Malkasian: Does that mean that there weren't debates and issues between the civilians and the military? Of course not. On a variety of little issues, and little things, and can't we get more here, and why do we give so much here, of course there's debates and issues on that. But there was no, "We refuse to go with this agreement."
Carter Malkasian: Now, in the open press, when it comes to President Biden's final decision to leave, it said that various generals, including General Milley, thought that we should've kept more forces there, and thought that this was better… Now, this is just in the press, so I can't confirm anything that's there, because I don't know. I haven't talked to anyone who's in those meetings. I obviously haven't seen meeting notes on it. So, I don't know what actually happened there, but that's probably just indicative of, once we're in the process of leaving, it just becomes harder.
Carter Malkasian: So, it was one thing to say it's the more compelling choice to do in early 2021, it's way different to see it playing out on the ground, and when you're seeing Kabul fall, and you're talking to people you know over the phone, and people are worried, people think they're going to die, some people are dying, and everything's crumbling and falling apart.
Carter Malkasian: You don't need me to tell you. You can read it various places, that there's obviously, on the part of a variety of military and a variety of civilians, great concern about how we left and what happened, and why did we just spend 20 years sacrificing everything for this to be the result? I think a lot of that's natural, given the stress and such, that the situation was in then.
Annie Henderson: I think you've touched on this a little bit, but I want to ground us a little bit more and then ask for a little bit wider view on this, which is, in July of 2021, President Biden said, and I'll quote here, "The Taliban is not the North Vietnamese Army. They're not remotely comparable, in terms of capability. There's going to be no circumstance where you're going to see people being lifted off the roof of an embassy."
Annie Henderson: I think he obviously came to regret that specific statement in comparison. After President Biden made those remarks, months later, the Taliban had conquered Kabul, and the Afghan President had fled the country, and we also had a suicide bomber kill 180 people, including American service members outside of Kabul's airport. So, I'm really curious, why was there such a large difference between the public expectation for the withdrawal and what actually happened, as someone who's sat advising the people who are making these decisions. I'm really curious, in your mind, where do you think some of those differences came from?
Carter Malkasian: It was always possible Afghanistan was going to unravel quickly. Afghanistan's history has a variety of occasions when, when the wind starts to blow one way, people try to ... groups shift in another direction. It's not entirely unique to Afghanistan. It just happens to be, we can look to immediate history and see some occasions of this in Afghan history, especially our advancement into Afghanistan in 2001, which the Taliban didn't put up much resistance. They just folded and went away. Depending on how we look at it, we can see it's even in the same amount of time that that all happened.
Carter Malkasian: So, this was always a possibility, that that could happen. It's hard to estimate the number of months or weeks in which something will happen like that. When you're looking at it, you have to consider okay, what are the things I think could happen for this to go to… that would make this go quickly? So, that's the Taliban are organized enough for, that they have enough logistics to move fast from place to place, that the government's Northern Alliance forces don't stand up, that no outside country gives greater assistance. These are some of the common things that are there, but you don't know. You don't know which way things could go, and you also don't know how much the Taliban would be inspired, or how much the government forces will be inspired.
Carter Malkasian: That should leave you, I think, if you're good to say, or if you're thinking broadly, to say, we don't know. There's a range of time in which this could happen, and I need to consider the different times in which this could happen, and the different things we might do for each of those. So, I guess you could say that that uncertainty is why President Biden said, "Well, no. It's not like that. It could be different."
Carter Malkasian: Another way to say this is, we can't predict the future, right? No one can predict the future. So, we shouldn't really expect politicians to do it. We shouldn't expect intel analysts to do it, as smart as they are, because it's an unrealistic thing to expect of someone. That's probably somewhat of a lesson from this. We have to think about, what's the broad range of ways this thing could work out, and are we ready for dealing with things, and have we laid out the indicators to see how it could change? What are the flashing red lights that we should be starting to see, that will make us say, "Okay, it's not going to fall in six months. It's going to fall in three months. It's not going to fall in three months. It's falling now." How do you start to translate that?
Reema Saleh: This might be an unrealistic question, but what conditions do you think would've been necessary to produce a better outcome?
Carter Malkasian: In Afghanistan?
Reema Saleh: Yes.
Carter Malkasian: That's a good question. It depends what you mean by outcome, but when we take something that would be realistic for an outcome, our realistic outcome for the war in Afghanistan was not winning. A realistic outcome for the war in Afghanistan would be something that lost fewer American lives, cost less money, and could've been managed better.
Carter Malkasian: So, what would've been needed to do that? Well, after defeating the Taliban, we shouldn't have been so overconfident. I mean, after toppling the regime in 2001, we shouldn't have been so overconfident. We should've thought that there's different ways history can play out, and one of them, for an insurgency, is that the insurgents return and form a threat.
Carter Malkasian: So, if we weren't overconfident, then we might've thought well, how can we deal with the Taliban? Can we negotiate with them now? Also, what kind of military forces do they need if they need to fight them? In a good world, that maybe would've prevented the war. In the much more likely world, it just would've made the war easier to manage, less costly.
Carter Malkasian: So, overconfidence there. Later on, take the surge. We probably shouldn't have surged. Why did we surge? Because we were so concerned about the threat from Afghanistan, and we cared so much about one option that we crowded out the other possible options that were there. President Obama should've had more options. One option could've been not to surge at all. Another option could've been to take away a few troops. I don't think you could've gotten all of them out.
Carter Malkasian: Another option could've been to surge a few troops. An option could've been well, don't decrease the numbers but stay long. You're going to have to stay long if you want to do any of these things. All of those things could've prevented a situation that would've lost fewer lives and cost less money, and a lot of those are related to our overconfidence, or not considering enough options, or not understanding that history… that the future's going to play out in different ways than you actually think it's going to play out.
Carter Malkasian: So, a lot of it gets down to the flexibility of one's strategy. A lot of it gets into: how overconfident are we? So, I think those are the things that I think we could've done differently to get to somewhere else.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Carter Malkasian. This episode was produced and edited by Reema Saleh and Ricardo Sande. Thank you to our interviewers, Annie Henderson and Reema Saleh. Special thanks to UC3P and The Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on The Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
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Disinformation and Democracy | Nina Jancowicz
Reema Saleh: Hi, this is Reema, and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world.
Reema Saleh: Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Reema Saleh: In this episode, Annie and I speak with Nina Jankowicz, an expert on disinformation and a global fellow at The Wilson Center. We talk about her debut book, How to Lose the Information War, which takes the reader through several case studies of how western governments are impacted by Russian disinformation tactics and how to navigate the future of conflict.
Reema Saleh: As a note, this episode was reported in November of 2021 before Russia's invasion of Ukraine. So, keep that in mind as you're listening. In the past month, we've seen misinformation and disinformation efforts ramp up. So, it's important to understand how these strategies work and what threats they pose. We also talk about her upcoming book, How to Be a Woman Online coming out April 21st on how to deal with gender harassment and abuse and online spaces.
Nina Jankowicz: My name is Nina Jankowicz. I'm a global fellow at the Wilson center, which is a nonprofit nonpartisan think tank here in Washington, D.C and I'm the author of How to Lose the Information War, which came out in 2020 and the forthcoming book, How to Be a Woman Online, which will be out in April of 2022.
Annie Henderson: Could you tell us a little bit about your first book?
Nina Jankowicz:Yeah, so this book came out of my experience when I was a Fulbright public policy fellow in Ukraine. I was lucky enough to be advising the government of Ukraine, specifically the ministry of foreign affairs and the spokesperson there on strategic communications and counter disinformation efforts in 2016 and 2017, which as you can imagine was a pretty interesting time to be in Ukraine.
Nina Jankowicz:I kind of felt, especially as the United States woke up to the threat of Russian disinformation specifically, but just kind of information warfare or online influence more broadly that we approached the problem with a certain hubris that I found really distasteful, especially from my seat in Ukraine. It was as if we thought we were the first country, the first people to ever deal with this problem, when that couldn't be farther from the truth.
Nina Jankowicz:Central and Eastern Europe had been dealing with disinformation, especially of the Russian variety for decades and had been really familiar with this new iteration of Russian online disinformation. And so I thought it would be useful to policy makers, but also to normal people who want to follow the news to understand how this phenomenon developed in Central and Eastern Europe and what the government and civil society there had been doing to try to combat it where they won and where they made, unfortunately, a lot of missteps as we tried to chart our own course in countering disinformation.
Annie Henderson:How are you defining disinformation? As you talk through all these different topics, I just want to make sure that our listeners understand the term that you're using.
Nina Jankowicz:Yeah, absolutely. I'll give you kind of the lay of the land as I see it, because these terms often get used interchangeably, which doesn't do the listener or the viewer really any good and frankly confuses a lot of people.
Nina Jankowicz:I use the definitions that First Draft News use. They're a great organization that focuses on how journalists and the media can identify and counter disinformation. And the definition they use for disinformation is, "False or misleading information used with malign intent." Now, that's different than misinformation, which is similarly false or misleading information, but it doesn't have that malign intent behind it. So, we're in the holiday season now. We're all going to be seeing our family soon.
Nina Jankowicz:We've all probably have that one family member who traffics in conspiracy theories. They're not necessarily sharing disinformation; they're just sharing their crazy theories because they think they're interesting or they might have something to them.
Nina Jankowicz:That's misinformation. That's all a little bit different than propaganda or fake news. I try not to use the term fake news in any academic writing. It is in the subtitle of my book, which is Russia, Fake News, and the Future of Conflict. That was something that my publisher insisted on as a signpost for curious readers. But fake news doesn't really describe the full breadth of information operations that we tend to see in this realm.
Nina Jankowicz:Often, the most successful disinformation campaigns aren't necessarily fake. They're not false and fully fabricated. They are grounded in emotion or a kernel of truth. So, let's take the coronavirus as an example. A lot of the distrust of the vaccine or distrust of government initiatives to counter COVID comes from a deep-seated distrust of either institutions or institutional medicine. If you kind of pull back the layers with people who are in the anti-vaccination community, that's what you get at when you get to the root of the problem.
Nina Jankowicz:So, it's not fully fabricated, it's playing on something that's very real for those people. And then propaganda is often thrown into the mix as well, but propaganda has a different meaning at least to my ear and that is propaganda is a little bit more for political purposes. It serves to support or promote one political ideology.
Nina Jankowicz:If you look at what Russia has done particularly in the last 15 years or so, they have supported groups and spread disinformation on all sides of the political spectrum. Sometimes directly working in opposition to one another, just to create polarization. That's very different than the propaganda that we saw during the Soviet period, which promoted the Soviet worldview, Soviet ideology, et cetera.
Nina Jankowicz:It's a little bit more like what China is doing today, promoting the CCP and Chinese ideology and a positive interpretation of how China is viewed in the world. A little bit different. I wouldn't call what Russia does, propaganda, at least in the international realm.
Reema Saleh:What makes new forms of disinformation so difficult to combat?
Nina Jankowicz:Well, I think what's happening today. What we see today is the use of disinformation paired with the micro-targeting technology that social media platforms offer and that actors like Russia or some domestic political actors have become expert at using. This means that pretty much anybody with a social media account and an understanding of these platforms and how they work can target their messages at exactly the people who are going to be most vulnerable to them.
Nina Jankowicz:Sometimes you can do that with the assistance of ads, but more recently it's become really easy to segment populations or to identify vulnerable populations simply through things like Facebook pages and especially groups. We've also seen a lot happening on messengers lately. So, things like WhatsApp or Telegram where people self-select into certain groups or channels, and once you're in, you can certainly message and broadcast your views to a group of people where there's trust for your messaging and where there's a lot less content moderation, right?
Nina Jankowicz:Especially on those encrypted platforms, unless you're in the group, the platform themself is not going to have any oversight over what you're doing. It makes it very difficult to combat. And then again, outside of the technological question, we're also looking at narratives that are very, very deeply seated in people's human distrust of systems, of governments, of science sometimes and a lack of understanding in how nuanced most events in the world are.
Nina Jankowicz:Things aren't actually as black and white as we like to make them out to be sometimes. And because of a lack of media and information literacy along with all the technological and social factors that I mentioned before, we kind of have this perfect informational storm, so to speak.
Reema Saleh:What misperceptions do people have about modern disinformation campaign?
Nina Jankowicz:I think the biggest one is that these are just silly cut and dry, false things that trolls on the internet make and they have no real-world implications. As I said before, these traffic and emotion and often they do drive people to take offline action. As we saw around the January 6th insurrection and a number of events during the COVID pandemic, the Reopen Movement and other protests that have inspired violence or threats to public safety. I think that's something that a lot of disinformation researchers have been warning about for a long time, because we've seen it happen in other countries. Again, the United States and a few other Western nations have approached the problem with such hubris that we thought our institutions are strong enough, we're going to be able to withstand this without the types of offline effects that we've seen in other countries.
Nina Jankowicz:And that's just been proven not to be true. There are two other kinds of demographic misconceptions that people have about disinformation. One, is that young people are going to be more susceptible to it because they use the internet more. What we actually find through a lot of data is that young people are a lot savvier about how they get their information. They understand that when they're watching their TikTok for-you-page, that that is not being generated organically, that the algorithm knows them and is sending them the content they're most likely to interact with and be engaged with and stay on the platform for and they recognize that and know how to navigate those platforms a lot better than let's say their grandparents do.
Nina Jankowicz:It's actually the boomers end up that have the most problems with information literacy. They're used to having a gatekeeper for their information. Having watched the nightly news for so many years and don't really fully grasp that on their Facebook pages or Twitter timelines, I doubt many of them are on TikTok, but if they are, that that is an especially curated stream of information, that's targeting them individually.
Nina Jankowicz:That is something that unfortunately, we have a lot to contend with and that population is voting more reliably than the younger folks as well who may not even have the right to vote yet. That's one demographic misconception. And then another one is that we often think that disinformation only targets folks on the right of the political spectrum and there are a lot of examples, especially from Russia in which disinformation targeted folks on the left. It's less frequent, but it does happen, and it doesn't mean that just because you're a registered Democrat or whatever, that you're immune from disinformation. You still need to take the same precautions online as folks on the other side of the political spectrum.
Annie Henderson:You talked a little bit about how disinformation is different than propaganda. I'm curious about where the modern concept of disinformation started. Is it really an internet age invention or does it have roots earlier than that?
Nina Jankowicz:Yeah, so Russia used disinformation during the Soviet period as well. Thomas Rid has a great book about Soviet era disinformation campaigns called Active Measures that I would highly recommend to anybody who's looking at it.
Nina Jankowicz:But in terms of our modern understanding of disinformation, certainly that began, I would say in the mid-2000s as the social media sphere was becoming more ubiquitous. A lot of the techniques that we see Russia using in particular, are holdovers though from the Soviet era. As Rid describes in his book, using these preexisting fishers and hot button issues and disagreements in society to further polarize, to further turn different sectors of society against one another, in order to gain political leverage is something that Russia has been doing since the Soviet period, since the early Soviet period we could say. I've been reminded by policy makers before that disinformation has long existed.
Nina Jankowicz:It's just a bit of a horse of a different color when it can travel as fast and as far and be as precisely targeted as it is with social media, with the platforms that we have today, where things can go viral in an instant and change our perception of events and make it very difficult to fact check or debunk after the fact in a way different than it would've been if newspapers were the ones being considered.
Nina Jankowicz:The famous example of Soviet disinformation campaigns that we often talk about is the Soviet operation to convince the world that aids was an American invention and that actually did gain some purchase, but it took a lot longer than it would have in the internet age because they had to launder their information through different print media and it took much longer to target certain populations abroad, especially and it was much, much more connected with kind of covert operations than the things that we see today, where a lot of these campaigns are kind of farmed out to different non-state actors like the Internet Research Agency, for instance.
Nina Jankowicz:So, disinformation as a concept has been around for a while. The Russian variety has some certain hallmarks to it and certainly is buoyed by the technology that's available today.
Reema Saleh:You compare the United States approach to tackling disinformation, to playing a game of whac-a-mole. Can you explain what you mean by this?
Nina Jankowicz:Sure. I actually call it whac-a-troll because I think that's kind of funny. But what I think we have been focused on basically since the very beginning when we figured out that Russia was attempting to influence the elections is removing fake accounts and posts that are harmful. There's been a lot of focus on that during the COVID pandemic as well.
Nina Jankowicz:But it's not a very systematic approach. It means that we are constantly on the back foot, constantly reactive, and it also means that essentially, we're always going to be chasing after these inauthentic actors who really have no reason not to continue to create fake accounts, not to continue to put out misleading information because the cost is very, very low for them. It takes much, much more effort to identify these fake accounts and identify the harmful posts than it does to create them.
Nina Jankowicz:And so, while it is important to put pressure on the social media platforms, I'm not making excuses for them here to make sure that they're identifying that content as quickly as possible and removing what it goes against their terms of service. But we also need to think more holistically. So, like how can we dis-incentivize actors like Russia from creating this content in the first place? thinking about that. Not that I think punitive measures are the end all, be all. These operations cost very little for Russia and for other countries.
Nina Jankowicz:So that is part of the toolkit, but not the panacea. We also need to think about how to educate our populations so that they're going to fall for these things less. There was such a debate. It feels like a long time ago now, but for most of the Trump administration, there is a big disagreement in Washington as to whether Russian disinformation was something we should worry about or not or whether it even happened.
Nina Jankowicz:It did happen. There's plenty of open-source evidence to that fact. And it certainly bothers me that an adversarial nation was attempting to influence our electoral discourse and I hope that any voting American would agree that that's not something that we should be okay with.
Nina Jankowicz:Instead, we just kind of looked at our shoes and allowed the hole that we're in to get even deeper. So rather than thinking about those generational ideas, those generational investments that we need to make that countries like Ukraine or Estonia or Finland in Sweden have been making, been in the case of Finland and Sweden, for generations in the case of Estonia and Ukraine for less time, but certainly making a large impact, we've been and cool in our heels. I think that is really, really unfortunate. And instead creating all this hubbub about removing content when that's only part of the solution.
Annie Henderson:Speaking of these other countries, I love how in your book, you don't just talk about the US, you talk about how a variety of countries are addressing the disinformation problem. I'm curious, do you see one approach emerging as the best in class? The gold standard for managing disinformation?
Nina Jankowicz:The best approaches all have things that are in common. I think of the countries that I look at in my book, which are Estonia, Georgia, Poland, the Czech Republic and Ukraine, Estonia has of course the privilege of being the first that Russia hit with some of these campaigns way back in 2007. They've got hindsight. They have really developed some systems that are quite robust, and their systems not only look at internet security, as we've probably all heard about. I'm sure this is very erudite audience, Estonian votes online. They have a lot of their government services online.
Nina Jankowicz:As a result, they're quite the leaders in cybersecurity in the trans all into community, but it's not just about hermetically sealing their online space. They've got an ethnic fisher that Russia likes to exploit, with the ethnic Russian population in Estonia. That was what led to the Bronze Soldier Crisis in 2007, in which a monument was moved and Russia through its media and some covert operations instigated protests in the center of Tallinn, the capital of Estonia.
Nina Jankowicz:I think as early on, Estonia realized that it wasn't going to just be these cyber operations or cybersecurity that protected it. They needed to address the elephant in the room. And in that case, it was integration of the Russian speaking ethnic Russian population in their country. And so along with all of their cyber measures, which are, again, some of the best in the world, they also invested in integration through education, through Russian classes for Estonian language for Russian speakers through other kind of cultural and investment opportunities for Russian speaking areas.
Nina Jankowicz:If you look at the integration statistics, things are really changing in Estonia. A lot of the younger ethnic Russians and Russian speakers are adopting an Estonia identity that isn't grounded just in culture or Estonia language. It's grounded in this kind of new Europeanness and being a digital leader in the EU, this sort of thing.
Nina Jankowicz:It seems to be really, really taking off. Is it perfect? No, very, very famously Estonia has had a couple of far-right politicians be elected to their parliament recently. So, watch that space, but certainly they seem to be doing a little bit better than many other countries. Now, they are a country of 1.3 million and people and have fewer societal fishers for countries like Russia to exploit. But if plucky little Estonia can do it, I am not sure why larger countries can't take another holistic approach with the resources that we have, let's say here in the United States to counter such operations that we're getting hit with pretty constantly at this point.
Annie Henderson:As you go through and talk about how each of these different countries handle their disinformation problems, do you think that that's the right approach? Should it be country by country or should there be any kind of international coordination? If you do think that there should be some international coordination, what should it look like?
Nina Jankowicz:Yeah, I think there is a unique problem for each country to solve. The campaign that Estonia was met with and continues to fight is going to very intrinsically look different than what's going on in the United States or the UK or Germany.
Nina Jankowicz:Russia is extremely good at identifying the unique weaknesses and vulnerabilities that each country has. That being said, we can always stand for more international coordination. There have been some nascent attempts at creating body that will share information and attempt to coordinate responses to disinformation crises that cross borders in particular.
Nina Jankowicz:One that was really quite successful, I would say is the response to Skripal poisoning in the UK in 2018. I think it was 2018 in which Russia, very famously used Novichok to poison a former spy who was living in the UK, Sergei, Skripal. As a result, when that operation was uncovered, the international community came together not only to expel Russian diplomats as a punishment for this egregious violation of UK sovereignty, but the UK government also shared and declassified very quickly, the intelligence that allowed them to say without a shadow of a doubt that this was the work of Russian intelligence operatives.
Nina Jankowicz:That was shared not only across governments, but with media, with experts who gave credibility to that message. I think in my perspective, that was a really successful international coordination operation. Not every disinformation incident can rise to that level, of course. But I do think there are moments where international coordination, particularly in terms of punitive measures can be extremely successful, but we haven't seen a lot of success in that area and unfortunately have seen more duplication than I would prefer.
Annie Henderson:One of the things that I love about your book is that you don't just talk about what's happening online. You also talk about how disinformation can kind of reach out the internet and have real monetary impact either through lobbying or the direct funding of groups or even just as a business for PR consulting firms who specifically focus on disinformation. What can be done about that? those actions that are happening outside of just online platforms.
Nina Jankowicz:So, this is another misconception maybe that I should have mentioned before. We think of disinformation as something that's just about online memes, but really there is a lot of offline action from the funding of these groups, as you've just mentioned to different political manifestations and unfortunately, this is where we get into kind of the murky area of anti-corruption reform.
Nina Jankowicz:This is something that I think we are going to see the Biden administration focusing on a lot more. It has been a priority for them. It's something that we really need our allies to help with as well, to uncover these networks and make sure that dirty money isn't moving around and funding these operations.
Nina Jankowicz:But if you look at Sheldon Whitehouse, the Senator from Rhode Island, if I've got that right, I'm pretty sure I do. He's very focused on anti-corruption. I did a hearing with the Senate judiciary committee in 2018, and that was his main thrust, that if we shut down the networks, the financial networks, through which these campaigns are funded, they won't be able to go on anymore. That's very true in the Russian case. With PR firms, it's a little bit different in that their clients are trying to distance themselves and they're often political actors trying to distance themselves from the disinformation and having somebody else do the dirty work.
Nina Jankowicz:We've also seen Russia do this recently, either the internet research agency or other oligarchs are buying services from PR firms, let's say in Ghana, which Clarissa Ward very famously uncovered in a recent investigation for CNN.
Nina Jankowicz:Again, that's not necessarily illegal. It just makes it a little bit more difficult to uncover these operations when the time comes. Now, the social media platforms actually for their part have cracked down on those operations, those PR disinformation or as some people like to say, disinformation for profit operations because they're quite misleading in their providence. And so, they feel that it goes against their terms of service. So that's one way that we're cracking down when there isn't illicit financial flows involved.
Reema Saleh:Disinformation doesn't just come from foreign actors. You write a lot about out how there's a rise in domestic disinformation actors and how they can be sort of amplified without knowing it. Should efforts to combat disinformation change depending on who is perpetuating that disinformation?
Nina Jankowicz:Absolutely. I think for too long in the United States, we have viewed disinformation as just a foreign problem while we are ignoring the problem underneath our noses. We have seen major political parties in the United States and high-level elected officials engaging in disinformation. Unfortunately, we don't have domestic regulations dealing with disinformation. We can point to different federal election codes and say, "Okay. Russia can't buy ads on Facebook in support of one candidate or another."
Nina Jankowicz:That's easy enough to say. But when it comes to disinformation that's coming from domestic figures online, it becomes very, very difficult to really clamp down on. We have rules governing advertising in print, on radio, on TV for elections, but when it comes to online ads, we don’t, and Facebook and other online advertisers and advertising marketplaces have been reticent to be the "arbiter" of truth for political ads.
Nina Jankowicz:Instead, saying this is free speech, it's in the public interest for people to see these lies. We've seen where that leads. It leads to insurrections that attempt to overthrow election results. I think we really need to get our federal regulations into place for this sort of stuff, especially because we have seen a proliferation of disinformation over the past 18 months that has not only affected our democracy, it's affected public health and public safety. We have to recognize that the longer we allow this wound to fester, not only do we create a bigger problem for ourselves at home, but that means that we are leaving ourselves vulnerable to foreign interference as well.
Nina Jankowicz:Because as you mentioned, we see foreign actors who identify these vulnerable individuals or people who are trafficking in disinformation, and they use them to launder their own disinformation into the American ecosystem. A great example of this from 2020 was Rudy Giuliani. As the director of national intelligence stated in their report on the 2020 election, which came out in March, I believe of 2021, it's pretty likely the IC assesses that Russian intelligence operatives fed Rudy Giuliani his "intel" on the Biden family. It was either fabricated or stolen. That was all with the express intent of manipulating American voters and using Giuliani to launder that information as a trusted conduit into the American ecosystem.
Nina Jankowicz:We have to think about this stuff. We need better awareness built about it. We need more rules about how campaigning can work with contributions from foreign governments and how that can be amplified online. Without even the foreign question in play, we need to discuss whether disinformation and just bold face lies that can affect public safety and public health can be amplified on the internet. I think there is a way to do that without endangering freedom of expression, if we keep it in an electoral atmosphere.
Reema Saleh:What are the steps that we in the US need to be taking in the long term? What institutions need to be most involved or held accountable?
Nina Jankowicz:So, I think the biggest thing on my agenda, if I were in the Biden administration right now would be empowering an office or a team of individuals to make sure that they are the kind of linchpin of US government policy to counter disinformation in the US government. Right now, we don't have that.
Nina Jankowicz:A lot of the institutions that are focused on counter disinformation activities are either within the intelligence community, within DOD, within the state department. They're not necessarily talking to each other all of the time. The coordination thing is always not necessarily the US government's strong suit, but more importantly, we don't really see involvement from institutions that are on the domestic side of things. I would love to see the department of education, the department of health and human services, housing and urban development, the national endowment for humanities, all of those and more involved in the counter disinformation question in the US government, because as we've just talked about, the domestic disinformation side of things is where it's all happening right now.
Nina Jankowicz:And if we're just playing defense outside of our borders, we're going to be missing a huge part of the game. I think that's the first step. And then we need to look at these really holistic. I hate to say it whole of government, because that's such a buzzword now, but whole of government policies where we are seeing really substantial coordination across government, where we're seeing an investment in generational activities like information literacy, where we're really trying to build up trust back in these institutions that has withered away over so long.
Nina Jankowicz:I think all of that is really important. Right now, we're kind of like a bunch of different hamsters spinning in our wheel, our own individual wheels. Are we powering a light bulb together? Yeah. But could that light be a lot stronger if we were working more in concert if we were all running on one giant wheel? Yes, I think so. And so that's the thing that I think is most important that we've seen governments like the UK do like Estonia, to some extent like Ukraine, although they have some kind of Soviet vestiges to recover from in their own government outlook and infrastructure, but that's the biggest thing on the agenda. So far, we've not seen that come out of the Biden administration.
Annie Henderson:Before this podcast, Reema and I were really excited to ask you about libraries and other offline in institutions of knowledge and what they can do to help combat disinformation, whether it be online or through these other avenues, like you've spoken about.
Nina Jankowicz:Yeah, I'm really excited you brought that up. I really believe in libraries. I think they are just a great resource for the United States and other countries where they've been employed in the counter disinformation fight because they're so highly trusted. Librarians are among the most trusted individuals, even still today across political parties. What I would love to see is either through state-level funding or federal-level funding, see grants go out to libraries who can host information, literacy classes, especially directed at seniors. Right? People who might need to have a little help for how to FaceTime their grandchildren, but you can also throw in some media and information literacy into that training that you're doing with them.
Nina Jankowicz:Also, when you have circle time with a bunch of kindergartners in the kids section of the library, let's also educate them about advertising and how it's targeting them. All of that sort of stuff is things that are allies like Sweden, like Finland, like Ukraine and Estonia are doing and it is delivered by a trusted mechanism. Again, somebody that knows their community, somebody that is seen as impartial, someone whose job people view it as to navigate information environments.
Nina Jankowicz:I think that's so critical because if we do like a bumbling kind of top-down US government propaganda campaign about information literacy, everybody's just going to laugh at it. Historically, we're not very good at those sorts of things. I would rather hand it over to the experts. Librarians, civil society, organizations that have deep roots in their community and let them be the conduits of that information, give them the funding and the space that they need to do it.
Nina Jankowicz:Make it a priority and I think we'll see great results. In Ukraine, they had a similar program that was funded in part by the US government, the UK government in Canada and they saw such growth in people's understanding of the information environment. They were able to train 10,000 librarians who then went and trained, I think another 80,000-90,000 people in their own regions back home. This program is still going on today, I think both at libraries and in secondary schools in Ukraine.
Nina Jankowicz:If Ukraine can do it, smaller country than us, but still quite a large country, one of the largest in Europe, I think the United States should be able to implement a similar program to great success as well.
Reema Saleh:Misinformation often runs on kind of anger or existing tensions in our society and social media does as well. Like I'm more likely to see a post if it elicits a really strong reaction from me. What should we do when we receive this kind of information and how do we parse through it when a lot of it seems organic or homegrown?
Nina Jankowicz:Yeah. That's an excellent question. I'll preface my answer by saying it's fine to be emotional. Let's just make sure our emotions are grounded in something real, not something that's spun up by a political operative or by foreign adversary. Right? When I am counseling people on kind of how to navigate the online environment, I try to remind people that the most engaging content online as you pointed out, is often the most enraging content.
Nina Jankowicz:And as we've seen from the Facebook papers, which have been and trickling out over the last couple of weeks, that is certainly true on Facebook. And I don't think they're the only social media platform that traffics in outrage. That being said, when you see this content, when you feel yourself really getting emotional about something you see online, stop for a second. Practice what I call informational distancing, which was something that I started advising people to practice at the beginning of the pandemic and consider why you're feeling so upset.
Nina Jankowicz:Is this something that is based in fact? Do you know the source? If you don't know the source, do a little bit of research. If this is a publication or a Facebook page or group, see what's behind it. See who's behind it. Do they have contact information? Is this a real person or a journalist who's published this post? If you can, do a reverse image search on their profile picture or Twitter picture to see if it brings you to an organic picture, or if it's something that's been edited or misappropriated.
Nina Jankowicz:A lot of times I can identify fake accounts because I do a reverse image search and it'll bring me to like stock haircut photos. That's a great way to do it. And then also, when we're talking about breaking news and things like that, see if anybody else is reporting what is causing you this emotional configuration in a different way.
Nina Jankowicz:Is a mainstream outlet reporting the facts the same way? Is there an outlet on the other side of the political spectrum, that's reporting the same details? Just do a little bit of crosschecking or what Michael Cofield, who's at the University of Washington Center for an Informed Public calls lateral reading. Looking across the internet to see like, is this true? Is it being reported the same way elsewhere? Just getting yourself a little bit more context because there are so many manipulative people and outlets online.
Nina Jankowicz:When you do that, you're going to be more informed anyway. It's a bit like writing a book report, when we were taught to do this back in elementary school, you weren't allowed to just use one source. You need to kind of consider all sides of the equation before you come to a conclusion. If you find that there has been, let's say, an incident of police brutality and everybody is reporting this the same way, you've been able to confirm the facts across multiple outlets, you know they're coming from a verified reporter on the ground, if you're interested, you can even go a little bit deeper and do some open source investigation and try to confirm where a live video was shot, things like this.
Nina Jankowicz:That's a little bit more skilled than we have time to go into today, but people do that. That's how you get information that is grounded. In fact, you remove the emotion from your initial reaction, and you are just thinking about what is true to inform your opinion. And then you can go forth and use that to fuel your activism, use that to fuel your interjection into the online discourse. But it's so important that we take those few extra steps and I've probably spent more time talking about it than it would take you. It's just a couple of quick Google searches and a couple of deep breaths before we click share. And that matters so much. We're kind of the front lines of the information warrant.
Annie Henderson:We've spoken a lot about your first book and I'm personally very excited to hear about your second book as well, which is called How to Be a Woman Online: Surviving Abuse and Harassment, and How to Fight Back. Specifically, I'm curious if you see a connection between the harassment women face online and some of these broader disinformation campaigns that we covered and that you've covered at length in your first book.
Nina Jankowicz:Yeah, absolutely. Actually, that's how I got into the whole gendered harassment space. I am a woman online, so I get this stuff myself, but it really started becoming an issue I cared even more about when I heard from interviewees during my first book, women in Georgia and Ukraine who had been the victims of targeted gendered disinformation campaigns coming from the Kremlin.
Nina Jankowicz:That's when I really started thinking about okay, we've heard a lot about how, how disinformation affects marginalized communities or different ethnic groups, but we really haven't heard about how it affects women. It was clear to me looking at like the Russian ads in 2016, that actually Russia was quite misogynist in its treatment of Hillary Clinton. The way that Russia had treated during the Obama administration let's say Jen Psaki who's now, of course, the white house press secretary, extremely misogynist. Russia doesn't have a great track record with feminism in general in its own domestic policy.
Nina Jankowicz:So, I started thinking about this more and I was lucky enough to do some research at the Wilson Center earlier this year with a great group of researchers that looked into not only the quantitative background of how women are treated online. We followed 13 candidates for office in the US, the UK, New Zealand, and Canada over a period of two months at the end of 2020 and found a staggering amount of gendered abuse and disinformation against them. I think something like 330, 6,000 pieces of content.
Nina Jankowicz:78% of which was directed at vice president, well at that point, candidate Kamala Harris. So really just truly, truly staggering amounts of hate. But we also saw through some structured interviews that we did with journalists and other women in the public eye, a very specific and deliberate use of gendered and sexualized tropes against women who were covering Russia, Iran, and China.
Nina Jankowicz:For me, this isn't just an issue of I'm a woman and people think it is part of my job just to endure this hatred online, which is bad enough, but it's also that the longer that we let this fester, it becomes a national security problem, right? We're in the age of deep fakes and most of the deep fakes that exist today, over 90% or 95% even are deep fake pornography. It's only a matter of time before convincing deep fake porn video is released of someone like AOC (Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez) or Kamala Harris or someone else.
Nina Jankowicz:We really, really need to get a handle on this, and the platforms don't do anything about it. There's no protections for women in our legal code. Law enforcement don't know what to do when they're presented with claims of cyber stalking or cyber harassment. It has an effect on you.
Nina Jankowicz:As somebody who's gone through this stuff myself, it makes it almost impossible to do your work and in the book and you know, I've used this analogy in real life too, because people don't understand how much it affects you, I compare it to, let's say you were walking down the street and suddenly there was a swarm of people, mostly men picking apart every part of your appearance, reducing your degree and all your hard work to your gender, telling you to get back in the kitchen, telling you to make babies and stuff that I can't say on this podcast, that would be something that we wouldn't tolerate. We'd take out a restraining order. The police would help you.
Nina Jankowicz:Online, we don't have that protection. Instead, as the internet has really even more so during the pandemic become an extension of ourselves, particularly for people who have a large online presence, journalists, academics, et cetera. It's just debilitating to undergo this stuff.
Nina Jankowicz:Women are just expected to endure it. "If you can't take the heat, get out of the kitchen." That's something my trolls have said to me before. So, I'm trying to change that. I do think that this is very, very closely aligned to the disinformation campaigns that we see both coming from foreign actors and domestic actors.
Nina Jankowicz:Just this week as we're taping this podcast, we saw representative Paul Gosar sharing cheap fake of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez were face plastered down an anime character's body, which then he proceeds to kill. I would say that is gendered abuse and disinformation. This is something unfortunately that I think is only going to become more and more common as we have more and more women in public life. I do not want it to affect the participation of my future children in public life.
Nina Jankowicz:I don't want them to look at my Twitter replies or look at Kamala Harris' Twitter replies and see shocking things and say, "You know what? I'm not going to run for public office. I'm not going to put myself out there." We need women in the conversation. And that goes doubly so for women of color and women of marginalized backgrounds who receive even more abuse than their white peers do.
Reema Saleh:I was genuinely surprised when that Twitter video wasn't taken down. How should platforms be responding to gender disinformation and harassment? What should policymakers be doing?
Nina Jankowicz:There's so much. The platforms have gotten ever so slightly better or a little more attentive over the past couple of months since our first report came out and I will say they have been at least willing to listen to the critiques we have for them. But right now, the biggest problem is that the onus of detecting and reporting and dealing with the harassment is on the target of those being harassed. It's on women. It should be the platform's job to protect their users from harassment and abuse.
Nina Jankowicz:Twitter has just introduced safety mode, which I think is an improvement. It's essentially something that will auto block people from your replies, who are using nasty language for as long as you like if you're undergoing like a trolling campaign. But again, the onus is on the user.
Nina Jankowicz:What I would like to see is more proactive detection of this content. If we were able to find 336,000 pieces of gender abuse and disinformation over a two-month period, attacking 13 different women, imagine what the platforms can find if they just put together a list of classifiers that they are updating fairly frequently.
Nina Jankowicz:In addition to that, we need to see consequences for those who are using this type of abuse. Right now, they just get a slap on the risk. They might get their account suspended. They might be asked to delete the offending tweet. Very rarely are they kicked off the platform, particularly if they are a large follower account that is essentially sending dog whistles to their followers to go and harass someone which has happened to me and happens to a lot of people. Those instigating accounts never have any consequence. So, there's a lot for platforms to be doing more proactively to protect women.
Nina Jankowicz:There's a reason that on Reddit, on Twitter, women make up less than half of the online population. It's because we are dealing with so much more abuse. On the platform side, I would just say they really just need to enforce their terms of service. All of the thing that I've mentioned are things that go against terms of service, and we don't see them taken care of. That's number one.
Nina Jankowicz:And then policy makers, I think there is some attention to this problem, particularly among women politicians, Jackie Speier of California is very, very interested in these issues. And we've spoken with a number of other members of congress as well. The problem is anything that has to do with gender becomes a polarizing issue in this Congress in particular. The violence against women act still hasn't been renewed.
Nina Jankowicz:I think there are some provisions being discussed in BAWA to add support for women who have undergone online harassment and perhaps to equip law enforcement with training and tools that they need to deal with some of these claims. But unfortunately, I think anything that Congress is able to pass, that's going to help normal people, isn't going to be implemented for a couple of years.
Nina Jankowicz:So, in the meantime, we really need the platforms to step up again. The one other thing that I would love to see introduced in the House and Senate individually and then in other parliamentary bodies around the world is rules for people who are sharing gendered abuse. So, for the representative Gosars or others, if they're sharing this sort of abuse or violent abuse from their official accounts, they need to be censored. There needs to be a consequence for those who are engaging in this sort of behavior to their colleagues.
Nina Jankowicz:This is supposed to be a civil deliberative institution and it's not supposed to be somewhere where people have to deal with violent threats from people they go to work with. Make no mistake, the idea there, again, isn't just to silence Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the interim, it's to send a message to all women, especially women of color or progressive women that they're not welcome in those spaces.
Nina Jankowicz:That is just unacceptable. So, I hope to see something like that introduced at least in the house sometimes soon as a result of what we've seen this week, but we've seen other issues that have met no resistance from the house rules committee or others. Just a few ideas. There's more in our report, malign creativity, which you can find on the Wilson Center website.
Annie Henderson:I think you've already answered this for online harassment that women face. But what are some of your big takeaways for policymakers when you're talking to them about disinformation more generally? You obviously speak to policymakers about this topic. What are your big points that you really need them to understand and take back with them?
Nina Jankowicz:The one that I repeat over and over, and I still think, unfortunately, is not heard by some politicians is that disinformation is not a partisan problem. It's a democratic problem. It doesn't matter what political party is being helped in the interim by disinformation. It might help your party today, but it might come to attack you tomorrow. It really is going to affect all of us. It's going to affect faith in the democratic system as we've already seen. It takes years to recover from something like that. I have served on election observation missions in countries like Ukraine and Georgia, where there is this deep-seated distrust of the electoral system because of legitimate fraud that existed there for many years. And so, I often think about in the wake of January 6th in the #StopTheSteal movement, how many people go to the ballot box now and don't trust that their vote is being counted?
Nina Jankowicz:I really do worry about that. It's not just our democracy that suffers, but as I've been saying the whole time, our public safety and public health, these institutions are important to the functioning of our society, to the peace and prosperity of the United States. It's ultimately extremely a selfish to say, "It's okay." When disinformation happens, as long as it's not affecting me.
Nina Jankowicz:If any policy makers are listening out there, remember the ultimate victim of disinformation is our democracy and people's participation in it. And without that participation, you're not going to get elected and the system isn't going to function anymore.
Nina Jankowicz:And that's the biggest takeaway for me and something that I find myself again, repeating every time testifying on the Hill or briefing policymaker, otherwise.
Reema Saleh:Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Nina Jankowicz. This episode was produced and edited by Aishwarya Kumar and Reema Saleh.
Annie Henderson:Special thanks to UC3P and The Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
03.01.22
Quantifying Global Peace | Steve Killelea
Reema Saleh: Hi, this is Reema, and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world.
Reema Saleh: Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Reema Saleh: In this episode, Deqa and I speak with Steve Killelea, a global philanthropist focused on peace and sustainable development. He's the founder of the Institute for Economics and Peace and the Global Peace Index, which measures and ranks the peacefulness of 163 different countries around the world. We talk about his recent book, Peace in the Age of Chaos, and how we can build more peaceful, resilient societies.
Steve Killelea: Peace in the Age of Chaos, it covers a number of different themes. The first is the personal journey to peace. Does it really happen by accident? Secondarily, it covers an entrepreneurial story on how you go about developing a world class think tank. And then finally it talks about the state of global peace, and then also describes a concept called positive peace, which is the attitudes, institutions, and structures which create and sustain peaceful societies, combines that with systems thinking to then come up with a transformational concept for how we could go about better running our societies.
Steve Killelea: But really, if I look back on it, peace to me happened by accident. So, my background's in business, I've set up two international IT companies. First one ended up publicly listed on NASDAQ, second on the Australian stock exchange. From that I accumulated quite a bit of money.
Steve Killelea: And so I set up a family foundation to work with the poorest of the poor. And so it's done a bit over 220 different projects down different parts of the world and direct beneficiaries about 3.6 million people. And so, working with the poorest, the poor took me into a lot of war zones, near post-war zones. And it would've been northeast Kivu in the Congo, I was walking through there one day and I suddenly wondered what is the opposite of all these stressed out countries I'm spending time in? What are the most peaceful countries and what could I learn from them to bring to my projects?
Steve Killelea: And really it was a fantasy question. We all have these fantasy questions. But what was profound, so I got back to Sydney, searched the internet, and couldn't find any rankings, the countries of the world by their peacefulness. I thought, wow, that's important. So, that's how the Global Peace Index was born. But out of that comes a really very, very profound question and profound realization: Is that a simple business guy like myself can be walking through Africa and wonder, what are the most peaceful nations, and it hasn't been done, and how much do we know about peace? If you can't measure something, can you truly understand it? If you can't measure it, how do you know whether your actions are actually helping you or hindering you?
Deqa Aden: You touched a little bit about positive peace. My question for you is what is negative peace and why is it important for us to distinguish positive peace from negative peace?
Steve Killelea: Yeah, that's a very good question. But I think the question coming back from that is what is peace? And so peace means different things to different people. So, you can hear a politician speak and peace is when the war stops, but that doesn't mean that you've actually got a peaceful society. You've just got one where you haven't got two armies fighting. There's also the concept of inner peace. And so inner peace may be described as the absence of conflictive emotions, certainly the concepts in the East of inner peace, of what they would call happiness, which is very different than the Western concept of happiness.
Steve Killelea: So for me, peace and the definition used for peace is relative to what you're trying to achieve. So, you think, well, what aspect of peace am I trying to understand here? And then you look at a definition to match.
Steve Killelea: So now, if we look at the Global Peace Index, we use the definition called the absence of violence or fear of violence as the definition of peace. And that's what you could call negative peace. Now it's very, very good. It's a definition just about everyone can agree on. You don't get too much argument. And it's something which leads to being able to get metrics to be able to measure peace. So, if you look at the Global Peace Index, it's got three different domains. So, it's got internal safety and security, maybe things like homicide rates, violent crime, terrorist acts, number of police, number of people in jail, etc., ongoing conflict and militarization. So, you can measure them. Now that's very, very good because now you know the state of peace. You know the state of peace with all the countries you're measuring – in our case, it's 163.
Steve Killelea: And then you also understand the velocity of peace in those countries. Is it improving or is it getting worse? And along a whole range of dimensions. So, that's truly, truly insightful. But what it doesn't do is tell you what it takes to create a peaceful society. Now that is what positive peace is. So, that's positive peace. And so we describe that as the attitude, institutions, and structures which create and sustain peaceful societies.
Steve Killelea: Now what sets that apart from the work of other people working in these fields is we've derived this through mathematical modeling and statistics. So, we've got something like 50,000 different data sets, indexes, attitudinal surveys at the country level in Sydney. So, what we do is mathematical modeling, statistical analysis against those data sets to find out the factors which are most closely associated with the Global Peace Index. And so those factors then, we take them, we do further analysis to be able to clump the ones which are most statistically significant together, that then forms a framework, or it's eight pillars, of positive peace.
Steve Killelea: Now the beauty of that is, one, it's not my ideas on what creates peace or the researchers’ ideas on what creates peace. It's factually driven within a positive peace index and not set by us. They're dependent on the way, on the strength of the correlations with the Global Peace Index. Now, as we pull that all together, we can now create a positive peace index and that's really quite profound because that now gives us the ability to be able to look at how a country's momentum's changing on the factors underlying what creates peace.
Steve Killelea: But what's more profound is what we found is when we took this Positive Peace Index, the same factors, which create peace, also create a whole range of other things which we think are really important in society. Such as high per capita income. In fact, countries which are improving in positive peace on average have 2% per annum higher GDP growth rate than countries which are decreasing. Perform better on measures of ecological sustainability, perform better on measures of your wellbeing and happiness and on measures of inclusion.
Steve Killelea: So, from that, what we derived is that positive peace, in many ways, describes an optimal environment in which human potential can flourish. And that's quite important. We then take the positive peace and then combine it with a whole set of systems, thinking, and theory to better understand the way societies operate. And that is when we start to get looking at the transformational way, Western governments and societies, about how we go about doing societal development.
Reema Saleh: Can you talk a little bit more about the Global Peace Index and the methodology in scoring countries?
Steve Killelea: Sure. So, if we look at the Global Peace index, as mentioned earlier on consists of three different domains, first one's safety and security, the second is ongoing conflict, and the third is militarization. So, we bring these together to create these three dimensions to create a compass and index. Consists of 23 different measures. We have an expert panel that looks at the indicators and assesses them and makes recommendations on what indicators we should and shouldn't include. And the index itself has been slowly evolving over time. Having the three different domains, you can take all of it as composite index and see what's happening and where the changes are or alternatively, you take each of the domains separately and see the momentum and direction of them. So, one of the more fascinating things which comes out of it is if we look back over the last decade, more countries have actually improved in peace than deteriorated. Most people wouldn't believe that, would they?
Steve Killelea: In fact, we've had 86 countries improve and 75 deteriorate. However, peace globally actually deteriorated over that time. And that speaks simply because when countries fall in peace, they fall faster than they improve. Takes a lot longer to improve in peace. You need the outbreak of the conflict or something, and it really drops significantly. So, if we come back and we look at, let's say domains like safety and security, it consists of a number of different measures, which are able to balance each other out. So, some of the things would be, let's say, the number of police, the levels of incarceration, levels of violent crime and homicide. And all those come together. So, if you have a police state, let's say a spy in every 10,000, it'd be really quite peaceful in terms of violent crime. But on the other hand, it's not a very peaceful place to live. So we look at the level of policing, the level of incarceration, and the level of violent crime. We also got the availability of small arms within the society. That's also a negative. We also measure the number of violent demonstrations, let's say, and a number of other measures. State-sponsored terror on its citizens, that'd be another measure which we have in there as well. So that's the safety and security. So that's really focusing on the internal.
Steve Killelea: Now militarization, that consists of a number of different indicators. So it's like percentage of GDP spent on the military, number of troops per 100,000 people in the population, sophistication of the weapons – countries with nuclear weapons score the worst possible score on that. And then the size of the imports and exports of military equipment as well.
Steve Killelea: And now, so if you look at the definition which we use for the Global Peace Index, absence of violence or fear of violence. So some people would say, well, the military keeps the peace. In some ways, that's a very, very true statement, but why do you have a military? It's, one, because you fear your neighbors and that you need to protect yourself against them. So that's fear of violence. Alternatively, you really do have to keep yourself safe or that you want the military to exert geopolitical influence. And that comes back to the use of the military for a country's own advantage. So that's the reason the military's in there. And so we're neutral on the military in terms of what the size of the military should be. Obviously, we don't live in a peaceful world. We need military, but the size of the military really comes down to choice for each individual country. What's the level you need to feel safe without it being then used extensively overseas in conflicts, which didn't need to happen?
Steve Killelea: The final domain is ongoing conflict. And so ongoing conflict measures the number of people killed in conflicts. It measures the intensity of the conflicts, and also the number of the conflicts as well which is going on. One of the more interesting things which is coming out of the work we've done, over the last 15 years what we've seen has been a growing global inequality in the levels of peace. So the countries which are most peaceful are becoming more peaceful, while the countries which are less peaceful are becoming less peaceful. What we find is once you actually get into a conflict trap, very, very hard to get out of it. And similarly, once you get very, very high levels of peace, we haven't had any countries with very high levels of peace, but major falling peace while we've been doing the index.
Deqa Aden: What are some best strategies to collect data from fragile countries? And how can we ensure accuracy when there's still some sort of violence that's happening? And what has been your strategy to ensure that we collect data from everywhere?
Steve Killelea: Yeah, well, we cover 163 countries, so about 99.7% of the population in the world. Some countries, the smaller ones, you just can't get valid data. So there's two ways of doing it. One is you use whatever official statistics you've got. The second is through using expert assessment. So if you're looking at the indicators within the Global Peace Index, they're a combination of the two. And so also you go for the best data resources that you can get your hands on.
Steve Killelea: So if you can go down into some countries, let's say DRC, for example, getting an accurate rate on a homicide rate is very hard, but you'll have estimates there. And the reality is that you are out by 10%, 15%, because you've got the 23 indicators from different directions, it doesn't matter too much. So whether something's 120 on the Global Peace Index or 130, it's not really so important - you're still getting an idea of the relative peace. But the best way of doing it, you balance it out with the best statistics you can get then combined with some things which are expert assessment. So like political instability, that'd be the example of one indicator which we use which is expert assessment.
Reema Saleh: What are the difficulties that come with quantifying this kind of data?
Steve Killelea: One is the availability of data. So it's a lot of things we'd like to measure, but there aren't yet decent data sets to measure them. Domestic violence would probably be one good example. The other thing is there's political dimension in this. And I think that's one of the reasons why we were the first organization to really do it. So because we've done a lot of work, let's say, with the European Union, for example, and they'll measure all the countries around the world by a level of peacefulness, but they won't measure anything inside the EU. Just too politically difficult.
Steve Killelea: So at times, you've got to be very, very sensitive to the political issues around this. So the mechanism we've taken with inside the Institute is we talk to the data. We don't talk to the politics. And then we let people draw their conclusions from the data. And so we've got a quite rigorous standard for just the way we talk about things so that we don't talk about them from a moral, emotional, or political lens wherever we can. But at times you'll find things like, let's say, democracies are highly correlated with peace. And so democracies are correlated with a number of other things as well. So we try and let the data do the talking.
Deqa Aden: We were wondering if you can share with us some trends about the Global Peace Index for 2021.
Steve Killelea: So if we're looking over the last decade, there's a number of trends you can see there. The first, as I mentioned, more countries have improved in peace than have deteriorated. However, when we look at overall peace, it deteriorated by 2% over the period. And it's back to what I said earlier on is that it's a lot easier for countries to deteriorate in peace than it is to improve in peace. It's also a system theory concept of tractable planes, which I've already mentioned. So a tractable plane's an area where countries get pulled into, and once you are in it, very hard to get out of. And so that's high levels of peace and low levels of peace. Then those two are tractable planes. So whereas, we find the top and the bottom of the index doesn't move around a lot. Whereas, the middle you bounce around quite a bit.
Steve Killelea: One of the other things which is interesting, I think, is militarization. So militarizations have been improving for over a decade. And then in the last three years, we've seen that trend change. And so we've now seen percentage of GDP spent on the military increasing in more countries than deteriorating and seeing the number of soldiers per 100,000 populations starting to increase after years over decreasing as well. And so I think what we're seeing is change. And this change in what appeared to be an historic trend which had been going on probably since the '80s, the end of the Cold War, and I think that's because of increased tensions in the South China Sea. It's all the militarization of China, and also an unraveling of relationships between Russia and Europe and NATO as well.
Steve Killelea: So I think these are sort of the underlying facts, not good. Violent demonstrations are on the increase. If looking at violent demonstrations, they're up 161% in the last decade. That's just steadily increasing each year. And down in the United States, if you look carefully, you can see the same trend going on there as well. So that'd be a few of the things. Homicides globally have improved, so that's an encouraging sign from one direction as well. So there are a few of the highlights which we can see out of studying the Global Peace Index.
Deqa Aden: So Iceland has been ranked the most peaceful country for the last 10 years. We are wondering why is that the case?
Steve Killelea: Yeah, well, there's always the standard joke in Iceland. Well, it's so cold, no one goes outside, do they? But I think that's a bit of a throwaway line. So I spent quite a bit of time in Iceland over the years, beautiful country. Any of your listeners ever want to have a great holiday, go to Iceland. It's one of the most spectacularly stunning places I've ever been in. But if you look at Icelandic history, it's been peaceful for a long, long while. And part of it is the environment: it's fiercely hostile. It's one of the most hostile environments in which people live. And I think what that's done is means if you're out and you've got big distances between people, if you're out and you get caught in a blizzard, you just go to the nearest house and people will welcome you in. In fact, up to about probably 30 years ago, no one locked their houses up. And if you turned up at someone's house, you're quite okay socially to go in and pour yourself a cup of tea. Put a kettle on the stove and have a cup of tea. Can you imagine doing that in Chicago or Sydney, for that matter? You'd be arrested.
Steve Killelea: But if you go back even in history, there's only been one real war fought internally within the country and that goes back to about 1200 AD, so a long, long while ago. Similarly, what happened is the men would be on boats. They'd go away for long periods of time because they had to go to get goods, bring them back, and things like that. And so the communities themselves were very, very good at integrating together.
Steve Killelea: And so I think you've got all these things which go back. One is the environment. Two is the history because they weren't into killing each other. They were into reconciling things. There's a place in Iceland where you've got two tectonic plates meeting, because it's one of the most volcanic active places in the worlds. Literally, you've got the two plates meeting, and one plate's 20 meters higher than the other plate, just the most significant place like it anywhere in the world. But they used to meet there for a big huddle once a year for about two weeks, and everyone from Iceland would come around and that's where they'd set their laws. And then the laws would be set, but you never had police or military to enforce them because the country was too scattered. It was up to the people of the country to actually enforce the laws themselves. So you've got all these rich traditions in it as well, which also I think lead to that underlying sense of high levels of peacefulness.
Deqa Aden: Now that we've discussed the current key trends in the Global Peace Index, we would like your opinion on climate change. When I think of the Global Peace Index, the first thing that comes to mind is political violence, not necessarily climate change. We were wondering why is climate change mostly excluded from the peace talks, and will there be a shift in putting climate change at the heart of peace and security discussions?
Steve Killelea: I think it's a complex issue. We've got the absence of violence or fear of violence as the definition of peace in the Global Peace Index. So putting in climate change would mess the Index up, it wouldn't be an accurate index anymore. Climate change is a very serious threat going forward, and it's going to be an amplifier on conflict, I think everyone sort of agrees with that. However, what it's amplifying is a lot of ecological degradation, and the ecological degradation is there now, and ecological degradation is a driver of conflict.
Steve Killelea: So we just put out a report, an ecological threat report, about three weeks ago. So part of it was to align with COP26, part of it was to get people focused as there's a lot of ecological threats there which we need to address now, which are drivers of conflict. For example, if we look at the 15 countries with the worst ecological damage, 15 of them are currently in conflict and four of them are on our watch lists for further large falls in peace. Now, if we look at what we call hotspot countries - there's 30 of them - so they're countries with very high ecological damage or threat, and also countries with low societal resilience. And we use positive peace to measure societal resilience. Of the 30 countries which are hotspot countries there, 28 of them are in the bottom half of the Global Peace Index.
Steve Killelea: So again, you're driving home this nexus. There's 12 countries in the world, all of them are in Africa, which are going to more than double their population in the next 30 years. Niger is the worst, it's with a projected population increase of 161%. So these countries are already ecologically degraded and stressed, and so these increases in population are just going to increase it further. And then climate change over the top of it is then just going to act as an amplifier yet again, increasing the droughts, increasing the floods. So I think climate change is going to have a real impact on the planet in the next 30 to 100 years, we really need to be taking what measures we can to reduce it.
Steve Killelea: But climate change is just one of a whole range of stresses we've got. Biodiversity is another one, it's very hard for a lot of us to fully understand the ecology and our dependence on a healthy ecology, but it's there. A lack of water is another one, and there are other stresses as well. So if we're looking at let's say food insecurity, this is one which is intimately tied in with this ecological degradation which we study and conflict, so if you look at food insecurity, it's increased 44% since 2014. And if you went back for decades prior to that, it'd been improving every year, but since 2014 it's got worse every year. In fact, it's 44% worse than what it was in 2014.
Steve Killelea: So today 2.3 billion people are food insecure, that's about 30% of the population of planet. But if you went to Africa, what you'd find is that two thirds of the population are food insecure, and getting worse. And the whole population of Africa is meant to increase by 90%, it was projected to increase by 90% in the next 30 years. So these are urgent problems which are existing there today, and so we really need to start to look at and address it. And we've got to address it in systemic ways, so we need to be looking at the whole of the system.
Steve Killelea: And so the Sahel in Africa's a pretty good example. So if you look at the Sahel in Africa for example, you've got Islamic militants there which have got loyalty to the Islamic State and Al-Qaeda, so you've got refugee issues. You've got ecological degradation, lack of food, lack of a water, water is needed for the food, you've got weak governance as well. And so we need to start look at all these issues systemically, how can you pull them together and do things to improve the societal systems to tackle many of these things simultaneously? But the systems we use, and all the institutions I should say, we use are siloed.
Steve Killelea: So let's come back to the Sahel, you've got military operations there, we'll just look at this through the lens of the UN. So you've got military operations going on there, that could be UN Peacekeeping. You've got UNHCR for refugees, you've got FAO which looks at the food, you've got UNDP which looks at development. But even it comes down to siloes, like WaSH programs and standard developmental programs somewhere else. And I could keep going, but you're getting an idea. So if these are systemic problems, we need institutions which operate systemically to be able to try and tackle them and solve them.
Steve Killelea: And in the book Peace in the Age of Chaos, that's what a lot of is about, we've got to start rather than seeing these as siloed problems, a military problem, a refugee problem, a development problem, a population problem. So you've got the UN Population Fund working on family planning, another silo, it's how do we bring them together to look at a specific area and how do we now tackle that? Weak governance as well, so if you look at a lot of the states there, they’ve got very, very weak governance and very, very weak rule. So now if you're looking at building governance, well, that's back into the IMF and the World Bank, how do we bring it all together? That'd be the major thing that I'm talking about. And climate change fits as one of the issues under all of that, but a very, very big and very, very important issue.
Reema Saleh: You write a lot in your book about the importance of systems thinking and how the elements of peaceful societies come together to make resiliency. How does this approach work to measure a country's resilience to shocks or future conflict?
Steve Killelea: So what we've found is that positive peace is an excellent measure of a system. So what we've done is, the way it's been derived, it's eight different pillars. And so eight's not too many, most people can get their head around it, but it's enough to describe a such societal system. None of this is counterintuitive, things like well-functioning government, strong business environment, equitable distribution of resources, high levels of human capital, acceptance of the rights of others, good relationships with neighbors, low levels of corruption, and so they all come together systemically.
Steve Killelea: Now, what's important when you're looking at this now, and you're taking the positive peace, what we find is it's very, very good at being able to predict future falls in peace. So in that way, you'd say it is a measure of resilience. And so peace in many ways, it's a relative concept, it's only relative to another entity. So show a country as peaceful, that's dependent on the other countries you're looking at, isn't it. Or is it resilience, show a country as resilient, it's depending on what else you're looking at.
Steve Killelea: So what we find is when there's a big difference between the measures of positive peace and the measures of the Global Peace Index, it's a good predictor of large future falls in peace, so you can see that as a measure of resilience. So countries where the positive peace score is much, much lower, the actual peace of the country, they tend to fall. And now when we are using that as a model, we call that a positive peace deficit model. We can get 10 years out, we can get 70 to 90% accuracy in large falls of peace, depending on the number of countries we pick. The smaller the number of countries we pick, the more accurate the model is, which gives you an idea of the strength. So also looking at resiliency. Another example, let's look at civil resistance movements. Countries high in positive peace, they have less civil resistance movements, they last for a shorter amount of time, more moderate in their aims, more likely to achieve their aims, and are far, far, far less violent.
Steve Killelea: And so as we come back to positive peace and again systemically, we see that things which create a peaceful society such as positive peace, also create a lot of the other things which we think are important, which I mentioned earlier on, things like high per capita income, better measures of wellbeing, happiness, better measures on inclusion, better measure on ecology, better measures on development. So again, coming back and we're seeing that if you can get the societal system right, what happens is everything else follows. An example that'll come back, the ecological degradation. So no country, which has high positive peace has really poor ecological degradation. This comes back, a lot of it, to the social system. It all comes together. So if you've got a well-functioning society, you capture the amount of water which you need to sustain your culture. From that, you've got productive agriculture, you should've got good government policies to oversee agriculture, and you've got efficient markets for the distribution of the produce. Your countries like Singapore, where you can't grow enough, you've got export industries which get the income so that you can import food. And also, the country's high in positive peace in this age have all got very small population growth. So from that angle, they're quite sustainable. That's just an example. It's when you get the system right, it's self-perpetuating. It looks after itself.
Steve Killelea: And countries which are high in positive peace are quite adaptive. I mentioned seven of the eight pillars earlier on, the one I left out was free flow of information. So if you look at the way these things function, they come together. I'll just give a simple example of just how difficult is to find causality in all this. And there's certainly things which do push the system in a particular direction, but think of well functioning government, low levels of corruption, and free flow of information. Free flow of information could be epitomized by a free press, but it's more than that. So does government affect corruption or does corruption affect government? Similarly, does the free flow of information affect the way corruption's done? What is corruption? Stymieing the free flow of information. And similarly, is the government and the things it does affected by a free press or free flow of information, or does the government pass regulations to control and affect the press?
Steve Killelea: You can't pull any of it apart, can you? It's all circular. So as you start to move in the systems side of things, first thing one wants to think about is path dependency. That's the path which a culture's been on. We spoke about Iceland earlier on and we could see the path dependency of Iceland. It's a positive path dependency, which has left them with a high level of peace now. All cultures have these path dependencies. It's their history, it's their cultural norms. And so you really need to be able to understand them, because they're actually fueling the system in a particular direction. So you really need to understand them and understand what needs to change. That'd be one concept.
Steve Killelea: You've also got concept of homeostasis, or steady state. So systems try and maintain a steady state. Look what's been happening in the west with the COVID-19, the way we've been attempting to get the system and keep it in balance. This concept of a steady state, all societies are built like that. If you get outbreaks of crime, you apply more policing. Inflation breaks out, you increase interest rates, et cetera, et cetera. You find all these mechanisms, which are called encoded norms built within societies, to try and keep it in a steady state. This may be a good or may be a bad thing. If it's the steady state, which entrenches corruption, that's not so good, is it? Or it's a steady state, which entrenches the police state, that's not a good thing either. So one needs to look at this and understand it from that perspective. And so, one of the things is you've got mutual feedback loops.
Steve Killelea: What happens there, and think of two political parties as a good example. You have an input into the system, you get a response, and the response comes back and alters the input. Systems are just made up of those kind of things all the time, very different than the physical world. So think of two political parties. One makes a policy manifesto, another party now responds to that policy manifesto, and the first party now adjusts and comes back. So you got this interactive game going on, where one has an action, the other responds, the other has another action in response to it, and so you have those things going on all the time through the system. Could think of the same thing with corruption. You bring in the law to control corruption, and corruption then manifests and starts to take a new form and get active in areas where it wasn't necessarily active before, because the system is pushing it down a different direction. And this could come back to then your cultural norms, your path dependency, what is the public perception of what's acceptable corruption? Varies from society to society.
Deqa Aden: So finally, I would like to ask you, what is the biggest takeaways policy makers should take from the book Peace in the Age of Chaos?
Steve Killelea: Yeah, well, there's a number of takeaways, but I'll just hit a couple of points. I think the first we haven't really covered in this interview is peace comes with an economic dividend. Don't underestimate how strong it is, because I gave the example earlier on of the 2% higher GDP for countries which are high in positive peace compared to countries which had deteriorated. That, when you compound it over 60 years, is a profoundly big difference. But if you look at cost of violence of the global economy in 2020, it was about $15 trillion. That's about 11.6% from memory of GDP. That's a lot. None of us can imagine a world which is peaceful, but we can all imagine a world which is 10% more peaceful, and that would be equivalent of adding three new economies to the world the size of Ireland, Switzerland, and Denmark. So peace is an achievable, tangible idea and comes with strong economic dividends, which is a key interest for all politicians.
Steve Killelea: The second thing I'd say is that societies operated systems and we don't actually get it. We've got a lot of systems, we think, yeah, there's a health system, there's a policing system, an education system, but we don't understand the principles of systems thinking and the actual study of systems from a societal perspective is still in its very, very early stages. That's a lot of the stuff I talk about in the book, and a lot of the stuff we're now starting to really study at the Institute for Economics and Peace. The second thing I'd say is that we can't go about business as usual. The big issues we've got on the planet, they're global in nature, things like climate change, ever decreasing biodiversity, full use of the fresh water on the planet, but underpinning many of those is overpopulation.
Steve Killelea: Unless we have a world which is basically peaceful, we'll never get levels of trust, cooperation, and inclusiveness to solve these problems, therefore peace is a prerequisite for the survival of society as we know it in the 21st century. That's probably different than any other epoch in human history. In the 21st century, it's in everyone's self-interest, but we have to understand the system dynamics and we have to operate our political systems more systemically, because our issues today are global in nature, and they're all systemic.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Steve Killelea. This episode was produced and edited by Aishwarya Kumar and Reema Saleh. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
02.01.22
Human Rights in Yemen | Afrah Nasser
Reema Saleh: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with The Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago. In this episode, I speak with Afrah Nasser, a researcher with Human Rights Watch investigating humanitarian law violations and human rights abuses in Yemen. She was an activist and independent journalist in Sana'a, and has been advocating for justice in Yemen for over a decade. So to start, can you walk us through the beginnings of the civil war in Yemen? How have things changed since the 2011 revolution?
Afrah Nasser: 2011 was a very significant point for Yemen's political life, in general. There were a lot of stereotypes about Yemen, that following the Arab Spring, there will not be an uprising or any democratic aspiration in Yemen, given that it's heavily tribal society and there is not room for democracy or a democratic life already. But in 2011, all the youth took the street and protestors were chanting, “irhal, irhal,” which means, "leave, leave." Meaning they were demanding the downfall of the president back then Ali Abdullah Saleh, who ruled Yemen for more than 30 years and was preparing presidency for his son. And then 2011 was the start of all what we see today because there was an international war to topple him with some conditions. So Ali Abdullah Saleh gave up power after the UN and the Gulf Cooperation Council led by Saudi Arabia, stepped in and gave him a power transfer deal, which meant that he was going to give away power and then an exchange of impunity.
Afrah Nasser: So there was guarantee that he was not going to face any transitional justice or at least 400 people from his circle. And that was in my opinion, the seed of the civil war that followed in 2014, because the transition without justice was a recipe for a disaster already. So in 2014, there was alliance between the former president Ali Abdbullah Saleh and the rebel group, the Houthis, to take revenge against some of the political actors inside Yemen that worked with the international community to topple him. And it was like a marriage of convenience because Ali Abdullah Saleh and Houthis already had several episodes of war, but because they had mutual interest at that time. So, that alliance was planning to challenge the presidency of Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi. So in 2014, the Houthi armed group marched into the capital Sana’a and took control of the major institution and gradually took over of the state.
Afrah Nasser: And then this was marked with a lot of violence inside Yemen, especially the capital, which escalated with the intervention of the Saudi-led coalition in 2015. So in March you had the Saudi Ambassador to the US back then Adel al-Jubeir, announcing from the US that Saudi Arabia was leading a coalition of nine to eleven, I'm not sure, Arab states that were going to form a military alliance and fight the Houthi armed group in Sana'a, as he described the Houthi were backed by Iran, and that was a big threat to Saudi Arabia. So since then, seeing the major conflict between the Saudi-led coalition with two key actors in that coalition are Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates fighting in Yemen, the Houthi armed group. And then at the same time, civilians were really facing so many abuses in violations by the Saudi-led coalition and the Houthi armed group.
Afrah Nasser: And then in 2017 in the Houthis killed Ali Abdullah Saleh, which gave them eventually the upper hand in controlling the capital Sana'a. So today you have the Houthi armed group controlling major parts of the north. While in the south, you have the Southern Transitional Council, which is backed by the UAE, controlling some part of the south. And also there is a presence of the Saudi-led coalition-backed Yemeni forces in the east of Yemen and south. So today we can say that Yemen is divided by different part, by different actors, which is like a multi-layered conflict. So you have one civil conflict, and then on the other level, it's internationalized because the Saudi-led coalition is enabled by the arm deals that it's able to add from major Western states like the US, the UK, France, Canada, et cetera.
Reema Saleh: Could you talk about some of the human rights abuses that have been coming from both parties?
Afrah Nasser: Yeah. So since throughout the course of the conflict, we've seen unlawful attacks by the Saudi led coalition, some of the abuses and violations include bombing schools, hospitals, funerals, weddings, and other civilian sites. The exact number of the casualties in my opinion, is underestimated. So according to the UN the latest statistics from the UN is that nearly a quarter of a million people have been killed. And that's not only by the unlawful attacks, but also including the humanitarian impact of the conflict. And then there is also lack of reliable statistics about the casualties of people killed by hostilities and unlawful attacks by the Houthi armed group. So, that makes it really unfair to describe the impact of the unlawful attacks. But from what we've seen is that the Saudi-led coalition and the Houthi armed group forces are committing unlawful attacks or use of violence against civilians or civilian targets.
Afrah Nasser: And then one of the major abuse that I care a lot about and work on a lot, is the detention crisis across the country. So, we've seen since the beginning of the conflict, there is a widespread of arbitrary detention and forcible disappearance of countless number of civilians. And Saudi-led coalition-backed Yemeni forces and the Houthi armed group are all responsible of committing those detention cases. So without exaggeration, from my experience working on this, I feel like every household have been impacted by the detention crisis. I'm bombarded with messages of relatives of missing men who are asking Human Rights Watch to document their cases. It's just the level of detention is just shocking. And the longer the war goes on, the more new groups are impacted by the detention situation. So this year there are reports from the UN coming saying that there are children also that were detained by some of the parties of the conflict. Human Rights Watch, we've worked on the case of the Yemeni model, Intisar al-Hammadi.
Afrah Nasser: So we've seen also women are being also subjected to detention. So, Intisar al-Hammadi is still imprisoned and facing unfair trial in Sana'a by the court that's controlled by the Houthi authorities. And there are other women also that are detained in her case as well and their families are not able to speak up because of the really deadly consequences of them speaking. So detention is just one area that I feel like is impacting every household. The situation for children also is just one of the most horrific aspect of the conflict. Because maybe not many people know, but most of the Yemeni population are below the age of 15. So it's a really young population and you see the impact of the conflict directly on children. So, today we have more than half the 20 million people who are in need of humanitarian assistance or protection in Yemen, are children.
Afrah Nasser: And most of these children will have those consequences of the humanitarian crisis for all their lives, because it impacts their growth, it impacts their intellectual ability. And just every time there is images of skinny children who are becoming the face of the starvation or famine in Yemen, it just breaks my heart because this is going to have long term devastation to the country. And then also children are impacted by the hostilities and violence in particular. We've seen children being targets of shelling by the Houthi armed group while playing, for example. Those cases are really just like a shocking mirror of the violations of their basic rights. And parties to the conflict also continue to use the schools for the military efforts and purposes. So it's just children don't... there is no safe place for children. Neither when they are playing in the street or...even their schools are being targeted.
Afrah Nasser: And it just breaks my heart. The situation from children is one of the worst, I would say, in the conflict in Yemen. And land mines also are a silent killer that not many people really pay attention to. So what we have seen according to some estimates that the death of land mines is at least 9,000 people who were killed. And in particular, the Houthi armed group have used anti-personnel landmines in conducting indiscriminate attacks. So I can go on, the list is really long, but I think one of the things that really concerned maybe the audience is the humanitarian situation and the starvation and the warning from the UN about famine and the humanitarian crisis. And there are many factors that are playing in this regard. But what we know is that parties to the conflict have had tactics or abusive practice that really exaggerated an already dire humanitarian crisis.
Afrah Nasser: So even us in Human Rights Watch, we have documented severe restrictions by the Houthi authorities, the Yemeni government, and even affiliated forces, and the UAE-backed STC forses. They all have had restriction on the delivery of the desperately needed humanitarian aid. So the humanitarian crisis in Yemen, it's not a natural disaster, or it didn't happen out of nowhere. It's man made and we know that parties to the conflict are responsible of that. Another underreported, I think, aspect of the conflict is the abuses that migrants face. So this year we saw that a migrant detention center was on fire in the north part of Yemen in Sana'a and it was under the control of the Houthi authorities. And from our investigation, we called the Houthi authorities to hold those responsible of the fire to account. And until today, for all those abuses, there were no justice.
Afrah Nasser: And that tells you about the urgent need of justice and redress for the victims in the course of Yemen conflict. So just last month, the UN specialized group investigating violations in Yemen for the fourth year, published a report saying that, "Until there is no political will from the international communities to address the lack of accountability, we will continue to see the situation in Yemen getting worse and worse and more abuses and more violations." Because parties to the conflict feel that they have free access and no consequences whatsoever in committing all these abuses. And unfortunately, that's being enabled by the silence of the international community and lack of political will to address the lack of accountability.
Reema Saleh: What responsibility does the international community bear for some of these atrocities, especially now that the US has resumed arm sales with the UAE?
Afrah Nasser: Yeah, there is a huge responsibility when we talk about international mechanisms, when it comes to accountability and international humanitarian law and international human rights, Yemen is a great example of the collective responsibility and collective failure, because there are many international actors that are involved in the conflict in Yemen. So the Saudi-led coalition began the military operation with UN Security Council Resolution in 2015. And it's been having the backing and support of most of the international community. And that means the US, the UK, France, others. And it just tells you how this is not just Saudi Arabia fighting in Yemen, but it also all these super powers as well. And then on the other hand, you have within the UN Security Council, we've seen Russia and Iran fully giving diplomatic support to the Houthi. And there are many news media reports about Iran supporting the Houthis militarily and helping them with training and et cetera.
Afrah Nasser: So the international actors in Yemen have huge responsibility to how the course of the conflict has been going. And when I say it's also like a collective failure, because I feel like when we talk about the international humanitarian law, there are mounting evidence, overwhelming evidence documented by respected international non-governmental, non-profit human rights groups like Human Rights Watch, Amnesty, and even Yemeni local rights groups, and even the UN. The UN has established two teams investigating humanitarian IHL abuses and violations in Yemen. And while we have all this overwhelming evidence and documentation and reports, they are all faced by deaf ears from the international community. And it seems there is a collective failure from the international community to pay attention to what is needed and to their legal obligation. And for example, ending their arms deals to parties to the conflict, or even rethinking how they are sending these weapons, what role they are playing in abuses in Yemen. So the international community has a huge responsibility, but also has a huge collective failure.
Reema Saleh: There was an interview that I think you did with Jadaliyya a few months ago, that I came across where you unpack the idea of why Western media often erroneously refers to Yemen as the forgotten war. Can you talk a bit about how Yemen was never remembered by the international community to be forgotten? Could you talk a little more about what this means and what we should take away from it?
Afrah Nasser: Yeah. I would like to answer to that by going back to how the international media and in particular media in the US were feeling about Yemen when Khashoggi was killed. During that time, when Jamal Khashoggi was killed by Saudi Arabia and Turkey, there were like this hype, and huge desire and willingness to investigate violations committed by Saudi Arabia at home and outside. And that included putting more scrutiny to what's going on in Yemen. And that was a reality check that Yemen did only matter because it was being seen through the Saudi lens. So Yemen was never a subject matter by itself. There has to be one reason, so we can pay attention to Yemen. There has to be another major event, and then we can look at Yemen. And also when there are other major events happening around the world, secretly, I always pray I hope nothing happened in Yemen during that time, because I know there will not be any media coverage. So for example, with all what was going on in Afghanistan, Yemen just slide to the end of the agenda, or even not even in the agenda of media coverage. I don't mean any disrespect to other tragedies in Afghanistan. And even before that it was in Syria or even to the heinous crime against Jamal Khashoggi, but it's just an interesting way of trying to compare how Yemen don't matter. And how it's really hard to get the media care about what's going on in Yemen. So today you have one challenge that I get, a lot of emails people asking me, "What more can we say about Yemen that hasn't been said before?"
Afrah Nasser: And I think it doesn't feel right, this question. Because look at your invitation, for example, you just invited me to, "Can you tell us about what's going on in Yemen?" So it's just so simple and easy, and it's heartbreaking how Yemen don't matter when it's facing the largest humanitarian crisis. It's just heartbreaking why Yemen don't matter when it's the poorest Arab nation where some of the world's richest countries like Saudi Arabia, the UAE are infighting. So I think this should be like a very interesting angle to any journalist, any researcher, any scholar, and yet Yemen is just not even in the map. I'm not going to say it's forgotten, it just doesn't count. For me, it's just shocking, really. I mean, one way that we Yemenis think about this is that, because we are poor, because Yemen is poor, that is the main reason nobody cares about it. Even if someone shows solidarity to Yemen, we feel like, "Oh, thank you for being exception, and seeing a value and showing solidarity to us." But Yemen has a rich history just given an opportunity, it can be as rich as Saudi Arabia, as rich as the United Arab Emirates. So as we speak today, I can see all the bling bling in the UAE Expo 2020 event. And for me, it's disturbing seeing all this extravagance in the UAE while there is misery and pain in their neighboring country in Yemen, while the UAE is backing, some of the most abusive armed forces on the ground, it's just so disturbing. And I just wish there is a chance for Yemen to flourish outside this conflict.
Reema Saleh: The World Food Program has faced some major funding shortfalls this year. With Yemen being its biggest humanitarian operation, what does that mean for the future?
Afrah Nasser: I think the humanitarian crisis is the bigger than just the lack or decline in funding. As long as there is war profiteering and war economy that was created as a product of the conflict, we will continue to have this humanitarian crisis and no amount of humanitarian aid can fix the situation. So today, for example, you have major restrictions from parties to the conflict, the mobility of humanitarian operation personnel and goods within and outside Yemen is extremely difficult, and they are faced by several restrictions from authorities on the ground, and even the Saudi-led coalition as it controls the air base of Yemen. So without lifting those restrictions, no amount of humanitarian aid can fix the situation or make the humanitarian crisis go away. And then you have the war economy. And one, just one tiny aspect of it is the taxation system on the ground.
Afrah Nasser: So there are some tracks that go from east Yemen to south or north. They are being taxed by every point, by every authority that is controlling the different parts. So logistics are becoming more and more expensive. And sometimes they outweigh the humanitarian aid itself. So without dealing and addressing all these obstacles, I think we will continue to have humanitarian crisis. This is why we need accountability measures so we can address or mitigate the humanitarian crisis. It's just a dilemma. You have to rethink your humanitarian strategies in Yemen, given the violations and abuses and restrictions and obstruction of humanitarian aid.
Reema Saleh: So what will eventually need to be done to ensure accountability for these human rights violations when the war is ended?
Afrah Nasser: That will be a huge work for all human rights groups. If the war ends today, that means we have a lot of things to do. But meanwhile, we think that it's so important for Western states, states that are mentioned in the documentation of the UN groups and human rights groups. So we have today, the US, UK, France, Canada, they all have to suspend their arms deals that are going to the conflict in Yemen, going into the parties in the conflict, that are basically enabling the continuation of the conflict. Now, I remember how during Donald Trump, there was this narrative that we can't suspend our arms deal to Saudi Arabia because it's creating a lot of jobs and that will impact our own national economic make interests. So why I'm focusing about the arms deal is because I think this is the least thing that the international community can show that they have accountability, or they want to take the parties to the conflict accountable to what's going on or violations and abuses in Yemen.
Afrah Nasser: And if the state's only way of making money is out of the blood of innocent civilians in Yemen, I think they have a huge problem already. Arms deals are very specific demand that all human rights groups have been asking since the beginning of the conflict. And God bless his soul, when Jamal Khashoggi was killed, there were countries actually that started to suspend their arms deals. So you had Germany, for example, some countries in Scandinavia. So we've seen that this was doable before, so why we don't do it now? I think arms deals is one specific area that the international community can address the lack of accountability.
Reema Saleh: How do you remember Yemen before the civil war?
Afrah Nasser: I remember my college. I remember my school. I remember the nice sessions with families, the jokes. I remember generosity. It's just like everywhere you go. People are just so generous. Even relatives are generous to each other. Neighbors are generous to each other and the more I'm working on Yemen, the more I understand that generosity is fundamental part of Yemeni culture because of war, famine, and misery and pain. So Yemenis do understand what's like to be hungry, what does it feel to be hungry? So they're always generous with food. You might go to the most poor family and yet they will get out everything that they have and show hospitality and try to serve you the best what they have. So this I always remember. And I think the work cannot take that away also.
Reema Saleh: Can I ask what initially brought you to blogging and journalism and writing in general?
Afrah Nasser: Yeah. I started writing in my journals when I was teenager and then that escalated to writing in local newspapers during my first years of college. And then when I finished college and I joined Yemen Observer, a newspaper in Sana'a, I started to blog also and put some writing in my blog. I've always been passionate about writing, but I think me focusing on writing about Yemen comes from the fact that I had Ethiopian origin. So half of my family are Ethiopians and the other Yemenis. In Ethiopia, I was typical like of all mixed races. In Ethiopia, I was looked as like, "Oh, she's Yemeni." And then in Yemen, I was like, "Oh, she's Ethiopian." But all I know is Yemen. My native language is Arabic. And I grew up in Sana'a and I've always felt I was from Sana'a. So I wanted to demonstrate or prove to the society that I was more Yemeni than any other Yemeni. So, this is why I started writing about Yemen.
Afrah Nasser: Maybe it was in English in the beginning because I felt that was the safe space, because I can speak Amharic as well. And then Arabic was also my native language, but I was being told that, "Oh, you're not Yemeni." So that felt I wasn't Arab also. And then English was somewhere that I chose it wasn't imposed on me or something. Yeah, that's how it all started.
Reema Saleh: Half my family is from Ethiopia as well.
Afrah Nasser: Oh, interesting.
Reema Saleh: Yeah. The other half is from Eritrea.
Afrah Nasser: Yeah. I mean, what's going on in Ethiopia and Eritrea tells you how some of these countries, their history is just full of war and conflicts. And it just makes you really wonder when will this end. But the fact that you're saying Ethiopia and Eritrea, all these neighbors they continue to migrate between each other. My grandfathers during the civil war in Yemen in the 60s, he immigrated to Ethiopia. And then when the conflict happen in Ethiopia during the 70s and 80s, my family, my parents came back to Yemen. That's going through one circle, I think.
Reema Saleh: Yeah. There's definitely a lot of moving back and forth. I have family that's moved between home and Dubai and Saudi, it's definitely... I feel like we're all tied together somehow.
Afrah Nasser: Exactly.
Reema Saleh: Can I ask you what your relationship with your homeland is like now that you're a journalist and the diaspora?
Afrah Nasser: Well, today I am a researcher. I'm not involved in journalism anymore, but I feel like I'm growing into like a global citizen. So, for example, something that I started to care a lot about is climate change or climate injustice, climate crisis, which is impacting everywhere. And COVID really also taught you how this world is a small place. So one virus went everywhere and impacted everywhere. And if one place is not safe, the other will not be safe. So that identity, I think, is becoming more and more clear to me, being global citizen. And I don't think of myself as someone in exile or even me working on Yemen, basically what I'm doing is connecting the dots between the other parts of the world and Yemen. So it doesn't mean I'm just Yemeni from Yemen and working on Yemen. No, I'm actually interested in what's going on everywhere. So the election in Germany, for example, and who will come next after Angela Merkel will definitely impact the arm sales industry, and how that will fuel the conflict in Yemen. And that just example. So I'm interested in everything that is global. And as a global citizen, I think we're far connected than we ever think.
Reema Saleh: So blogging can be a medium between journalism and activism in a way. So how do you think your independence allowed you to cover issues that went under reported?
Afrah Nasser: Yeah. No, it's helped me a lot. I remember one friend in Sweden in 2011 when I first came to Sweden and I mentioned that I had a blog and then we were discussing things about Yemen. And I told him like, "maybe you can read a World Bank report instead of my blog." And then he turned to me and he told me like, "your blog is more credible to me than most of these institutions’ reports." And today I understand why he was saying that. I had so much freedom outside big institutions’ policies and the dos and don’ts and that freedom... I was just writing things that I thought mattered the most to me as someone Yemeni and to my friends, to my relatives. So I wanted to show Yemen from our perspective.
Afrah Nasser: And I think that when you really believe in your value, that's like the most revolutionized thing you can do. Because I didn't believe much of the international media coverage on Yemen and how sometimes - I'm not saying all the time - but they describe Yemen with just one focus. Which is like, for example, terrorism, and I thought Yemen was bigger than that.
Afrah Nasser: So I wanted to talk about all of that. So for example, terrorism. For me, poverty was the biggest terrorism for civilians in Yemen. Not al-Qaeda, or Daesh, and things like that, or the corruption from Ali Abdullah Saleh regime. How that really fueled terrorism that the international media is talking about. So, things like that, for me, just being genuine and truthful were very, very important. And I think that why my writing resonated to a lot of people.
Reema Saleh: Definitely. I think there's something really human in a lot of the stories you were writing at the time.
Afrah Nasser: It's not about being human. It's just I felt like we are not any less than any other nation. Yemen is important like Saudi is important, like the UAE. So I was just writing like that.
Reema Saleh: Yeah. So this is my last question. What inspires you to keep working and what brings you hope in these times?
Afrah Nasser: You see there is this saying, I forgot the name of the philosopher, but he says, "Optimist by the will, and pessimist by the intellect." And it feels like you have to have some sort of hope so you can continue doing what you're doing. Otherwise, there will be no point in the work that you do. And I think tyrannies really want us to have despair and just give up. I think that is what gives me motive to continue is just, I don't want to give tyrannies what they want and I think we need to take what's rightfully ours.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Afrah Nasser. This episode was produced and edited by Aishwarya Kumar and Reema Saleh. Special thanks to UC3P and The Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on The Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
01.04.22
Social Cohesion After Conflict | Salma Mousa
Reema Saleh: Hi, this is Reema, and you’re listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts.
You’re listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world.
Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
In this episode, Aishwarya and Wafa speak with Dr. Salma Mousa, a political scientist studying social cohesion after conflict, and what policies can build trust between groups. She talks about her latest study on building social cohesion between Christian and Muslim youth soccer players in post-ISIS Iraq.
Dr. Salma Mousa: As someone who grew up in the Middle East and who was also an immigrant in Canada for a while, the question of how someone's social identity conditions so much of what happens in their life, and how other people treat them, and how they see themselves, was always something that was very top of mind for me. I noticed different situations or environments where my nationality mattered or my religion mattered, and other environments where it didn't matter at all.
And this was all happening against the backdrop of the sporadic violence, especially when I lived in Saudi Arabia, which was targeted based on sect and based on nationality. And so, being in that kind of environment you start to think, okay, so my identity seems to matter sometimes a lot, and other times, it doesn't matter at all.
And so, how can we get identity to matter less? Because the Middle East is not necessarily a place where these social identities have always existed, number one. And number two, these identities have not been things that have structured conflict. It's not necessarily the case that we have to keep killing each other for these socially constructed things. And it wasn't the case for hundreds of years, if not thousands of years, for many ethnic and sectarian fault lines.
So, how can we get those things to stop being fault lines, given that there's nothing inherent in our culture that suggests that it has to be that way?
Wafa Eben Beri: Thank you so much. It's a very interesting point that you are bringing your personal perspective into that and your interests professionally. For our listeners who are not familiar with your work, can you tell us about your study that is titled Building Social Cohesion Between Christians and Muslims Through Soccer in Post-ISIS Iraq and what the main findings were?
Dr. Salma Mousa: Sure. So, the study that you referred to was a field experiment in Northern Iraq where I was able to set up a series of soccer leagues, and I was able to randomly assign amateur Christian soccer teams to either receive fellow Christian players or receive some Muslim players, and then they train and compete for a two-month period.
And what I found was being assigned to a mixed team made Christians more accepting and tolerant toward Muslims in terms of their behaviors, but not really toward the Muslims, more broadly. So, what I mean by that is, I found this distinction between how you treat people you know from an outgroup compared to how you treat strangers.
And so, I found that this contact within soccer leagues was really effective at building these local social ties and improving tolerant behaviors toward your teammates and other guys you met in the league, but it did not extend to Muslims more broadly outside of that environment.
So, for example, being assigned to a mixed soccer team did not make you more likely to visit Mosul, which is a big Muslim-dominated city about 40 minutes away from the study sites. So, this suggests that this theory of intergroup contact can be promising in building this very localized community level social cohesion, but it's not necessarily achieving its goal of building generalized social cohesion and prejudice reduction.
Wafa Eben Beri: That's a very interesting point, because, based on my experience in Israel and working with Jewish groups, I found the same finding. The findings showed that the group contact didn't affect the perception of the participant toward the individual from the other group, and less affects the perception toward the collective group represented by the participant.
For example, someone would say, "When I meet this Arab guy, he's very nice, but not all the Arabs are like that, and he's an exception." Could you tell us, how can we expand social cohesion to a more broad level, to take this interaction that has happened between the participant and the individuals to a more collective level?
Dr. Salma Mousa: So, now I know I need to read your work because this sounds very relevant to what I'm looking at right now. And you highlight a really important issue, which is that these kinds of contact interventions, they aim not to just improve how you feel toward the one or two people who you meet, or who you're friends with, but to actually generalize those positive feelings toward the entire outgroup.
And if that generalization doesn't happen, if you don't update your beliefs about the entire group based on a handful of interactions, then the contact theory is really a failure. It's really trivial. It's nice to build some friendships here and there, but it's just not nearly scalable enough that this is something that we should necessarily be turning to, especially in conflict zones.
So, this question of how can you encourage the generalization of effects, I think this is an open question. Social psychologists point to a few factors that might help. One is typicality. So, you need to view the contact partners as typical, or representative in some way, in order for you to infer something about the entire group.
And actually, I do have some work on this looking at a Muslim soccer star in England, Mohamed Salah, who plays for Liverpool. And long story short, we do find that when you prime people to think about his Muslim identity and that he's a practicing Muslim, it makes Liverpool supporters, the fans of the club, more likely to say that Islam is compatible with British values.
So, this link, emphasizing this link between that one person and the whole group can help facilitate that process, but there's still really a lot that we don't know about it. I mean, people can still exceptionalize a handful of individuals who they like and choose not to see them as representative. So, the question is, is someone really objectively ever typical or representative, or is that actually a function of prejudice, whether you choose to see them as exceptional or not.
And there's this other tension between being representative, but also not confirming stereotypes. So, your group identity should be salient, but it shouldn't be salient in any negative way. You shouldn't be doing any stereotype-confirming behaviors because that won't work. So, there's some tensions, I think, here in the social psychological literature that need exploring.
Aishwarya Raje: So, I'd love to hear more about how you looked at soccer specifically as the framework for your work on social cohesion. I mean, I'm a huge fan of professional soccer, and I'm a terrible player, but I'm a huge fan, I mean, millions of people around the world are. I mean, what do you think it is about the sport, or perhaps team sports in general, that can potentially take a group of people beyond just recreation and competition, and actually build deeper connections on a more human level?
Dr. Salma Mousa: I think there's a few different routes through which sports can build social cohesion. I can think of a few just off the top of my head. One is that team sports naturally fulfill a lot of the conditions laid out by the contact hypothesis.
So, contact across group lines is supposed to reduce prejudice when the contact involves cooperating for a common goal, when it's endorsed by authorities who people respect, and when you are on equal footing, so there's not necessarily a hierarchy or an unequal power status. So all those conditions really lend themselves very nicely to team sports.
There's also, I think, an argument to be made about creating another identity as being fans of the same team or players on the same team. And so, it highlights this common third identity that's shared between people. And so, it highlights commonalities in that way, rather than differences. So, those are just two ways that I think sports – whether you're playing or whether you're watching – can actually... can build some social cohesion or erode some of the group boundaries.
Wafa Eben Beri: During my work I saw a lot of different types of group contact that can yield sometimes different results related to social cohesion. What I mean by that, such as the difference between groups that meet through soccer or food, This is something that sometimes we find something in common. And the group that meet, for example, I have examples in Ireland or in Israel, in bilingual schools or through activism or volunteering together. Can you tell us more about what you think, and if there are different results related to this group contact with different purposes?
Dr. Salma Mousa: Yeah, absolutely. So, this is something that's important, right? What kinds of settings and environments produce contact under those ideal conditions? Team sports is one that lends itself naturally to this, but there are a few others as well.
To some extent, classrooms. You don't have so much the element of having a common goal, but there tends to be some cooperation, having equal footing, having an authority figure that endorses the interactions. So, classroom settings can be positive, and we do find that in the literature.
What's even stronger, most of the time, tends to be roommate assignments. So there, you don't necessarily have cooperation as much, but it's that kind of environment where you have these mini-cooperative interactions and generally a positive experience. And that is also something that we found that is actually effective at reducing prejudice.
Military conscription is another one, military training. So, again, it's the roommate mechanism, but really that fighting with each other and relying on each other seems to be really important. And so, if you want to extrapolate the commonalities across these different settings where we have seen positive effects, and looking at studies that have found negative effects of contact – and there are a few of those – I’d say one of the most important conditions is that you are not competing, that you are cooperating and not competing.
The degree of cooperation, it's a little unclear how much cooperation you need, but definitely the presence of active competition is almost always negative. So, I'd say that if we're starting to move toward an understanding of what are the necessary conditions, I would say that's as close to a necessary condition as we found.
Wafa Eben Beri: I have a follow-up question. You said about the negative results, when we put competition or we don't have a common goal between the interactions of the groups. Can you tell us in which way the results will be negative, how the results are being presented when it's negative? Is it that people become more prejudiced? Can you talk more about that?
Dr. Salma Mousa: So, we don't have a lot of very, I say, solid work about this, but I think there are some plausible explanations for why competitive contact is bad. I think the most common sense one to me is that it highlights otherness.
So, if you're put in a situation where you feel that you need to come compete with this group, either for jobs or for scarce resources or even in a sports game, you start to view that person and their group as being opposed to you, necessarily. You are against them. They are different. We have no preferences in common. Our goals are diametrically opposed to each other.
And that, I think, just stresses the sense of otherness and difference, rather than what you want, which is the opposite, where you want to feel like you have some things in common. At least you should have a common goal, even if you have nothing else in common.
I think the other plausible explanation is that there are some interactions that come along with cooperating, like you have to discuss, you have to compromise, you have to make decisions together. And that process, that negotiation process, and just the micro-foundations of actually working together can reveal things about people's personality, can humanize them more. It opens up more of what we call “friendship potential,” which is something that has been found to be very key to contact.
This kind of one-sided exposure where you just see someone in the subway or something – that can actually cause a backlash effect – but you need some space for friendship potential, some conversation in a not so emotionally charged environment. And so, I say those two things where that competition can emphasize otherness and, at the same time, it has very low friendship potential.
Aishwarya Raje: I'd be curious to hear your observations about how you've seen social cohesion play out based on gender. Of course, the study that you did focused on creating soccer teams for young men, but in a lot of context, I think we see women being the social backbone for their families and communities. So, I'm curious as to how you see those dynamics play out in a post-conflict context.
Dr. Salma Mousa: I don't have that much to say about this only because we have such little research that I'm aware of that looks specifically at social cohesion-building strategies that target women specifically. But what I can speak about is my own experience working in Northern Iraq.
I initially wanted to actually have an intervention targeted at women and bringing women from Muslim and Christian groups together, and it became clear very quickly that the social norms in Northern Iraq were not really conducive to this. This is because there's this unofficial system where women are not really permitted to be out in public, and especially in areas with unfamiliar people if they don't have their brother or their husband with them.
So, you would need the permission of the husbands, or the brothers, or the dads in order to be in these new spaces where they're going to be mixing across group lines with people that are unknown or strangers from the out-group. And so, because of the difficulty of actually arranging that contact, I then decided to focus more on men.
And so, this, I think, is an important question of how should we target these kinds of interventions, and I think there is a case to be made that you want to target potentially norm changers or norm leaders when it comes to prejudice. And we should be doing more work to understand how social cohesion operates among women. But, at the same time, there is one benefit of targeting whoever the norm leaders are in society, often, it's men, in that you might actually accelerate some of the change potentially.
Wafa Eben Beri: Can you tell us how group context affects the general political situation or the leadership in the country and vice-versa?
Dr. Salma Mousa: This is the million-dollar question. We have a lot of tools at the grassroots level for building social cohesion. So, things like intergroup contact, empathy-building interventions or education, perspective-taking exercises, and they seem to work, under some conditions, at the grassroots level. But the question is, how are these things affecting the structural barriers to social cohesion?
There are reasons why groups are in conflict, or one group is explicitly being oppressed. And these kinds of grassroots interventions, they're great at building this community level social cohesion – and that's a good thing – but are they really going to address the structural roots of conflict that cause this situation in the first place? And I'm much more skeptical about that.
So, can things like contact overcome barriers to integration like residential segregation, like ethnic entrepreneurs or political entrepreneurs who start stoking tensions between groups? These kinds of more environment-level barriers to cohesion, I think, are much harder to overcome without policy tools.
I think the ideal recipe would be a mixture of both. I think you need stuff happening at the grassroots level and policies at the structural level to really build lasting and sustainable peace. One of the reasons, actually, why this is important, is that if you just do the policy-level intervention, and you don't have grassroots support at least, or acceptance of the intervention, it might not actually have a positive effect.
I'm thinking, for example, some east Asian countries where they actually have very progressive immigration policies, but on the ground, there was not acceptance by the host population. And they're like, “Oh, why are you giving preferential treatments to immigrants?” So, actually, it can go the other way. So, ideally, you need, I think, a mix of those two things, but how you aggregate up from the grassroots level to the policy level, I think, is still unclear.
Aishwarya Raje: And that's a really great segway into my next question, because I know another element of your research interest is migration policy and refugee resettlement and integration.
And I'm curious, would you say that this model of building sports teams between perhaps host populations and refugee populations could facilitate greater refugee integration into the host countries? And how translatable do you think this model is to contexts that are not necessarily post-conflict, but in contexts that are generally just lacking a lot of social cohesion?
Dr. Salma Mousa: So, there are some reasons why the theory of change around social cohesion might be different in post-conflict societies and in recently post-violent societies.
I think the distrust towards strangers is higher. The averseness to risk is also higher. The lingering effects of personal trauma, psychological trauma, and community-level trauma is also very high. So, I think for all these reasons – and just baseline prejudice is probably high too. So, for all these reasons, you have a really hard case when you're going into recently post-conflict societies and trying to conduct these kinds of grassroots-level peace-building tools.
At the same time, I think there is a lot of overlap in what we do in peacetime and what can be done in post-conflict societies. So, for example, this idea of intergroup contact, positive contact actually reducing prejudice, it depends to the extent to which you see some of these cleavages in the West as being post-conflict or not, or actively antagonistic.
For me, it's not obvious. For example, if we're looking at law enforcement and minority groups in the US, that's an actively antagonistic situation in a lot of cases. So, I think a lot of these distinctions between post -conflict and peacetime or West and Global South are not necessarily that relevant when you start looking on a case-by-case basis where you do have this active antagonism and hostility, and oftentimes violence as well.
What I would just say is that any time you have that situation where it's active conflict, you are setting things up to be harder, where you have to take a lot more precautions, not least of which from an ethical perspective, before getting into these kinds of grassroots interventions and getting people together, who are not necessarily ready to be brought together yet. So, there's just this extra layer of precautions that need to be taken.
Wafa Eben Beri: How can your research findings can shape the policies in a country in post-conflict, and especially in the context of peacebuilding?
Dr. Salma Mousa: So, I've done a few studies now looking specifically at this idea of contact. Generally, it looks like the effects are positive, but they're much more limited in post-conflict or active conflict settings.
So, what I would suggest to policy makers is any environment or space that you have control over where people are mixing or have the potential to mix across social lines, try to optimize those interactions so that they create the kind of ideal conditions for contact that we know to be generally positive. So, try to avoid competition, try to make the interactions recurring, not a one-time thing, try to get the endorsement of communal leaders who are respected. So, those spaces that you do have control over, optimize them for positive contact.
At the same time, I don't think you can rely only on grassroots tools alone for sustainable peace. So, we need to be addressing the structural roots of either oppression or intergroup conflict, depending on the setting. And so, we need to address things like residential segregation. That's causing people not to interact in the first place, for example. We need to address the kind of national rhetoric or the rhetoric of politicians that demonize certain groups.
So, you can't really just rely on the grassroots level. There has to be support at the policy level as well.
Wafa Eben Beri: Thank you so much.
Dr. Salma Mousa: That was really fun.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Salma Mousa. This episode was produced and edited by Aishwarya Kumar and Reema Saleh.
Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
12.01.21
Refugee Mental Health | Aimee Hilado
Reema Saleh: Hi, this is Reema, and you’re listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts. You’re listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies, and policy issues it affects.
In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs, and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
In this episode, Aishwarya and Marina speak with Aimee Hilado, a clinical social worker and researcher specializing in immigrant and refugee mental health.
Aishwarya Raje: My name is Aishwarya Raje, and I'm a graduate student at the Harris School of Policy where I'm also a fellow with the Pearson Institute. And on this episode of Root of Conflict, I'm joined by my classmate Marina Milaszewska to sit down with Dr. Aimee Hilado. Dr. Hilado is an expert on refugee and immigrant mental health. She's also an Associate Professor of Social Work at Northeastern Illinois University, and she's the founding clinical director of the RefugeeOne Wellness Program, which is a mental health program established in 2011 for refugees, asylum seekers and immigrants in Illinois. Dr. Hilado, thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us.
Dr. Aimee Hilado: Thank you for having me.
Aishwarya Raje: So, just to dive right in, what led you to focus your career on mental health and wellness for conflict-affected populations and those who have experienced trauma, and why are these issues that should be prioritized when it comes to working with these populations?
Dr. Aimee Hilado: I'm the daughter of immigrants from the Philippines. And so, thinking about how to navigate adjusting to life in a new country was really part of my upbringing, watching my parents navigating life in the US. Now, every immigrant story is very different, but there was something about that draw. That draw of understanding, “How do people adjust to life in a new country.” And as time had progressed, I realized that the nature of folks that are coming to the United States is because they have no choice, because they are forced to leave their home countries, that their experiences were unique. And that services in the field didn't adequately address some of the mental health issues that come when you are forcibly displaced.
And that really was what opened my eyes to this work. I'm a clinical social worker by training. I'm an academic researcher, as you said, an immigrant and refugee mental health and much of my career has really focused on how do we think about supporting the health and mental wellbeing of forcibly displaced immigrants and refugees who are in the United States, while elevating their stories to inform policies that are made that do directly impact those that we serve.
Aishwarya Raje: So, later today, you'll be presenting at an event here at Harris, which is organized by the Pearson Institute and by Rotary International, which is focused on evidence-based approaches to working with conflict-affected populations, which makes a lot of sense because we're here at Harris where our slogan is “Social impact down to a science”. So, can you speak to some of the evidence-based approaches that you use when working with these populations, and how do those approaches potentially change depending on the cultural context of the populations that you're working with?
Dr. Aimee Hilado: So, as part of my work, I started a mental health program for immigrants, refugees, asylum seekers called the RefugeeOne Wellness Program. This is a program that's nested in a larger refugee resettlement program, RefugeeOne, and we've been in operation since 2011. We've been resettling refugees, asylum seekers, unaccompanied minors from all over the world. And really for me, in thinking about how to effectively operate a program, we had to have a deep understanding of who we were serving.
And so, we integrated a lot of ongoing data collection methods to really get to the heart of what's the need: Who are we serving? What's their story, and what treatments are most effective? And so, we have been tracking what are the symptoms based on region of the world, length of time displaced, gender, age, level of education, because all of that directly impacts the treatment modalities that we use. And over time, in the eight years we've been doing this, some of it is just by what we do, what we learn while we're in the field, but also very intentional studies, descriptive studies, randomized controlled trials, to really understand and document services, needs, and impact.
And that's been part of the work of the Wellness Program. To illustrate, I think about some of the things that we just learned by surprise. When we were resettling refugees from Bhutan, from Southeast Asia, from Africa, we would do universal screening. I wanted that to be part of our programming because I wanted to remove the stigma of mental health. So, rather than say, “Okay, someone looks like they've got needs,” let's ask them, “Have you been sad? Have you had difficulty sleeping?” We said any adult that arrives is going to be asked questions about their health and wellbeing. We would ask you questions about your mood, about your appetite, about your sleep and your relationships with others.
And even with that data, we were able to see trends based on country of origin. How long were they displaced? Where were they displaced? And we used that to inform our treatment modalities. As we started to provide services, we realized that different communities responded to therapy very differently. I think therapy is very much a Western approach to addressing mental health problems and we'd have clients that would come to the first session and they would be supremely polite. And then they wouldn't come back to the next session. And we realized that the one-on-one, face-to-face was just too intense for them.
I would say generally, this was the case with our refugees and asylum seekers coming from Southeast Asia and from Africa, where culturally they're used to being in a collective, they're used to telling their story, their needs within a community-based kind of setting, within groups of people, not one-on-one with someone who's definitely not from their own community. But when it came to other communities, specifically those coming from the Middle East, from Syria and Iraq, what we noticed is that privacy was very important to them. That they weren't ready to share their needs, especially with a stranger who's not from the community. They didn't want to share that with others within their community. And so, we had to tailor their services.
So, what I'm describing is lessons learned that we've collected and tracked to really inform our modalities. Tested the impact of different treatment approaches, whether it's narrative approaches, cognitive behavioral therapy, dialectical behavioral therapy, mindfulness practice, we've seen the level of effectiveness. We track our clients based on pretest and post-test to see is their symptom reduction around the areas that they struggle with most, with the hope of always moving them forward on that pathway to healing.
Marina Milaszewska: Hoda Katebi of Because We've Read and JooJoo Azad fashion blog utilizes economic empowerment to improve the refugee experience in Chicago. Her sewing factory in the Chicago area is called Blue Tin Production Co-op and employs immigrant and refugee women who may otherwise be barred from employment due to language or legal barriers. What do you think is the role of economics and personal finance in the mental health of refugees?
Dr. Aimee Hilado: I think it's incredibly relevant that oftentimes, when we think about how people arrive into the United States, we think about their migration story and their story doesn't begin just when they arrive. We think about their experiences abroad, the time in which they are traveling to their next destination, whether that's a week, whether that is decades. And then we think about their experiences upon entering the United States.
For those that we're serving, and I think about the RefugeeWellness program, and I think of who we're serving right now, many of them have been displaced on average 17 to 20 years. And so, when you think about that time, just waiting for a resolution to come to the United States, when they come here, the first priority for them is not to talk about mental health. It's about getting the job. It's about learning the language and rebuilding their lives because no matter where our refugees are coming from around the world, the United States is still a beacon of hope.
They hear about the American Dream, and that is a priority for them. We also know that the policies, the funding that's allocated to US refugees, the State Department, is really not enough. That there is a housing allocation that really is just about three months of housing funds, where there is an expectation that new arrivals are going to be able to become self-sufficient in a very short period of time. And so, there is that driving force to stabilize themselves with jobs, stabilize the economics, and so, it is so critical.
We are lucky that we are in a time where there are more employment opportunities. We have, in the resettlement program, specific services, where we have employment staff that work with local companies, hotels, factories, the airport services, to make sure that they can serve as liaison for those that maybe had been farmers in their own home countries. Because really, the stress of not being able to put food on the table, the stress of not being able to pay the rent is overwhelming and it actually takes priority before they start talking about previous past trauma symptoms. It's in the here and now, and that's relevant survival. I think about Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. We're not going to get them to talk about past trauma if they're worried about their most basic needs being met. So, very critical.
Aishwarya Raje: Just going back a little bit to what you were saying about the different cultural context that you work with: in addition to managing personal finance and mental health, given the gender breakdown of the populations that you work with, what do you see as some of the unique challenges that women face? Whether they're trying to find employment or accessing mental health services or being a young mother, what are some of the challenges and maybe automatic obstacles that some of the women that you've worked with face?
Dr. Aimee Hilado: Majority of our arrivals are women and children. When we think about those that are forcibly displaced, they tend to be the most vulnerable. And so, in terms of immediate challenges, we've been resettling over the last eight years very large families where dual income is critically important. Those coming from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, we've got a lot of single mothers. And what's hard in the current workplace is that we don't have standard shifts, second shift, third shift that operate from afternoon to late evening. We have to balance transportation that's available. Standard ordinary typical daycare programs that run from 7 to 6 oftentimes don't fit with the schedule of those that are seeking employment now. And the costs are also quite high for high quality childcare.
So, that's a barrier that's there, but we address that barrier by working with the community. Oftentimes we pair families together so that one parent, one family can watch children while another person takes a shift so that we can work it around some of those barriers so that it doesn't keep people from being able to get a job and to be able to provide for their families.
One of the trends that we've seen is that actually women are finding an easier time getting a job because especially during the summer months, even in the winter months, there's a lot of work around hospitality, and oftentimes they're looking for female employees. Women are not always seen as the viable candidate for factory jobs. It's a lot of hard labor. The challenge with that is potentially changing family dynamics. What happens when in cultures where the women never worked before, now they are the breadwinner? What's the power dynamic that we need to address in the family system as a result of that?
So, I think the challenges look different. They cut across ethnic groups, but in the spirit of looking for gainful employment and becoming self-sufficient, these are challenges, real challenges that directly impact how families function, how individuals function, and also a cumulative impact and the influence on mental wellbeing.
Marina Milaszewska: That's so fascinating how those roles are possibly getting flipped right now. So, for any students who are interested in doing some of the work that you are doing or similar with refugees and immigrants placing a focus on mental health and wellness, what do you think are some important experiences to grasp outside the classroom?
Dr. Aimee Hilado: I would say getting to know the communities, because I've shared a number of the arrivals that are coming to the United States and they're incredibly diverse. And with each community, there are just different belief systems, different cultural traditions, different experiences. And so, to really be able to do this work well, we have to get to the heart of the uniqueness of each family.
I think generalizations are always helpful, but really starting where clients are and recognizing the uniqueness of their immigration story and their experiences is really at the heart of being able to do this work well. I think culture humility is a huge part of what we do. Recognizing that we don't know all the answers, and we've got to be ready to apologize and ask to learn and become partners in this work and recognizing that the people that we serve, they're incredibly resilient. I think when we oftentimes talk about conflict afflicted people, vulnerable populations, forcibly displaced populations, we put them into a box of having needs that they're at greater risk, that we need to pity them in some way.
And what I will say, the stories that I get to hear in therapy, the privilege of being able to serve these populations, they're so incredibly resilient. That they speak 5 to 10 languages in some cases where many of us probably speak only one to two, if we're lucky. That they have overcome insurmountable challenges and yet they're strong, and they're positive, and they're hopeful. And I think we just can't lose sight of the fact that they bring inherent strengths to our communities. And so, what we do in terms of our work with them is really just support them on that pathway to really thriving in a new country.
Marina Milaszewska: As you just mentioned, refugees face trauma due to loss of familiarity in space, place, routines, and family. When you are working with refugees and immigrants as a mental health practitioner, how do you take care of your own mental health?
Dr. Aimee Hilado: Really good discipline. I think that secondary trauma is not something we talk about enough for immigrant and refugee mental health providers. That, to do our work well, we have to be able to be vulnerable and to take in the stories, but there's always a cost to that. And so, for me, it's really putting self-care as a high priority. To not wait to when I start to feel burnt out to the point that I'm not finding joy in the work. To be disciplined in making connection, to reflect on all the gains, to be able to seek services, my own therapy services, reflective supervision, to process what I'm seeing in the field, because really it is about sustaining yourself in the hard work, that's so incredibly important.
For students in the social work program in which I teach, that's also one of the lessons that we emphasize. Self-care, and even more so than that, a focus on mindfulness, that mindfulness is gaining quite a bit of attention, not only as an effective treatment modality for trauma-experienced populations, but for the professionals that are serving them. Learning how to quiet your mind so that you're less reactive and more responsive. I think that's something that's a skill that all of us need have, and certainly part of my ongoing practice so that I can be in the field for as long as I have been.
Aishwarya Raje: And we couldn't let you go without asking a public policy question. So, given the relatively resistant rhetoric coming out of the Trump administration towards refugees, immigrants, we're seeing things like Muslim ban and families being separated at the border. What do you see, especially gearing up for the 2020 presidential election, as the biggest policy challenges facing the issues that you work on?
Dr. Aimee Hilado: Unfortunately, there are consequences to the anti-immigrant heated rhetoric out there, that there are populations that absolutely feel vulnerable as a result of the policies. And so, one of the charges we've put forward to clinicians and all of those that are advocates for immigrants and refugees is to tell the story. Because I think that oftentimes, we don't have an opportunity to control the narrative, that the narrative that's being spewed is one with a lot of hateful rhetoric.
And so, one of the things that we focused on at RefugeeOne is to show the positive side of what immigrants and refugees bring to the community. How they contribute to the economy, how they contribute to relationships, how they contribute to our schools. And the hope is that as we continue to spread this information that, that creeps up into the policy discussion, that they're not seen as a liability, they're not seen as a threat, but they're seen as contributing members of society that pay taxes. They want to rebuild their lives with dignity and safety, and that hopefully the policies reflect the wonderful contributions that they're making to our communities every single day.
Aishwarya Raje: Well, thank you so much Dr. Hilado for joining us and for all the incredible work you're doing.
Dr. Aimee Hilado: Thank you.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict. This episode was produced and edited by Aishwarya Kumar and Reema Saleh. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter
Root of Conflict
10.26.21
Evaluating Peacebuilding Interventions | Ada Sonnenfeld
Reema Saleh: Hi, this is Reema and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast. You’re listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. In this series, you'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
How do researchers assess the impact of peace building interventions? And what can we learn from examining the existing literature as a whole? My name is Reema and, in this episode, Mwangi and I speak with Ada Sonnenfeld, a former evaluation specialist with the International Initiative for Impact Evaluation.
Ada Sonnenfeld: So, I have a technical background in impact evaluations and other types of program evaluations for international development, with a focus on evaluations and evidence in fragile contexts, particularly peace building and governance.
Reema Saleh: She talks about her work, managing systematic reviews and evidence gap map projects, which can help policymakers make more informed decisions about how to use evidence to make sense of what we know and learn from what has been done before. We discuss her recent review where she and her colleagues synthesize evidence on programs that promote intergroup social cohesion in fragile context. So, first off, what is an impact evaluation?
Ada Sonnenfeld: So, an impact evaluation is an evaluation of a project, program, policy, that tries to establish not only what changed, but what part of that change can be attributed to the policy, program or project. And so, this might be done through statistical means where you can say, using either randomization or quasi-experimental designs, use econometrics, to identify what of that change you can say with some reasonable level of certainty was due to what you did or what you're evaluating, rather than all of the other factors at play.
Mwangi Thuita: Why would someone want to do an impact evaluation? Why are they important?
Ada Sonnenfeld: Impact evaluations help us understand what impact we are having. So, you would want to do this if, for example, you're a government, and you're trying to understand whether your policy to reduce inequality is having an effect on inequality. Or whether your policy to keep more children in school is actually keeping more children in school. Especially for government policies, these tend to be very expensive. And so, you want to make sure that the money that you're spending is having the expected results. Impact evaluations are expensive, so there are many types of programs that may not be conducive for impact evaluation, where it may not be the most relevant type of evaluation. But in general, you would want to do this to be as sure as you can be, that your impact is what you think it is.
Mwangi Thuita: Some people describe the increased popularity of impact evaluations as part of the measurement revolution and development. Aid and development organizations, they now expect impact evaluations for a lot of projects they fund. Does this expectation of evaluation affect the program design? Does it improve things?
Ada Sonnenfeld: There's a lot of things within that question. So, there are definitely more impact evaluations that are happening. 3ie has a repository of impact evaluations that at this point has over 4,000 international development programs and that is rapidly growing. When we look at the number of impact evaluations published per year, particularly around 2009, you see a big uptick in evaluations from lower- and middle-income countries that are published. So, that's great, because that means that we're growing the rigorous evidence base. Whether that means that programs are being designed differently, well, you can either say, “Are programs being designed in order to be conducive to evaluation?” And you also have another question on whether or not they are using the findings from those evaluations in order to improve design. I don't think we can answer either of those questions with any degree of certainty. We work really hard to try and get impact evaluations read and used by relevant stakeholders from implementers, policymakers, other academics working on the topic. But it's hard to track that.
Mwangi Thuita: What definition of social cohesion do you use for the systematic review? I know you said it varies, but what do you use for your review?
Ada Sonnenfeld: Social cohesion has been defined by many people in many different ways. And we adapted a definition from some work that was done by Chan et al. in 2006. And then we added to that some insights from Paletta and Cullen from 2000 and Kim et al. from 2020, which was some recent work that Mercy Corps was doing with the World Bank on social cohesion. So, fundamentally social cohesion is about the state of relationships between people, institutions, government, within a society. And you can think about social cohesion as a universe in many ways. You have the vertical relationships between the state and the society, between government and its citizens. And then you have horizontal relationships about people in institutions within civil society. For the purposes of our review, we focused just on the horizontal element of social cohesion while recognizing that for building sustainable peace, vertical social cohesion is also extremely important.
Within these sorts of horizontal and vertical spheres, you also have different types of ties between individuals and groups, and those might be bridging about intergroup, or across group ties and also bonding, within groups. Again, for this review, we're focused on bridging intergroup social cohesion. So, trying to understand how you can affect the relationships between social groups.
Finally, there are five different dimensions of social cohesion that we identified from those three main sources within the literature. And that is trust, a sense of belonging, a willingness to help, and a willingness to participate and an acceptance of diversity. And that last one, acceptance of diversity, is the one that is probably the most controversial within social cohesion discourse. There are lots of authors who have argued that it is a potential effect of a socially cohesive society rather than a necessary component of it. So, we decided to take a bit of a theoretical stand and say that, especially when you're thinking about fragile contexts, an acceptance of diversity actually does have to be a component of your conceptualization of social cohesion, because otherwise you could think of an authoritarian state that only allowed for a certain type of citizen to live their life freely, as a socially cohesive place.
And I think if people from different groups don't all feel a sense of belonging, then you don't have social cohesion. And it doesn't matter, even in the most homogenous state in the world, there is still diversity there. And whether that's people with disabilities or LGBTQ people or whomever, there are lots of different ways in which people are diverse, and nobody has only one identity. And so, you have to be able to have some level of acceptance for different identities within a community in order for something to be cohesive.
Mwangi Thuita: What about fragility?
Ada Sonnenfeld: The definition of fragility that we used for the review was a very nuanced one. So, because within a systematic review, we have an explicit ex-ante. So, before we start the review, we say, “This is what we're going to include in this study.” And anything that meets these criteria we'll include. So, we wanted to focus on fragile contexts, and in order to operationalize a definition of fragility that would allow us to screen all of the potential records against consistent criteria, we focused on saying that either it would be in context in which the fragile states index had given the country a score of 90 or above, or it would be in all in lower- and middle-income countries, we're focused only there.
Or it would be a situation in which tensions between two groups were identified as being the driving rationale for the intervention. So, this allowed us to look also, for example, for studies that might have targeted the relationships between two different gangs in Central America, or we included studies from Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Bosnia and Herzegovina are no longer classified as a fragile state, but the tensions between the two groups are still very present in society there. And there's still a lot of work trying to address the aftermath of the nineties. So, we had a definition of fragility that tried to recognize that fragility is not constant, either over time or within a country. And by saying that the focus of the study had to be tensions between groups that either were recently or were seen as at a risk of becoming violent, was the way that we tried to find relevant contexts.
Reema Saleh: What's unique about doing an impact evaluation in a conflict or a post-conflict setting?
Ada Sonnenfeld: Any kind of work that is happening in a conflict or post-conflict setting is going to be a little bit tricky because you have to be cognizant of the fact that your actions are going to interact with the context in a way that might have an impact on the conflict or the tensions or the potential. So, whereas all interventions should have some basic level of making sure that they do no harm, that bar becomes increasingly difficult to reach in a conflict-affected area, because the potential for doing harm becomes increased, because even something that you might think looks like a good intervention at first glance, such as giving vouchers to refugees in an area might have unintended consequences that create harm for those people. If, for example, you don't provide any support to vulnerable members of the host community.
Mwangi Thuita: You and your team at 3ie did a systematic review of impact evaluation literature, which covered 37 papers, I believe, and 31 unique interventions or intervention arms. So, could you tell us briefly about the systematic review, what motivated it and what were some of your main findings?
Ada Sonnenfeld: So, that systematic review grew out of an evidence gap map that we did of interventions that aim to build people and societies in fragile context. And so, the evidence gap map had identified a cluster of programs measuring the effects on social cohesion, but it took a wide range of different approaches in order to have that kind of impact. So, the social cohesion review identified five different groups of interventions ranging from radio dramas and media for peace to classroom, school-based peace education to intergroup contact through sports, to very complex, comprehensive, large scale programs that combined a number of different approaches. Overall, the review identified a pattern of small effects on social cohesion. But that's not really very surprising, because as we've said, interventions in fragile context tend to interact with the conditions for peace, but there's a lot of other factors that go into determining the relationship between two different social groups.
And so, we don't think it's that surprising that a social cohesion intervention alone doesn't have a very large effect on the relationships between groups and fragile contexts. However, we think it's really exciting that we're able to identify a pattern of small, positive effects that you could identify and see that well actually, these programs do have a place in the peacebuilding toolkit. They just are not going to solve all of the problems, which I think makes sense. That's a very headline finding. Within the review, like I said, we identified five different groups of interventions and we looked at the impact within each of those intervention groups. And we found, for example, that radio dramas tend to have on average, a positive impact on trust, and another group of interventions related to comprehensive multi-component programs that included elements of peace education, where they would hold workshops with community members.
And then from that workshop, they would then set up opportunities for people from the different groups to interact with each other, such as through negotiation committees or early warning systems. And then they would add to that an element of economic support. So, a way for people to work together by identifying a program, a small intervention that they could do in their community that would benefit both groups. And those kinds of comprehensive programs, we found an average and positive impact on trust and a willingness to participate. Amongst the school-based peace education interventions, the ones working with children, we identified positive impacts of the programs when they measured effects on the children who participated. There was one study that measured the effects on parents who did not participate, and we didn't find any effects there. And what we think that means is likely that such a school-based peace education program, working with children, might have a lot of capacity to influence how the children and the youth or the teenagers see each other, but that might not be sufficient for changing the way that the adults see each other, and you likely need to engage them directly.
Reema Saleh: So, one of your findings is that standalone interventions may not be enough to build resilient, social cohesion in fragile contexts without complementary interventions. So, what kind of complementary interventions do you have in mind? Is it realistic to expect major changes to group relationships without them?
Ada Sonnenfeld: I think it's not realistic to expect major changes to group relationships only through social cohesion interventions. I think they have a clear role to play, but fundamentally, the drivers of conflict in any situation are rarely identified as purely being about deep-seated intergroup prejudices. Prejudices are held by everybody, everywhere, but they don't tend to turn into violence except when there are other triggers at play. And so, I think having interventions that address those systemic drivers of conflict is very important. What those might look like will vary a lot on the particular context you're looking at.
So, there might be one context where there are major economic inequalities in that striving groups. Or there are even just perceived inequalities between how different groups are treated by the government and that might be driving tensions. In other situations, it may be tensions over the way that land is used. One type of community may want to use it in one way, another might want to use it in a different way.
So, there's often something else that's driving conflict. And that's why it's important to be very cognizant of the local context in which you're working and understand how your intervention may interact with those situations, but also to be realistic then about what you may or may not be able to change. When it says, “We need these complementary interventions addressing structural drivers of conflict,” that is not something that it's likely that any one actor can influence. And that's where you need the peace building community more as a whole, in a given context to say, “These are the different drivers that we can identify.” Is there a way that we can say, “Okay, this funder might focus on this element?” This funder might focus on that one and try and build a program and just coordinate in terms of how you're doing the various approaches, and more coordination might help.
Mwangi Thuita: Your findings also suggest that social cohesion programs that identify bottlenecks to intergroup social cohesion and carry out conflict assessments tend to have a larger and more positive effect. So, this kind of seems obvious, but it's also important to understand whether or not a particular context actually needs an intervention and the lack of relevance or appropriateness to the context can be at least part of the reason for seeing no impact. Did you find that most impact evaluations do comprehensive assessments like these and if not, why?
Ada Sonnenfeld: We're always working within systematic reviews from a place of imperfect information. So, what we do in order to identify the papers is we do a really extensive search of academic databases, websites from different actors, such as the World Bank and relevant implementers and donors. And we try to find all of the impact evaluations that we can that meet our criteria. And then we do an additional search for every study that we find that meets our criteria to identify other documents written about that program, to help us get as much information as we can about what they did. But we often can't find that information. And so, while within our study, we found only one or two impact evaluations that were clearly based off of conflict analyses and based on context assessments, that doesn't mean that none of the others did that. It just meant that we weren't able to find those studies and they didn't mention having done them.
So, just with that caveat in mind, I did think nonetheless, that it was surprising that very few of them mentioned having been based on conflict analyses, but I don't know if that's just because it wasn't reported or if it actually didn't happen. To your point as well, in terms of why they may not do that or why they may, I think it is surprising, but I also think it's not uncommon. It's not unique to social cohesion interventions or peace-building interventions. Other work that I've done for other types of interventions in fragile and in non-fragile context has also identified a similar finding around how often the bottleneck seems to have been misidentified. And that might relate to the fact that the intervention was wrong, in the sense that they were trying to implement something that wasn't needed in that context. But another potential source of that is that what they were measuring might not have been quite right.
That's where things get really complicated, because what social cohesion means is very context dependent. And so, you can take the example of Nigeria, where we had four different studies that took place in Nigeria, and two of them measured farmer and pastoralist communities, one targeted Christians and Muslims, and the third targeted people from different ethnic groups in the country. And so, those are three different types of social cleavages that different interventions were targeting just within a single country. So, what the social cleavages that you're targeting and how your intervention changes perceptions across that cleavage, is going to be very context dependent, and then how you measure it will also change. So, what it means, for example, to measure acceptance of diversity, a lot of people looked at whether or not people had friends from the other group, but they measured that in different ways. And they didn't always measure that in ways that were necessarily relevant.
And that's really tricky because maybe one way to deal with that is to say, “Oh, well, let's all measure the same thing.” but then, what if what you're measuring doesn't make sense for that particular context? So, you end up in this situation where there's an issue with bottleneck identification, but it's hard for us to say whether that's because they didn't do good baseline assessments of what the conflict dynamics were and what the needs were or whether it's because they weren't measuring things quite correctly. All I can tell you is that we couldn't find evidence of conflict assessments having been done. And we think they probably would be useful.
Mwangi Thuita: Given that social cohesion is often very contextual, so if you need a theory of social breakdown in each case that you're looking at, which involves contextual information – does that have implications for how generalizable the findings of impact evaluations are across the board?
Ada Sonnenfeld: Absolutely. I think one of the conversations that we've been having with Ray and with a lot of other actors who are looking at social cohesion as a way of working towards sustainable peace in fragile contexts, is that there's a need for a framework that is general enough that everybody can say, “Yeah, this is what we mean when we're talking about it,” but that the indicators can be hyper contextualized. And so, that you know where on your framework your indicator feeds in, but the indicator itself is based off of the local context. And that might help us move to a place where we can say, “Okay, this change in this context represented a big leap in the relationships between the two groups.”
Whereas in this context, all they measured was something that actually was quite a small step and that can help having a sense of where something maps onto a common framework would help us interpret the findings across contexts and help us better figure out how to use the findings from one impact evaluation in another context. Because that might say, “Okay, this evaluation, this intervention in this context actually had a really big impact on trust.” And maybe that helps us see why and how we can take that to another place.
The realist in me likes to always say that interventions themselves can't be replicated, but mechanisms can be transferred. And what we mean by that is the design will always have to be contextualized of your intervention. But the reactions that your design is trying to trigger in the people it targets, you can try and learn from that. So, if you can get people to work together collaboratively, that's a mechanism that you might be able to replicate, even if the way that you get them to work together, and the context, the setup might be very contextualized.
Reema Saleh: Do you think that evaluations are useful for testing assumptions about how development interventions affect change?
Ada Sonnenfeld: Yes. [Laughter] I do think they are useful for testing assumptions. I think they're very useful. Specifically impact evaluations can give us a lot of information about that, but it depends on how the impact evaluation is designed. I think increasingly we see impact evaluations being theory-based and using a theory of change. And that's incredibly important because that means that they have thought about. “All right, in order to get to social cohesion, these are the steps that need to happen.” And then you can see if, for example, you find a positive impact on an early-stage outcome, but not on a later stage, you can see where your theory of change might break down and then you can test your assumptions to try and see why that might be. Some really clever impact evaluations have done specific tests of different mechanisms to try and see what was driving change. And those are really interesting.
But you still have a lot of programs that just measure those sorts of high-level impact outcomes. And then you don't really know what goes on in the middle. And that's what we often call the black box of a randomized controlled trial, for example, is a classic one where you don't really know why you're seeing the results you're seeing. And so, what we would say is that that's why mixed methods are so important. You have your statistical methods to answer one part of your question, but that alone is likely not going to be enough without some kind of process evaluation, qualitative information, trying to see why you're seeing those results to help you interpret them correctly.
Mwangi Thuita: Would you say that these impact evaluations do a good job of measuring intermediate effects?
Ada Sonnenfeld: I would say that very few of the studies in our systematic review measured intermediate outcomes and effects on intermediate outcomes. So, whether they are capable of doing a good job, yes, they are very much so, but it's not often that they do. And that's I think really where I would like to see the field moving towards is “Okay, we're getting to the point where we recognize that having a theory of change is really important for any type of evaluation, impact evaluations and other types, because it can really help structure what kinds of questions you ask.” But what I often see is that evaluations, even where they have a theory of change at the beginning, will not revisit that theory of change after they have their findings to say what do these findings actually mean for my theory of change? Do they validate it? Do they challenge it?
Do they suggest actually it should be refined in this way? And maybe this is what the theory of change should look like. So, I often feel like that last step of closing the loop. And “All right, here's our initial theory of change.” This is what we thought was going to be happening. We measured outcomes against X, Y, and Z steps. So, intermediate steps and final impact outcomes. This is what we found and they'll often leave it at that. But that can sometimes be difficult if they then don't tie that back, because it can be really hard to interpret why you might see positive effects on some indicators and null effects or mixed effects on others. And so, you really need the researchers who are working with the program team. They're the best place to then say, “Okay, what does this mean for the theory of change?” And that will also help us when it comes to understanding how the findings from that study might inform future studies as well.
Mwangi Thuita: And one thing that I think was intentional in your review is you don't include interventions that aim to build sustainable peace by providing economic support for things like job training. So, like cash transfers also. Could these be some of the complementary interventions that you were talking about earlier?
Ada Sonnenfeld: Yes and no. I mean, the reason that we didn't include those was not because we don't think they are a relevant approach to building social cohesion, but rather it's because the evidence gap map that I mentioned earlier actually identified a large number of ongoing studies of cash transfers that are trying to measure outcomes on social cohesion. And so, that would have meant that, for us to have synthesized that literature now would be a bit premature because there are so many ongoing studies, those findings would change within the next two or three years. And so, that was the rationale behind excluding those from our study. I think it will be really interesting to synthesize that literature in about two or three years, not right now. I mean you could right now, but it's likely to change.
Whether or not those address underlying drivers of contentions between the communities, I think is a slightly different question that that synthesis will probably have to answer. Cash transfers can be really important in humanitarian aid context and in addressing short-term needs. Whether they are the structural changes that you need in order to shift the situation for those communities in the long run is a question that's still open.
Reema Saleh: I was curious why there were a lot of countries that never had impact evaluations.
Ada Sonnenfeld: Why that might be?
Reema Saleh: Yeah. I was curious kind of why it's kind of uneven.
Ada Sonnenfeld: It's very uneven. I mean, the evidence gap map is maybe a better source of that than the systematic review, but you can see there that some of the analysis we did, there's not an obvious correlation between, for example, how fragile a country is or how much ODA it receives, how much official development assistance it receives, and how many impact evaluations there are. You have quite a large number comparatively of impact evaluations from Afghanistan and DRC than plenty of other places like Syria that receive a huge amount of ODA. And Yemen. So, I don't know why there haven't been evaluations in those places. That's not a question that our research was able to ask. You would have to do a lot of stakeholder research and asking all of the different donors and all of the different universities why they don't research those areas.
But what we try to do is just say, hey, there's some really important geographic gaps where we don't have rigorous evidence. And maybe hopefully people will read the evidence gap map and see that and say, actually it would be really beneficial, not just to our own programming, but to the global evidence-base to build evidence from those less well-studied contexts.
Mwangi Thuita: Yeah. Well, thanks. Thanks Ada so much. Thanks for all your time.
Ada Sonnenfeld: You're very welcome.
Reema Saleh: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Ada Sonnenfeld. This episode was produced and edited by Aishwarya Kumar and Reema Saleh. Check our show notes to access the full report discussed in this episode. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
02.10.21
How Corruption Fuels Violence and Disorder | Gretchen Peters
Eduardo Ortiz: Hi, my name is Eduardo Ortiz, and you are listening to University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast.
Root of Conflict Introducers: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research Institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Aishwarya Raje: The relationship between illegal financial flows and state level of violence is present in conflicts around the world and is especially pronounced in Afghanistan. In particular, the country's thriving drug market based on the opium trade has proven to be a major economic factor that has been fueling the ongoing conflict. My name is Aishwarya Raje, and in this episode of Root of Conflict, Mwangi Thuita and I speak with Gretchen Peters, Executive Director of the Center on Illicit Networks and Transnational Organized Crime. Drawing on her role at CINTOC as well as her decades-long career as a writer and journalist, Gretchen talks through why the political economy of the war in Afghanistan is so poorly understood, as well as the connections between criminal networks, weakened institutions and breakdown into disorder.
Mwangi Thuita: Gretchen, thank you so much for joining us today.
Gretchen Peters: My pleasure. Thank you for having me.
Mwangi Thuita: So, to start, can you tell us about the Center on Illicit Networks and Transnational Organized Crime, and what your role as Executive Director of the organization looks like?
Gretchen Peters: Sure. I had worked for several years as had my colleague and co-founder Kathleen
Miles. We had both worked as consultants to the Defense Department and to U.S. law enforcement.
And what we realized was that a lot of efforts to fight organized crime and violence around the world were perhaps well-intentioned, but were having the opposite effect than wasn't what was intended, and we felt that it was important to establish a center that would be focused on fighting the systems that support crime and corruption. The corruption had to be taken into account in any program to counter organized crime. My 20 years or so working as a journalist before I became a consultant to the U.S. government, I worked as a journalist for many different parts of the world.
And what I found was that what was often the dominant narrative of why people were fighting
each other in conflicts that never ended, whether it was Sunni's fighting with Shia, or Muslims fighting Christians, or some other thing that was going on, was really just a smokescreen for powerful forces that were often funded by elicit activity, that had in many cases, corrupted powerful institutions of the state or had in some places that I've worked, replaced the state or certain aspects of it, either as insurgents or warlords or just major power brokers that sort of operated from the shadows. These shadow economies prevented the violence and the conflict from going away because the shadow economies depended on the lawlessness for their business to go well. A good example of that would be the opium trade in Afghanistan.
I'm convinced that one of the reasons that peace process after peace process collapses is because there are so many constituencies that benefit from the horrific continuation of violence there – they don't want the war to end. There's almost always a spoiler that takes out the peace process, just when it's starting to reach progress. More recently, Kathleen and I have done a lot of work in Africa
and what we're seeing there, it's distinct from Afghanistan, but we're seeing these often foreign
criminalized forces coming in and really hollowing out institutions of states, in multiple countries.
It's been sort of most famously documented in South Africa with a state capture by a number of groups. But the most famous was an Indian family that became very close to the former ruler. But we're seeing similar things, and in some cases, it involves East Asian and generally Chinese groups. In some cases, there's been Russian groups. We've tracked the involvement of Iranian and Lebanese criminal groups in other parts of central Africa, and they almost seem to operate from the same playbook. It's fascinating to study but the impact it has on societies is devastating. It implicates education systems, the economy, healthcare, all sorts of stuff get negatively impacted by it.
Mwangi Thuita: And on the topic of Afghanistan, in your book, Seeds of Terror, you illustrated a really vivid picture of a thriving drug market built by the Taliban, where they make millions of dollars every year from the opium trade. Can you talk us through the political economy of this conflict and why you think it's so poorly understood or poorly represented, when we talk about the war in Afghanistan?
Gretchen Peters: One issue that I think is most poorly understood, and this is not unique to
Afghanistan, we've seen the same thing in places like Mexico and Columbia and other parts of the world, is that human beings have the intuitive response of fighting crime and fighting problems where they see them, where they're most visible. And the most visible aspect of the drug trade – well, there's two aspects that are visible. One is the farm areas where the crops are grown, and another area is if at the other end of the drug supply chain, if there are people dying and there's street markets and corners, where drug dealers sell drugs, those are the visible things that law enforcement tends to go after. But often, the real power brokers that control the supply chain, they're certainly not the farmers in any drug, and they're certainly not the guys selling dime bags on street corners. They're the traffickers who are in the middle, and in particular, they're the folks that finance this trade and those people almost virtually never go to jail. Occasionally, you might see law enforcement arrest a drug kingpin, and certainly, there've been a number of drug kingpins in Afghanistan, like Haji Juma Khan, Haji Bashir Noorzai, Haji Bas Mohammad that were arrested and have been in those three cases brought to the United States to face jail time. But the money around the Afghan drug trade has virtually never been investigated.
I've done consultations with U.S. intelligence. I've met with the Brits about this. It's quite clear that the money related to the opium trade, which is billions and billions of dollars annually, is not under a mattress in Kandahar. Some of it is in Pakistan and Iran, some of it is in the UAE and banks in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. But quite a lot of it is in Europe, it's in the United States. I, at one point, when I was working for the DOJ and the Defense Department, I mapped out a money laundering operation that the Taliban were running that extended as far from Afghanistan as Northern California. And nobody had ever looked into the financing of the Taliban beyond Afghanistan. And that's a ridiculously myopic view of how that insurgency is financing itself.
If we’re looking beyond what's going on in Afghanistan, we're not understanding the full scale of how the Taliban as an organization - and the Taliban has many different factions so I’m simplifying a bit – but no one's getting a full picture of how the insurgency finances itself without looking at the full supply chain that is funding the insurgency through drugs and other criminal activities. Some factions and within those factions, some commanders within the Taliban are making the enormous amount of money from supporting and facilitating the drug trade, or in some cases running drugs themselves. And other parts of Afghanistan where there's not as much or no narcotics grown, we see insurgent commanders funding themselves through kidnapping regimes, through controlling illegal mining operations, through all sorts of extortion rackets. And again, this is common to insurgencies around the world. This is not something that is unique to Afghanistan, and it's also important to acknowledge in Afghanistan that there are a lot of warlords and local commanders that are on the government’s side that are engaging in the same criminal activities. And so, the people stuck in the middle are the Afghans, ordinary Afghans that are just really between Iraq and a hard place. And it's a tragedy.
Mwangi Thuita: Can you walk us through the process of tracking and mapping these networks and maybe
some of the political hurdles that come into play when you're trying to disrupt the flow of money and undermine these criminal operations?
Gretchen Peters: Yes, that's quite a big question. So, in terms of how we map these organizations, we first start out usually by reading as much as we can that's available in the public record or depending we're working with the government, they might have government reports that aren't available to the public that we're able to read or to look over. So, we first try to learn as much as we can. We then try to figure out from those documents and public records, who seems to know about what's going on and who we can speak to. And then we will go out and conduct typically dozens of interviews, usually structured interviews to try and figure out. We have about a 12-page set of interview questions that go through the different phases of a criminal supply chain, or really any supply chain, to understand how goods move in one direction, how money moves, and how financing of transactions occurs.
We will then, to what extent possible…[…] it depends on the commodity, for example, we've done a lot of work trying to understand the illegal ivory trade between Africa and Asia. And so, we've looked at drug seizures and mapped out down to who owns the trucks that delivered shipments that later turned out to have ivory in them, tracing back the license plates, and then, the ownership of who owns the home where the truck was registered, to see if we can start to piece it together. And some of it will be deadends, but sometimes, eventually, I should say, we're almost always able to put together a picture of who we believe the criminal network is. And then that also provides us with more leads of people we can speak to.
So, this can often in and of itself be a six-to-nine-month process. To map something like that out can take an enormous amount of time. And when I was writing Seeds of Terror, and I was trying to map out the Taliban, or my understanding of the Taliban, that was about a five-year process. And over the course of that process, it became less and less possible to function and to operate in some of the areas where I needed to be. And so, I fortunately had worked in Afghanistan and Pakistan for a long time. So, I was able to do things that many foreigners wouldn't be able to because I had local friends and they would take me in. So there reached a point when the guys I was working with said, well, we can't drive you down there unless you sit in the backseat and wear a burka.
And then they started saying, well, you can't come down. We're not going to be able to take you in there. We can't take you in there, but we can bring people out or we can't take you in there at all, or it's just not going to happen. And in those cases, I would then send one of my local research assistants to conduct an interview. but we did have to be very careful, and it created significant barriers to the project. But one thing that I have found really in most places that we've worked, I mean, as long as we have trusted local researchers and partners that we're working with…people are so frustrated by this, in any place we've been, nobody likes to live in a place that is infested by crime and corruption.
People often ask me if we're scared to do this work. And the answer is of course. Sometimes it's scary and we're very nervous about going into a place or meeting with a certain person. But I'm more scared about not doing anything about this and not trying to figure it out and not trying to figure out solutions. I'm more afraid of what's going to happen to our planet and our communities if we don't. And so, we have been very, very lucky, but I think part of it is that we are in there earnestly, trying to figure out how the system works, and people seem very grateful to talk to us. And we haven't ever exposed anybody that didn't want to come out, so I suppose that helps us too. But over time, we then are able to build a map to say, these are the roles and functions in the supply chain that move commodities.
And then we created a separate map, usually going the other way. When I say map, I mean like a
diagram. It’s often laid out in a combination of like Microsoft Excel and PowerPoint, just because those are programs that lots of people have. We've used network analysis programs as well, but I mean, I can do it with post-its and string on a wall…it’s just to sort of show the progression and to explain how stuff moves from one place to another, and how money oils that system. What we found in a number of places…I did a project a few years ago in Gabon, in Central Africa, which was really interesting looking at the ivory trade. And I was working with the Gabonese government and their national parks and the anti-poaching unit within their national park system.
And we spent months mapping out the poaching gangs, I guess you'd call them the criminal groups that were poaching elephants. And then on top of that, we mapped out the networks that were
exporting ivory, and they were also in many cases, exporting rosewood and other endangered
timber. And what we realized, the Gabonese commander and I, what we realized was that he and his guys were going out into kind of remote jungle areas that were dangerous, if nothing else,
because there's yellow fever and Ebola and etc. but also armed poachers. And within days, they would be arrested. And so, then we set off in a project to map the corrupt networks that existed on top of the criminal supply chain.
Because what was happening, was that every time they'd go out and launch an operation to arrest
Somebody, within three or four days, they'd be released on some technicality. And so, we were later able to map out all the judges and more senior officials that were on the take and the country. It was a really fascinating project. And I spoke to him, I think it was about six months ago and asked him how it was going. And he said, “It’s still very difficult,” and I said, “Well, what’s your biggest problem? Is it crime or corruption?” And he said, “Without a doubt, it’s the corruption.”
So that's become in many ways for me, more of a focus than the criminals themselves. If you have a government that's clean, that's functioning effectively, criminals don't really have much room to operate. Corruption really is the grease that keeps the machine going.
Aishwarya Raje: So you talked about the importance of having local friends and working with
local researchers. And I think often times in academic circles, when they talk about conflict resolution, it's told from a very kind of high-level analytical perspective, and often misses out on the perspective of local voices and local communities. So, can you share some experiences that you've had with local communities that you've worked in, whether in Afghanistan or anywhere else you've conducted field work that perhaps challenged what you thought you knew about the conflict, or made you think about the conflict differently?
Gretchen Peters: Yeah, totally. I mean, first of all, I'm alive and in one piece today because of my local colleagues in multiple different countries. The number of times I have been physically rescued or pulled out of a situation when it started to turn, I could maybe count on two hands the number of times that's happened. But I certainly would not be alive today if it weren't for my local friends and colleagues who in many cases were taking far greater risks than I was to, to go out in these communities and ask these questions. I think one of the things that was hardest for me to understand at first was the extent to which you can have battlefield enemies in a place like Afghanistan. But we also saw this in the Balkans that were literally killing each other by day and yet at night would be collaborating to traffic drugs.
And so, that was something that took me a long time to get my head around, and yet I've learned that it's incredibly common in conflict that enemies will still get along when they need to. When there's opportunity for money to be made, they will find a way to reach a solution. And I think it's an important lesson for us in terms of peacebuilding approaches, that you have to understand the political economy of conflict, and if you can help opposing sides reach a solution that is economically acceptable to them, where both sides are going to make money or both sides are going to see themselves getting some kind of financial slice of the pie at the end, where their communities and their backers will be supported financially and will be able to survive. It can provide you a pathway towards some sort of conflict resolution.
Mwangi Thuita: That’s a great segway into my next question, which is about how to deal with the conflict elite. So, in Afghanistan and with respect to the Afghanistan war right now, there are peace talks going on in Doha that are attempting to resolve this dispute and pave the way for a U S withdrawal. Now, I mean, the chances of that actually happening, many people would say are low. But from your perspective, in terms of incorporating what we know about the political economy of conflict, why is it important to think about a peace dividend for the conflict elite, when sometimes it seems like there's more pressing, more important issues?
Gretchen Peters: Well, it's a really good question. And I’m also impressed when anybody else uses terms like conflict elite because it's something that I obsess over, and that I think that a lot of people think about or even identify, but it's certainly a case in Afghanistan, that that was a country that many of the power brokers, many of the conflict elite are precisely that. They became powerful as a result of the conflict and their families or their tribes were not powerful before. And so, they will potentially see themselves as losing influence, losing income at the end of the conflict. So, I think one of the most important things to do, whether you're trying to investigate, say, our messed up
healthcare system in this country, or why a conflict is continuing in a place like Mozambique or
Afghanistan, nothing seems to solve it.
For me, the first order of business is to figure out who's benefiting from it continuing to happen, Who’s making money off of the conflict and the perpetuation of the conflict. And if you can get those people who are benefiting from it to agree for it to end, then I think you're on the road to recovery. Even if you can just figure out who they are that’s benefiting from it, you're halfway to a solution, but in Afghanistan, I think we're seeing now with the explosion of violence that's happening, and in particular in Helmand province, which is the number one province for producing poppy in Afghanistan, that there's forces at work that don't want this peace deal to go through. They're not complying with the ceasefire.
So, I don't have a lot of optimism about where this is going. There’s going to have to be some kind of settlement with the Taliban, but I don't think a settlement that involves bringing the Taliban into the government is a good idea. So, I think that the international community should be negotiating with Afghanistan's moderates, of which there are many, instead of their violent drug trafficking extremists of which there are few. So, I think it's unfortunate the decisions that have been made around the Doha Accord.
Mwangi Thuita: In closing, I want to ask a broader question about how you see the causal relationship between the kinds of illegal financial flows that we're talking about and violence and disorder. That is, after all, the theme of this podcast. So, do you think it's more the case that the criminal networks are simply exploiting weakened institutions that have brought about civil conflict and violence, or do their activities actually precipitate a breakdown into violence and disorder?
Gretchen Peters: I think the issue you're talking about goes in both directions. I think that the illicit financial flows can both be part of the asymmetric warfare campaign for insurgent and violent groups.They can help to finance attacks. They can help to finance corruption. They can have a very corrosive impact. Plus, the strength of insurgent or criminal gangs perpetuates or pushes the belief among the community that the government is weak and ineffectual. I think that the illicit flows can have a very damaging impact on a variety of levels. The other issue is that, and there's a group here in D.C. called Global Financial Integrity that does a lot of really good work tracking this issue, but it lists that financial outflows from a lot of countries in the developing world, in particular, they've done some really great work in Africa, are often 7 to 10 times higher than aid and development inflows and foreign direct investment. And so, at the same time that there are efforts to try and stabilize unstable countries, the outflow of cash is really just sucking the place dry, sucking its bone marrow out.
Aishwarya Raje: Well Gretchen, you’ve been very generous with your time. Thank you so much for speaking with us.
Gretchen Peters: Thank you. Aishwarya. Thank you Mwangi.
Aishwarya Raje: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Gretchen Peters. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of the series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit the Pearson institute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
01.21.21
Is There Hope for the Afghan Peace Process? | Laurel Miller
Nadia: This is Nadia and you're listening to University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast.
Root of Conflict Interviewers: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research Institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Aishwarya Raje: The war in Afghanistan has ravaged on for decades and peace negotiations between the Afghan government and Taliban officials during that period have often broken down, time and time again, with a number of foreign actors involved in the conflict and in the negotiations, the most prominent being the United States, reaching a comprehensive peace agreement has proven to be exceedingly complex. But now, with a new set of negotiations taking place in Doha, we may be seeing a window of opportunity to make progress towards peace. My name is Aishwarya Raje, and in this episode of Root of Conflict, Mwangi Thuita and I speak with Laurel Miller, the Asia Program Director at International Crisis Group. Laurel discusses the intricacies of the war in Afghanistan and how they've evolved over the years, and the best-case scenario for what a peace agreement can look like. Laurel, thank you so much for joining us today.
Laurel Miller: My pleasure to be with you.
Aishwarya Raje: Your topic during the Pearson Global Forum was, of course, a case study on Afghanistan, which is undoubtedly a very complex conflict. We could probably do an entire podcast series just to talk about it, but can you give us, or lay out for us who the main players have been in this conflict? And from a U.S. perspective, how have our goals in Afghanistan changed over the last 20 years?
Laurel Miller: Sure. And, and I should say I came to this position at International Crisis Group already having focused quite a bit in recent years on policy issues related to Afghanistan. It's one of our priority areas within my current job, which I've been doing not even for two years now, but, had done some analytical work of my own when I was at the RAND Corporation related to Afghanistan.
And I also served in the U.S. State Department from 2013 through the middle of 2017 as the deputy, and then the Acting Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan and was working on issues related to War and Peace in Afghanistan at that time. So that’s what I drew on in my presentation at the Pearson Forum, and in other work that I do. So, the conflict there, it's multi-sided and complex, and it has both internal and external dimensions. Often, from an American political and popular perspective, we think of the war in Afghanistan as the war that has been there since after 9/11, after the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, and toppling of the Taliban regime there. And that is one dimension of the war, the U.S. invaded Afghanistan at the end of 2001, because the Taliban regime had harbored Osama bin Laden and had refused to hand him over.
The U.S. took the position at that time that it needed to not only endeavor to capture or kill bin Laden and his associates, but also make an example of the Taliban regime in order to say that, state sponsorship, state harboring of terrorists will not be tolerated. So, one dimension of the conflict in Afghanistan is that the United States invaded and gradually built up the number of troops on the ground in Afghanistan over several years. After having wiped away the Taliban regime, it was one of the key actors in installing a new government there, putting in place a new constitution, elections, et cetera. But then the Taliban regrouped, from safe havens in Pakistan. Across the border from Afghanistan, the Taliban regrouped as an insurgency and the United States then became embroiled in a counterinsurgency war against the Taliban.
So that's one dimension. Rolling a little bit back further in time, Afghanistan was not a fully peaceful place before 9/11. There had been a civil war in the early 1990s after the Soviet Union withdrew from the country and the U.S., which had been heavily engaged in supporting the anti-Soviet fighters in Afghanistan, including bin Laden, decided to exit the region and the country descended into a civil war in the early 1990s, which then created the opening for the Taliban to sweep to power and hold power in the later part of the 1990s. The Taliban had by and large consolidated control of the country, but not complete control of the country, and there were dimensions of warfare that were still going on related to that fight even before the U.S. invaded after 9/11.
And so, there's a war still going on in Afghanistan that has a lot to do with what was happening in the 1990s, even before the U.S. invaded. That's another dimension and layers to the conflict in Afghanistan. And then, Afghanistan also is surrounded by some meddlesome neighbors, it's in a very difficult neighborhood. The key players in this regard are both Pakistan and Iran, but others too have over many decades sponsored, favored, proxies and clients in the country, and have, have helped to perpetuate warfare there through these relationships. And as I mentioned, Pakistan, in particular, is consequential in that it gave safe haven to the retreating Taliban figures who then regrouped as an insurgency. And so, there's another dimension to the conflict and the set of actors in Afghanistan that has to do with the external players within the neighborhood, not to mention the United States and NATO as external players further afield, and Russia and China too have interests and involvement in Afghanistan. So, it's a particularly complex conflict because of these both internal and external dimensions that overlap, but also represent distinct sets of interests on the part of all of these players.
Mwangi Thuita: So, what has changed in the last few years, so that there's now more of an emphasis on a negotiated settlement as opposed to achieving a military victory, as a precursor to U.S. withdrawal, even though there's still, like you mentioned, during your panel, a low likelihood that, a peace agreement will be agreed upon and implemented properly.
Laurel Miller: So, I think you have to look a little bit back in time to see how the U.S. came to this point of being focused on negotiating a settlement and negotiating directly with the Taliban. Initially in Afghanistan, the U.S. saw itself as being initially after the invasion as outright victorious, militarily. It didn't capture bin Laden. He famously escaped and later was caught and killed in Pakistan. But the U.S. did very quickly topple the Taliban regime over time and was able to pretty much decimate the Al Qaeda presence in the region and saw itself in those first few years after the invasion as having really utterly defeated the Taliban. From the time when the Taliban began to reconstitute as an insurgency, gradually, certainly by 2005, 2006, it was clear that there was an insurgency.
I think it's fair to say from that point on the war from a U.S. perspective has never gone well. The U.S. from that point began to increase the number of forces steadily. Even before Obama came into office, there were already a series of surges. And then there was what was literally called a surge in the beginning of the Obama administration, to at the peak, there were 100,000 American forces deployed in Afghanistan. In 2002 it was like tiny numbers, a few thousand at most, and then to a 100,000 American forces in Afghanistan at the peak, plus NATO forces for a total of between 140 and 150,000, plus in any military deployment like this, you then have to multiply several times more contractors, including doing military-like tasks in addition to this number of troops on the ground.
The reason why the numbers kept going up is because the war wasn't going well, and the U.S. saw the U.S. military advocated for the application of more resources to try to turn it around, to change the trajectory. From the peak period, already by 2013, 2014, the number of U.S. forces was diminishing because the idea was that the surge of forces in the Obama administration was supposed to be temporary, and so there was a plan to surge up and then come down. And at the same time, there was an emphasis placed on building up the capabilities of Afghan security forces to take the lead in the fight against the Taliban, but still with the U.S. engaging in counter-terrorism efforts. But even with this sort of peak, and then initial decline of U.S. forces there, it was never really turning around.
The Taliban was steadily gaining ground and even with the enormous devotion of American resources to building up the Afghan security forces, they still hadn't and still haven't today proven capable of entirely on their own handling the counterinsurgency without American backing. From around 2015, when the number of U.S. forces really began to dip, it became even harder for the Afghan security forces, and there were even more gains by the Taliban. And even today, with the numbers of U.S. forces almost down – by next week, it's supposed to be down to 4,500 – obviously the Afghan forces are carrying much more of the burden of the fighting, much, much more, but still, in really the most exigent circumstances, they need American military support, particularly air support, meaning they need the bombing of Taliban positions in order to not be overrun by the Taliban.
And the Taliban has continued to improve its position. So that's the trajectory of the war fighting. And I mentioned that in answer to your question about the peacemaking, because it's the explanation. If the U.S. had been militarily successful in partnership with the Afghan government, and eliminating the Taliban insurgency, then I don't think anyone would be talking about a political settlement, or they'd be talking about one that's really just negotiating the terms of the Taliban surrender. But that's not the case. There are many people who think if the U.S. started being serious about a negotiation much earlier, it could have negotiated on much more favorable terms, but as the Taliban has gained strength, we are nowhere there in negotiating the terms of the Taliban surrender. It was more than a decade ago now that some American policymakers recognized that the war was not winnable and that there had to be an effort to begin trying to negotiate a political settlement of the conflict.
But for many years, that effort was in fits and starts. It was, “We're going to keep going with the war effort, and this is something we'll do on the side.” And it doesn't usually work out very well if you don't put something that hard at the center of your efforts. And so, it was very ebb and flow of attention to this, changing more affirmatively, more concertedly in the direction of trying to negotiate a political settlement only around the end of 2018. Even in the Trump administration, for the first year, there was a mini-surge, again, trying to turn around the war and negotiate from a position of strain. It didn't happen that way. There wasn't a positive change from an American perspective in the war, and so, efforts were redoubled in early 2018, not coincidentally, because you have a president who campaigned on and seems to still want the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan as a policy priority.
Aishwarya Raje: So, given that context, how consequential is the upcoming US presidential election going to be on the peace process? What are some differences we could expect from four more years of Donald Trump versus a new Biden administration?
Laurel Miller: Yeah, the short answer is very consequential, potentially, even though I'm not expecting a major change of direction if Biden wins. If Trump wins the second term, then based on the recent trajectory of the policy efforts, as well as the recent public statements by Trump himself and the tweets and his national security advisors’ comments, which suggest a plan to reduce U.S. forces even more by another half, down to just 2000, around there by January. I think that's a pretty safe bet that that would continue and that the ability of U.S. diplomats to try to negotiate a decent political settlement will be much reduced if Trump wins, because the policy will be a policy about troop deployments, not a policy about Afghanistan. I think Trump has pretty clearly shown that, because he said he really doesn't care about Afghanistan.
He doesn't see the risk or threat there, or issues of U.S. credibility, or what do allies think about, it's really just about troops, no troops. And so, I think that you would see a push to just make as fast and dirty a deal as you can, so that you least have a fig leaf for a complete withdrawal. If Trump loses, we have a question as to what happens in the period of time while he's still president after that loss. And there, I think we're all expecting if Trump loses, to have all of oxygen sucked out of the air by litigation of what the result of the election was. He's already relitigated it. So, people post litigate it too.
And so the question in my mind, then is, did he just lose interest in what he said about Afghanistan, and it's all really just about litigating the result of the election, literally and figuratively litigating, and is Afghanistan just off the radar and forgotten about, and nothing happens between that and the inauguration? Or, does he decide he's just going to burn it all down? And now, his legacy is “I said I was going to do it, and now I'm just going to do it.” That's possible to be too. I think the bureaucracy would have ways of slowing down anything serious that happens between the election and the inauguration, but not necessarily to a great degree. So, there's a lot of uncertainty about that period. If Trump loses and, we get through the November to January period without too much happening with the status quo being essentially preserved, then I think there's an opportunity for the Biden administration to do a bit of resetting, first of all, to kind of re-energize the peacemaking effort, which is right now, pretty much stalled because of the U.S. election – other factors too - but neither side of this negotiation is foolish enough to think they can count on what will happen after an American election.
So, they are being very careful. We're not going to take any risk by entering into any agreements that they're not sure about. So, things are stalled right now because of the election, and if they stay stalled, there'll be an opportunity for Biden administration to re-energize its peacemaking efforts, to maybe repair some of the gaps, to probably take a little more time and be a little more orderly about it. I think they will still be focused on peace process, but the issues themselves are not going to get any easier, and the prospects of ultimate success in a peace negotiation are not going to be orders of magnitude higher, even with a more orderly American foreign policy.
Mwangi Thuita: So, there've been some efforts to imagine alternative histories of the war in Afghanistan, how U.S. strategy could have been implemented a bit better. Last year, Harris professor, Ethan Bueno de Mesquito wrote in the Boston Review that we were always going to lose the war in Afghanistan because, and I want to quote him, here, “Counterinsurgencies are wars of attrition. Wars of attrition are won through resolve and the side facing an existential threat will always have the greater resolve.” He suggested that what could have been a successful, narrowly defined counter-terrorism operation became an unwinnable counter-insurgency moving forward. Do you think the U.S. has learned the right lessons about counterinsurgencies?
Laurel Miller: I largely agree with what you just described from that position, but with some caveats, because I'd want to know what that alternative looked like to getting embroiled in the counterinsurgency. To say we just go in, we talk with the government, and then we say, see you later, that doesn't work particularly well either in terms of stable outcomes. So, there there's a lot to unpack about what that alternative history really looks like. In terms of whether the U.S. has learned the lessons, I'm not sure at all. I don't think the lessons have even been drawn fully yet about Afghanistan, much less learned. And what I think we've seen happen in recent years within the U.S. military establishment is simply sticking your fingers in your ears about counterinsurgency. It's like, “Oh, we just don't talk about counterinsurgency, we don't do counter-insurgency anymore. We're not going to do it again. So why should we bother to think too much about what went right and what went wrong?” I’m exaggerating slightly. The military does have its procedures for doing lessons learned, but it's only a partial exaggeration. There's just been such a rapid swinging away from the notion that we're ever again be in a counterinsurgency, just like happened after Vietnam when it was “Well, we're not going to do that again.” And then lo and behold, we did do that again. That inhibits really learning the lessons. What I do agree with is the idea that the United States could be a successful counter insurgent in Afghanistan, without the Afghans themselves being successful counterinsurgents. That to me is highly problematic.
And if you look at the literature about counterinsurgency doctrine and the supposed success stories of counterinsurgency, that the doctrine is drawn from, the successful examples are not of external powers being the primary counterinsurgents. They are of the internal power being the successful counterinsurgent. And so, to me, that was the fundamental flaw of the U.S. strategic approach to the counterinsurgency in Afghanistan, was the idea that without the Afghans, that we could be the primary determinant of success in the counterinsurgency. Now, I don't mean to suggest that no one paid attention to the Afghan forces – there was also an effort to build up their capability – but I think there was a lack of realistic appraisal of how quickly and successfully you are going to be able to build up the indigenous Afghan capability to fight the counterinsurgency.
Aishwarya Raje: So finally, in the context of the peace process, you've talked about how any peace deal being brokered in the immediate future is highly unlikely, but what would a successful peace deal look like for Afghanistan? Part of the answer might be depending who you ask just based on the number of actors that are involved in it. But, let's say for example, if we look at Afghanistan and the U.S., how do we align our best-case scenarios?
Laurel Miller: Yeah. So, first to be clear, I'm a proponent of the peace process in Afghanistan. And I think the chances of success are not zero, and the payoff is high enough that the efforts should be made. Even if you can't say that the likelihood of success is high, from an American perspective, I think the bottom line needs to be what the Afghans themselves can agree to. So, I don't think the U.S. should be that particular about what some of the details of a political settlement look like, even in terms of issues like hot-button issues, like women's rights in Afghanistan. Now, I feel comfortable saying that because there's enough diversity of voices and participants that I don't think that anything that the current Afghan government would agree to would be too compromising on issues like that. But I don't think that the U.S. should have red lines about what the exact nature of the state and governance looks like.
Let’s imagine for instance, that the state structure that emerged looked like Iran. Should we really have a negative view on that? It would be better than Saudi Arabia, if it did, just to be realistic, it would be better than any of the monarchies in the Gulf that we're perfectly friendly with. It would potentially even be not worse than Turkey. So, to my mind, the highest value is in ending the violence and enabling Afghans to live their lives in relative peace. And, from an American perspective, I think that in terms of the details, of what the structure of the state and governance looks like, there's a lot that should be sacrificed for that highest value.
Aishwarya Raje: Well, Laurel, you've been very generous with your time today. Thank you so much for speaking with us.
Laurel Miller: Well, it was my pleasure to join you. Thanks for that.
Aishwarya Raje: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Laurel Miller. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit the Pearson institute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
12.08.20
How Will Climate Change Impact Conflict Trends? | Amir Jina
Taylor Griffin: Hi, my name is Taylor Griffin and you're listening to the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast.
Root of Conflict Introducers: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research Institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Mwangi Thuita: Climate change will affect rich and poor countries, but poorer countries are predicted to pay the greatest human and economic cost. In this episode, we interview Amir Jina, an Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy researching how economic and social development is shaped by the environment. He uses economics, climate science and remote sensing to understand the impact of climate in both rich and poor countries. In our conversation with Professor Jina, we discuss how shocks to the water system could impact conflict patterns, and whether it's even possible to identify a causal relationship between conflict and climate change. We also discuss his work at the Climate Impact Lab using state-of-the-art empirical methods to study the effects of climate change.
Aishwarya Raje: Professor Jina, thank you so much for joining us today. So, to start out, can you just set the scene for us? Broadly speaking, why do we talk about environmental issues as a potential root cause of conflict, and looking at water, specifically, which was the topic of your Pearson Global Forum panel, what does water conflict mean and what kind of conflict are we talking about?
Amir Jina: So, I think fundamentally why we make this connection is that lots of conflicts, maybe all conflicts, arise as disagreements over resources and access to resources of various kinds. And while they don't have to be environmental resources, that's one of the main ways in which different societies will derive some kind of value or wellbeing. So, we have a situation where water, in particular, is fundamental to so much of what we do as a species, in terms of making our food, for example, that as that resource would start to get scarce, a conflict might inevitably arise or cooperation might arise for that matter, but there's potential in that, in the presence of that scarcity, for some kind of conflict to arise. I think that's why we make that link. One of the points that we had tried to make during the Pearson Forum was that there's a naive idea that this could be people standing around the lake because it's getting smaller and smaller and they're literally firing guns at each other over this dwindling resource, but it's never truly that simple. And one of the things which makes it both a fascinating intellectual problem, but then also a really difficult policy issue, is that the connections are sometimes really obscure. And some of those links are really hard to understand.
Mwangi Thuita: Yeah, I really enjoyed that part of the panel. We know that it's notoriously difficult to disentangle the effects of extreme weather, things like higher temperatures, longer droughts, more intense storms from the other political and economic factors that are making conflict more likely. I think one of the examples given was Syria, which took place against the backdrop of a drought across a large part of the Middle East which caused migration from rural to urban areas. You have an increasing number of unemployment in the context of rising political instability. Do you find terms used to describe the impact of extreme weather caused by climate change, such as catalyst, trigger, threat multiplier, do you find those helpful in understanding how and communicating how climate change affects conflict?
Amir Jina: People who are concerned with security, national security have really attached themselves to this phrase of a threat multiplier. And I think then it becomes from my point of view, a useful communication tool, partly because there is always going to be a debate about how fundamental issues of climate or the environment are in causing conflict. But I think it's a little bit more easy for people to understand that even if it's not the ultimate and direct cause, it almost certainly has the ability to be approximate cause of some kind of issues that we'd see. And so, the threat multiplier language is very useful from that point of view. It's not something that I would talk about. It's not a phrase that I would use so much within talking to colleagues about this, where we would probably try to drill down a bit more and understand specific mechanisms, or refer to something as being – and this is going to be very kind of wonky academic speech – but we'd refer to something as a reduced-form relationship, if we don't understand the mechanism, and we're pretty comfortable talking about those reduced form types of relationships. And then we would drill down into the mechanisms, but in an abstract sense, particularly outside of talking to those people who work on this issue in a research context, it's pretty useful to be able to say, is this something where threats might exist and you know where those threats would be, where you know what a whole other set of risks are?
And what we're talking about is something that might amplify risks. The other useful part of it is that it doesn't immediately dismiss. And in particular, I think it kind of respects the knowledge of people who actually deal with and are concerned with conflict on the ground, because it's saying, you know what these threats are. And this is one extra thing: it's not the academics coming in and saying, I'm going to tell you what's going to cause this conflict, when there's a whole set of political and social context that people working on conflict and in a day-to-day basis will know much better than most academics can ever try to know. So, I think it's super useful from that point of view and I think it shows a little bit of respect and deference to the people who actually are doing more to deal with the consequences of conflict in a real policy sense.
Aishwarya Raje: So, one question around understanding how water and conflict are related. It feels like it often comes back to the lack of comprehensive data around the issue. And I know that's something that came up during your panel during the Forum. And I'm wondering: Is there a push to produce more data as a means to eventually build more effective policies, and whose responsibility would it be to collect and produce this data? Is it local governments? Is it researchers such as yourself? Is it private sector partners? Is it a combination? How should we approach this problem?
Amir Jina: Yeah. So, I think where data becomes useful is in this sense, I guess, taking a step back: What is the actual link that we would see? So, I said, it's very stressed resources, so water supply decreases for some reason. There's a first step, which is just making that connection. So, between weather and conflict, there's an extra step there, which is saying, “How much worse was this in the present day because of climate change?” And that's a really hard thing to do. Something that's a little bit easier is to say, “Let’s take projections of climate change and see if this relationship stays the same, or how much worse, usually worse, but could also be better, but how much worse or better is that going to be in the future?” And so, making those steps and connections along the way to even establish those relationships, we do need data to start. We need data on the conflicts. We need data on people's wellbeing on their health, on socioeconomic status. We need data on what the drivers here would be, which is water access, weather, et cetera.
The really difficult issue with large-scale interpersonal conflict, is that they now are often happening in places without a lot of data on or a lot of environmental monitoring. So, one of the reasons why this research has exploded in the last few years is because there has been a big push towards measurement, broadly speaking, of the environment, of climate, of weather, and bypassing issues that are particularly tricky, like in across all of Sub-Saharan Africa, for example, very few permanent weather stations. There’s a handful of airports, but there's nothing like the density of weather measurements that you would get in the United States. Rivers all across the United States have gauges, which tell us what the levels are, what the volume of water flow is, and you just don't get that in a lot of other parts of the world.
So, there's been innovations there on using satellites, on using models of physics of the climate of trying to work out what the weather is in each location. We've been filling a data gap slowly. It's being incidentally attached to understanding conflict, because the reason that those models are being made is because of people doing climate research or environmental research, and they develop some global data sets. And then the people who had this problem of saying, “Well, I wanted to understand the environment-conflict link in this location, where I had no measurements before,” suddenly they have some access to data. So, we're kind of riding on the coattails of a lot of other well-funded science to do this. And so, often those exact measurements aren't exactly what we would need to understand the issue. So, coming back to your point then, we're kind of getting lucky at the moment in terms of there being access to data on the environment side.
And then a few groups are also measuring conflict in a better and more consistent way. Now we can go online and scrape news reports for different conflicts and try and build up our databases in a more consistent way. But for this resource to a conflict link, I think that the level of data that's required to understand the mechanisms part, but also to think about using this information we know about this relationship for early warnings, that's not really there yet. And so, what do we need, coming back to your question? What do we actually need, and whose responsibility is it? In an abstract sense, hopefully it would be the responsibility of anybody who's negatively impacted by that conflict because there's some incentive there, that you should say, “Yes, we should learn about this.” Monitoring efforts are pretty expensive to set up, particularly in the old-style way that you would have in somewhere like the United States or parts of Europe.
And so, we're relying on more innovation to try and make cheaper sensors, cheaper river measurements, cheaper pollution measurements, so that we actually can fill in the map in terms of what's measured and what's not. And so ideally, this would be something that governments would be able to support, but then we enter the issue that comes up when you're thinking about conflict or economic development, which is “What's your priority in that location?” If you are a place which is prone to conflict in the first place. where it's hard to do data monitoring, where your population might be poor, is putting in a set of weather stations or river level gauges actually your highest priority? And the answer is probably no, there's more pressing things. And so, even if it is the government's responsibility, it might be very low on their list of priorities. And so, that's where private agencies, researchers, the international community, does need to step in. If we believe that this is a major issue, then somebody needs to step in and do it because the resources just don't necessarily exist to do it at the national level in a lot of places where we'd really want to monitor this.
Thanks for that. So, you're part of the Climate Impact Lab, which brings together social scientists and
climate scientists to try and figure out how much climate change is costing society and who's paying what. What are you able to achieve working collaboratively between social scientists and climate scientists together that you might not be able to do alone?
Amir Jina: So, yeah, my background was actually that I started off as a physicist, then a climate scientist, and then fell into economics almost accidentally. Someone told me about a paper by Esther Duflo, who was the second woman to win an Economics Nobel prize. And this was 10, 12 years ago. And prior to that, I had a very narrow and biased view of what economics was. I thought it was investment banking. So, seeing this paper about the welfare effects of a government pension refund in South Africa on granddaughters of women who got this transfer, that to me was kind of mind blowing. So I moved from climate science more into economics. And I've tried to keep those two things together, as much as I can.
The drawback of that or that the difficulty with that is it's pretty hard to try and be an expert in one thing, let alone an expert in multiple things. And so, early on, I had to give up the idea that I'm going to be an expert in these two things, but that there's very few people sitting at this intersection. And what that allowed me to do was have a language to be able to communicate with both of those fields and to try and bring together a larger group. The benefit of that is that we're in a situation where, for questions like this environment and conflict question, where insights from more than one discipline are actually important, for the issue of conflict and for a lot of issues dealing with fundamental questions of human wellbeing and how we interact with each other, the question becomes more important than the discipline that you are situated in when you ask that.
We should be focused on solving or understanding a certain problem. And that means trying to get ourselves out of the silo that we're in intellectually and seeing what are the tools that are needed to solve this problem. And so, I think the benefit that comes from working with the Climate Impact Lab, the reason why it's somewhat organically evolved into the thing that it is, with as you said, computer scientists and economists and climate scientists and others, is that it allows us to stay focused on a problem and bring together the resources we need. And sometimes it's true. We do need, if we want to understand, for example, uncertainty and what the future is going to be like, we need real climate science there to tell us, but we also need the economists to say, well, here's what we understand about the link to the economy. Here's what we understand about this aspect of the economic system. And currently, the climate science is not seeing this part and the economics is not seeing what the climate science can do.
So, we actually need to find some bridge in between these, and it's allowed us, in doing that to solve questions in a way which we think is more focused on the actual policy actions you could take. So, to do this in a way which is really hyper-local, we can get this all over information all over the world, right down to the equivalent of the county level in different countries. We can do a full quantification of uncertainty, which I think is useful for investments, or if you're thinking generally of your climate risks, broadly, it helps to know what your average change might be in the future, but it also helps to know what your 1 in 20 or 1 to 10, your risk of change might be, so, what the full distribution is. I think that's what this collaboration has allowed us to do.
Aishwarya Raje: So, as a follow-up to that, I feel like often times in the world of academia, which of course you have much more experience we do, it's easy to get caught up in looking at really highly consequential and urgent issues like climate change, public health, poverty, as intellectual exercises, or as things that are intellectually interesting rather than as issues that affect people's wellbeing and livelihood. So, given your role in the Climate Impact Lab, or just in general, how do we make sure that we're not just researching for researching and actually taking into account the human factor with these issues?
Amir Jina: This is absolutely something that I wrestle with if not on a daily basis, than an almost daily basis. And I think I spent a lot of time early on in my research career doing long stints of field work. Sometimes particularly in development economics, that can be…the interactions there with the place that you're studying can actually be quite short, but I would try and go for as long as possible and spend a few months in a place and try to learn as much as possible about the people who were being affected by the thing I was trying to research. And partly, that did two things. One was to make sure that I understood well. And I think a lot of the really good development economists that I look up to, do have, even if they don't write about it in their papers, sometimes they have this really in-depth knowledge of the places that they're working in.
And they have people who they work with there, who are living there full-time from those locations that are able to provide context when needed. The other thing that it helps to do is when I sit down and see some data points or some data set on a different outcome, it helps me try and connect that. It's something that I have to consciously do, but helps me try and connect it back to some of the stories that I remember from sitting in a focus group in a small village in Bangladesh or somewhere, and try to remember there's enormous consequences to getting these answers right in this information. So, that's the one aspect of this. I think the other part is recognizing that there's kind of an ecosystem right in this. So, I'm a researcher because I derive some kind of enjoyment from finding out new things.
And I think that's true of most academics. There's some reward to just thinking deeply and understanding something. And that might be what motivates us to some extent. I think most of the people, particularly at a policy school, are also motivated by solving a real problem. One of the things which we've tried to do with Climate Impact Lab, and I think some of us tried to do generally is to make sure that we recognize there's a broader ecosystem around that knowledge system. There are people who will be able to use it. There are people who might rely on that information. There are people whose lives will be improved by finding out answers to different questions, and to make sure that we don't just sit in our offices on our computers, writing the papers, but actually get nudged towards what the important question is.
Mwangi Thuita: Speaking of visiting developing countries, I saw that you you've been to Kenya. I saw some photos on
your website.
Amir Jina: Yes, I have. My father was from Tanzania actually.
Mwangi Thuita: Okay, I’m from Kenya!
Amir Jina: The thing which I didn't realize for years was my father grew up in Tanzania and they had actually moved to Kenya originally from India in the 1800s. But my name, my last name, means name in Swahili. And so, when I landed in Kenya for the first time, on my immigration form, I wrote down and said, Jina, and then I wrote Jina after it. And the immigration officials found this so funny, and one guy cracked up and he called over the guy next to him and said, “This guy doesn’t know what he's doing.” I was like, no, that's really my name. They looked at my passport, everything. But yeah, so I have a connection to there. The work in Kenya was actually part of working with the United Nations, with UNICEF and the United Nations environment program. There was a small network of people at African universities trying to think about climate adaptation, particularly this youth initiative that was starting.
So, part of it was, “I'm trying to support this,” and then, a few people went there and, and kind of helped with the knowledge sharing that was related to that. So, I think it’s another one of those things, actually that even though I don't have research from there at that time, the connections that I made and some of the things I got to experience in different community conservation projects, for example, have actually stuck with me a lot. And those are some of the things which provide the motivation or at least some context for why I continue to try and sit behind my computer and sometimes boring work of doing the papers.
Mwangi Thuita: So, you earlier said that although we know that there's an effect of shocks to a water supply and conflict behavior, that we don't know much about the mechanisms. Specifically, I think during the panel, you said that shocks to water systems are increasing the risk of conflict by about 5% to 10%. First of all, can you just explain it in simple terms? What do those numbers mean? What does that mean?
Amir Jina: That was coming from a paper of a coauthor of mine who had done this broad meta-analysis of about 6 different research projects at all different scales, and looking at what the climate conflict link was. Standardizing those making sure they controlled for all the unobservable differences that might lead to problems in that interpretation, so that you could interpret those causally, and then looked at the average effect of those. And what they found was this one standard deviation change in precipitation. So not really in the lake access or something like that, but just a precipitation shock led to this, this 5% difference. So, that was a very specific thing. It's hard. So, I'm fairly confident that we can interpret those things causally because of the way we set up the observational data.
But we set up the experiment with our panel data and our fixed effects and all the things that become important for turning this interpretation into a causal one, rather than just correlational. I think what we would need to understand exactly what those mechanisms are, is in some cases, just a lot more data, a lot more research, but also in particular, a lot more understanding of the effect of certain policies, either directly related to conflict or not. So, there's this fascinating paper about the monsoon in India and looking at crime rates due to changes in the amount of rainfall that happened during the monsoon in India, and it found that there was a relationship between less rain and more crime, and then it looked at the rollout of this Rural Employment Guarantee Act, which was an act in the mid-2000s, which gave guaranteed labor for people or days of work for people who were unemployed.
So, for example, if there was an agricultural shock, their crop failed, they could go and get access to work for pay. And so, it was this work guarantee act. The way that that was rolled out across the country wasn't exactly random, but it was turned on in some states at certain times differently. And this research paper, by a guy named Thiemo Fetzer, found that the relationship between rainfall and conflict almost completely disappeared. And that tells us a lot about what might be happening behind this mechanism. This is something saying, well, if we know that this is related to employment. What's the main source of employment that's being targeted by this policy? It's agricultural employment, to make sure that people don't end up unemployed or losing money that comes from either being a landless labor who's employed on a farm or having your own crops fail if you own your land.
That allows us to say, well, we've identified a little bit more what the source of that link could be. It's down to the food supply, but more than just the food supply, it's down to people's ability to make money. The amount that people were getting for this for this extra day of work wasn't actually that much money. So, it shows potentially how desperate people had gotten that they would engage in this really risky crime conflict behavior in order to make up for that loss. And it tells us quite a lot about the actual household budgeting decision that goes into what might make somebody engage in a pretty desperate activity. And so, I think it's situations like that where we can understand the role that certain policies play, where we know the policy targets a certain specific mechanism where we start to learn a lot more, but that's a slow process of building up information. The ideal would be that we could then see this, learn something from it and say, “Okay, maybe the environmental conflict nexus, instead of focusing on ending the conflict once it happens, why don't we think of something like a social safety net as being that conflict reduction policy?”
Mwangi Thuita: Well, thank you. Thank you so much for your time and also for the important work you're doing. It's very interesting and of course important.
Amir Jina: Thank you both so much.
Root of Conflict Introducer: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict featuring Amir Jina, this episode was produced and edited by Aishwarya Raje and Mwangi Thuita. Thank you to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support for this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's events and research, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
07.14.20
COVID-19 and Peacebuilding in Nigeria | Rebecca Wolfe and Maurice Amollo
Root of Conflict Introducers: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research Institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Daniella Choi: Hello, my name is Daniella Choi.
Daniel Vallejo: And I'm Daniel Vallejo and we are so excited to have Dr. Rebecca Wolfe and Maurice Amollo with us. Rebecca is a professor at the Harris School of Public Policy and she's a renowned expert on political violence, conflict and violent extremists. Maurice is the Chief of Party for Mercy Corps Nigeria’s country office. The two of them have worked together for a long-time developing programs and conducting evaluations on conflict mitigation.
Daniella Choi: On this episode, we highlight Mercy Corps program in Nigeria called the “Community Initiatives to Promote Peace. It's a multi-faceted program aimed at building bridges between pastoralists and farmers by engaging community and faith-based leaders, coordinating social assistance, and strengthening conflict mitigation networks to promote peaceful coexistence. We talk about the intergroup tension between the indigenous and non-indigenous populations as a root of conflict and how this identity-based conflict is widespread around the world. We also discussed the disruptive effects of COVID-19 and social distancing measures on implementing this program, which is based on building trust and social cohesion.
Daniel Vallejo: Dr. Wolfe and Maurice, thank you for joining us today. We understand you're focusing on mainly two groups, addressing the conflict between two groups, so if you could talk a little bit more about these two groups, the difference between them, or why this conflict arose.
Maurice Amollo: The Community Initiatives to Promote Peace program is trying to empower communities to prevent and respond to violence and violent extremism by strengthening key skills and relationships. We are trying to also foster an environment for peace through policy, advocacy, media outreach, and of course, linkages to development programs. The focus there is mostly to ensure that the various development programs and policies that are being implemented to improve people's lives in the middle belt are conflict sensitive. They’re being implemented based on do no harm principles. But now for our study, the focus is on two groups, the farmers and the herders, and that conflict has had a long history and it's complicated because of a myriad of issues and challenges that have come with it.
One of the things that is happening currently, particularly in what we call the Chad Basin is because of the effects of climate change. We are having an accelerated state of desertification. And with that, we have communities that are moving from as far as Chad southwards, and mostly herders from the Fulani community. And as they move, they are getting into conflicts with farmers because of the competition for the limited natural resources, most of the cases, the hoarders are accused of leaving the animals unattended and destroying farms. And so, because of that, it has brought really serious, violent conflicts between those two groups, but it is also complicated by the religious dynamics, because the Fulani are predominantly Muslim, and the majority of farmers in this middle belt are Christians, and religion is the strongest form of identity in Nigeria. This violence has become political, politicians use it to access resources, but also power, it has become religious. The underlying root causes are not in most cases appropriately addressed. There are also serious individuals who can appropriately respond to some of these disagreements on the marge and use nonviolent ways to deal with those particular conflicts. Our other partners are trying to build the capacity of these particular communities, but also foster an environment where these individuals can be able to resolve their conflicts in a non-violent manner.
Daniel Vallejo: An important root of this conflict is conflict with the natural resources and their scarcity. Is this scarcity due to human intervention, or is it more related to a natural cycle in order to understand what are the possible solutions on the scope?
Maurice Amollo: I would think it's both. One is that there are challenges with demographics. You know, the Nigerian population is very young, and it is expanding so fast to the country right now. The population of the countries in Europe are between 200 to 250 million people, and of that, I think over 70% is below 35 years. There are no jobs, there are no jobs. There are challenges with the governance system. Security is a big challenge. The government is unable to provide adequate security to these people, and there is not enough space where communities can co-create with the government officials to come up with solutions that are challenging them. And because of that, everybody is to himself or herself. But also, I think that the limitation is, these communities are heavily dependent on natural resources, particularly the herders, and if it is farmers, mostly depending on rain-fed agriculture, there is not enough space for everyone, and there is not enough capacity to rally the communities around common areas where they can be able to deal with some of these problems because of, again, as I said, weaknesses within the governance system.
Daniella Choi: In terms of what we're seeing in the scarcity mindset, it can go for the natural resources, and obviously the effects of climate change is making livelihood for subsistence farmers extremely difficult. And alongside of that, the scarcity mindset that it exists within the ingroup and outgroup population. So, sort of the social trust element and the social network element. And we're curious, particularly because the intervention you're designing, or you have designed and are evaluating, is a peace-building intervention that is really founded on building that social understanding and trust. So, how that selection process happened and deciding which dimension of this root causes to focus on.
Rebecca Wolfe: These peace-building interventions Mercy Corps has been working on actually started probably in about, I think, 2009, with a program funded by the UK government. And we've been able to do these follow on interventions, building off of that and the intersectionality of the farmers and herders and religion, and the religious dynamic that plays a role, but it worked with communities. They say particularly in the more rural areas, it’s largely about the resources. What’s been an added identity issue that's come up in recent years, is this question of local versus foreign, outside pastoralists, or Fulani, as Maurice is saying, because of climate change, people are migrating from further North down South. And so, they aren't familiar with the agreements that had been fostered with local Fulani. With Mercy Corps, they did a qualitative study of this kind of foreign pastoralist, and at one point, a discussion with USH, should we talk about it in terms of farmer-pastoralists conflict, or in a sense, local versus – I forget the term they were thinking of using, because local farmers and pastoralists weren't having that many issues with each other.
It was about this additional identity that came apart of it. And so, what we were seeing back then, in 2000, this was clearly the most important kind of issue and that was affecting this area of Nigeria more. So, we were doing assessments in the south of Nigeria as well, but this is where we also felt we could have the most impact because it was a locally based conflict, not driven by more political factors at a national level. What's been interesting is a lot of the funding for peacebuilding around 2012 and 2014 started to move to Northeastern Nigeria because of Boko Haram, and so, a different identity-based conflict. And all the good work that had happened in the middle belt, all the funding went towards the Northeast and now violence because of these resource factors has escalated again.
And so, the money's now moving back, and it shows the fact of having a short-term mindset on these issues, because they're identity-based and longstanding, has potentially perverse effects.
Daniella Choi: I lived in Gambia, and last summer, I worked in Ghana, and because my host family were Fulani people from Guinea, I always try to talk to folks if I see them. And it's really interesting because the conflict in Gambia was Fulani pastoralists from Niger. And the people always said, “Oh, they're from Niger, they're very different from us.” Whereas in Ghana too, I was in the Northern side and there were Fulani folks from Burkina Faso that came over with political hardships, like years ago or something like that. And people still have a very strong identity of, “Oh, they're the Fulanis from Burkina Faso, which was really fascinating how long that lasts.”
Daniel Vallejo: I was wondering, I was thinking, when you start working with nomadic communities, you have to change a lot, this scope of how you measure the impact or how you continue measuring the impact, because they will change, they will move. I mean, in your report, you make a lot of analysis like in this municipality this happened, or in this one, this happened, how do you do this? They will not be there tomorrow.
Rebecca Wolfe: I will say, I often joke how I didn't learn my lesson last time around, of doing a RC with a mobile population. I had done a research workshop with people when I was designing the first study and no one gave me feedback that this was a really bad idea. And it really, in some ways is a bad idea. And yet I'm doing it again. I mean, one thing that has worked really well, and has helped us is our local partner. They parry, in both the previous study and this study that we're currently running, they really understand where the pastoralist communities are moving. And again, local pastoralists, there's regular movements that they make yearly. And so, we could know where to follow up with them. It did make other aspects of the peacebuilding program difficult. So, how do you have a project that benefits the pastoralists to the same extent as the farmers? Cause you're putting it in a physical…
Daniel Vallejo: So, when you’re – talking specifically about pastorals – you’ve put in this community, in this geographic location, the numbers you find, that group is going to become part of another municipality?
Rebecca Wolfe: Because of the way the movements are, they still are kind of grouped within a community. So, even if they move far away, we were able to kind of separate it out. So, it's not the way we demarcate community, so that there wouldn't be that contamination that it sounds like you're getting at that. So, they moved from a treatment community, for example, to a control community in their migration. Is that what, in essence, what you're asking?
Daniel Vallejo: Exactly, yeah, perfect.
Rebecca Wolfe: So, we were able to make sure, again, working with the local partner, they would help us be able to map who the communities are, where the pastoralists went to, so that we didn't have kind of those strict boundaries between those. I will say there were times in the previous study where, to be able to address some of the conflict dynamics. We had controlled communities come into the study because we wouldn't be able to resolve the conflict dynamics without them. And that was more of a priority than the study. What we also realized, that by including control communities from time to time, it would minimize any results we had. It wouldn't have exacerbated the results. And so, we still could feel confident.
Daniel Vallejo: Part of what we have done, I think as Rebecca mentioned, is to try and understand the movement patterns of the pastoral. It’s so hard. We also take a very close look at the seasons. You know, the rainy seasons and the dry seasons are to determine how those movements will be influenced. We also have mapped out the corridors, even though those keep changing, we've mapped out the corridors to try and predict where they'll come from and how they move, what community they will come to. And in most cases over the years, that pattern has been fairly similar. It hasn't changed much, and that is why you have conflicts recurring in certain areas over and over again. That said, it's of course a challenge that we continuously have to take into consideration. We are trying to see if we can work with RN because they are doing this human tracking, where they can predict when the pastoralists or the herders will likely move from one area to another.
Daniella Choi: It seems that building trust and getting buy-in from both sides of the peacebuilding that you're working on is really important. And particularly with creating the intervention design or even understanding who are the leaders and what are the government resources that they would like to be linked to, and mitigation techniques, it seems like there's a lot that requires centering the communities’ voice and centering their experience, as well as co-creating the intervention. I was wondering if you could provide one example to how a better understanding of the needs of their community has allowed for this space to co-create their intervention.
Maurice Amollo: One of the things we've done, of course, it’s really critical to understand really the inner dynamics and operations of the community you're working with, to know who is, who, who are the influencers, who are the gate keepers, who do I want to keep close? Who do I want to keep even closer? Particularly the spoilers. We try to keep them as close as possible. And I think we do all that so continuously, we have a very important component in our programming, and that is conflict and stakeholder analysis or mapping where, before we start programming, we try to map as exhaustively as possible, who are the key actors in each community, who has the ability to move people away from, but also to violence. And once we know who these individuals are, then we develop strategies on how to reach out to them.
So, they are part and parcel of the problem. Conflict analysis enables us to understand the dynamics of the conflict factors and how they are changing at any one given time, as you know, conflicts can evolve very fast. It can start into something about your animals ate my corn, and then it moves very, very fast for a very different thing. If you ask why people are fighting, it would have changed, it would have acquired a very different image. So, continuously we do conflict analysis, but we are also conducting interviews, what we call daily context analysis, where we send questions to communities and they are able to respond. And we are able to see real-time in our dashboard, what, how people perceive the state of peace or conflicts in their particular community. And to be able to then come up with an appropriate response to what that is. It all revolves around trust building with all the key strategic quarters. And that includes government, it includes security officers, politicians, youth, women, who are a very, very important component of this program, and bringing all of them together, or what I think Rebecca normally says, creating a dense network of individuals who can be able to create where there is attention, but also respond with a necessary capacity to respond to that particular incident.
Root of Conflict Introducers: We will be right back. Hey, Root of Conflict listeners. This is David Ruban from UC3P, the main page. Obviously, if you're listening to this, you like Root of Conflict. We think there might be a good chance you'll like the main page too. Every Friday, podcasters from across UC3P do interviews and mini-series on a wide range of topics related to policy, politics, and current affairs. Check out UC3P, the main page, wherever you find podcasts. And now back to Root of Conflict.
Daniel Vallejo: We're going to move a little bit to another topic. Like we understand that COVID has become this global thing, this global pandemic, but when you start thinking about rural communities that are not so related to this global interexchange, we were wondering if COVID is really that important in these situations. Like for example, I'm from Colombia and comparing to the Colombian situation, in many rural regions, you have issues with malaria, with dengue, COVID is just like another one, it’s not the one. So, if you could talk a little bit more about this, how are they leaving this there.
Maurice Amollo: Just like you said in Colombia, it's almost the same here, that people think that yes, the government is telling us there is COVID-19 there, but the systems that the government has put in place to respond to the pandemic are in many ways in direct conflict with people's normal, daily ways of life. And it's even worse in these communities where we, if you are in urban or peri-urban areas, they depend on wage and employment. And so, to tell them to restrict movements, social distancing, to tell people that you have to continuously wash your hands in communities that are suffering serious water scarcity, it just makes sense. And then bring that together with the whole trust issue. These are communities in conflict, in standing conflicts here, there are serious challenges with the trust, because of flows and governance, communities don't trust what the government says. And of course, then we also have the other component, the elephant in the room in Nigeria, and that's Boko Haram with its propaganda. Whether this is something that is affecting the West, the enemy, or that has been brought by the enemy and we should resist, or this is just another strategy to put us down.
So, it has come with a lot of misinformation. Unfortunately, the government's approach has not really responded to some of these challenges because I see daily briefings of the state of COVID-19 and they're just called statistics. You know, now this number of people are infected in the last 24 hours. There are now so many 10,000 people infected. This number is dead. This number are discharged today. But they do not really explain to a random guy in the street language, what all this means. So, in a way, people have just ignored these guidelines and they are going on with their life. However, in response, the government has instructed security operators to take various stern action. Again, it's people who are not following those guidelines.
The military has been deployed. And with that, we have had an escalation of conflict particularly between youth and the police, because a lot of security have now been deployed to either enforce the curfew or enforce travel restrictions. individuals have taken advantage of standing conflicts, especially between the farmers and herders to commit things that we'll say are purely criminal, either cattle-wrestling, stealing from farmers or from herders. And this has seen a spike in violence between farmers and herders, since the COVID-19 started, with not much response from the government. Again, interestingly, even government officials are uncomfortable to move around because of COVID-19. And so, the response is not as robust as you'd think it. And then the other thing is that even those people that we had trained in conflict with the issue are unable actually to move in and deal with this, some of these conflicts.
And so, we are worried that COVID-19 is likely to wipe out some of the gains that we had achieved. We have tried to really adjust to the situation. We've moved a number of our programs to radio. We have expanded our social media outreach, particularly targeting young people. And we are remaining in contact with the key strategic community leaders, through telephone conversations to ensure that where we can intervene, we are intervening. The restriction in movement particularly, and social distancing has created a very new dynamic that I think as a peacebuilding community, we are not very prepared for. Our work is first and foremost to build relationships and you don't build relationships through telephone conversations. You build or rebuild relationships through bringing people together, sitting and confronting some of the challenges and the trust issues that they are going through. So yeah, we are using alternative means and we are right now in unchartered waters. but I'm sure something good will come out of this.
Daniella Choi: Maurice, as you were talking about how coronavirus has affected Nigeria and your particular work, it really mirrors the U.S.’s experiences, as it does for a lot of other places in terms of misinformation and sort of delayed or inaction on the part of the government, and just the daily lives as we know it being affected. And I wonder particularly in the context of the issue that you're working in, the spike in violence with the pastoralists and farmers community, and growing distrust, that the social distancing is obviously not aiding. In an ideal world, what would be an intervention you would like to see from the government?
Maurice Amollo: So, we have started organizing online meetings, virtual meetings with some strategic government officers, but also members from the civil society to begin to discuss some of these policies that the government have put in place. And we just remind them about the unintended outcome of some of those. For example, things around banning travel and what they define as essential services. And they have not seen, particularly among conflicted communities, that individuals who have the capacity to mediate this conflict should be considered as essential servants. So we are trying to really advocate for these individuals to be allowed, of course, taking care of all other things that you need to take care of during a pandemic, and they're allowed to make sure that they mediate this conflict to avoid escalation, so that they're not arrested, because we are stopping the spread of COVID-19, but people are losing lives and property. So, it doesn't make a lot of sense. So, how can we still implement these policies, but also ensure that conflicts are not worsening where they are? How do we balance between the two?
Daniel Vallejo: Given that the governments have been spending a lot of resources to overcome this COVID crisis, do you think this will affect in some sense, the available funds for international aid?
Rebecca Wolfe: Yes. And I think maybe Maurice can also add to that in terms of, has he been asked, or knows of how the Nigeria program has been asked to move interventions into a different area. Earlier in the conversation, I mentioned that just moving from the middle belt to Northeast Nigeria because of the change in crisis. And I saw that happen in Iraq as well after ISIS. So, we had been doing all this governance and civil society work in other areas and ISIS hid, and all the money and the work moved to humanitarian, not the development work and peace-building work that had been happening. And so, I think there is going to be a lot of shifting of funding into this area. And one of the things I've seen from other research I did in Afghanistan is in a sense what a potential backlash affects when aid goes away, especially when it's done, not in a considered and deliberate way, when it's just this kind of immediate thing. And so, there is, particularly in conflict zones, that significantly risk that not just all the gains will be lost, but actually could create more grievances.
Maurice: Currently. I think what is happening in Nigeria, we've seen some donors, some of the programs to begin to repurpose some of the funding. So far, I think the sector that has been affected is the USAID, humanitarian response programs. At least for me, I've had several calls with our donor USAID, but also with DFID and our message has been very, very clear and simple. I think just based on what Rebecca has said, we have told them that look, you have already invested heavily in dealing with some of these conflicts. If you look at the UN SDGs, particularly for a country like Nigeria, they're still in the red. They have not achieved that. There has been some progress, but they’re not quite there. In fact, they are still […].
If you look at the amount of investments that have already been put to deal with this conflict, I think for the UK government alone, if you look at the just the ODA, they invested around over 200, close to 300 million in 2018. If, right now, we decide that COVID is the fraction of the thin, unless we propose funding and put a break on conflicts, I think the effect will be really, really bad, because number one, these conflicts have not stopped. As I said earlier, they are continuing, even as COVID-19, is ongoing and we will most likely lose everything we've worked for in in the past few years. So, I would say COVID-19 as a threat multiplier, and let's double down in our efforts and say, “Yes, we will deal with this COVID-19, but we will also ensure that other efforts at managing conflicts are maintained.” Because diseases really do well in areas where there is silence, where people are not talking, and conflicts breed silence, because of trust issues. If you want people to tackle COVID-19 effectively, you will want effective communication. You want people to cooperate. You want people to come together. Conflict does not allow for the building of social capital, for those people to come together and do these things. So, if you take your foot off the gas now, it will be worse.
Daniella Choi: We are in the U.S., we are in the middle of another crisis with race relations and systemic racism, and just ongoing protests with everything that's been going on with police violence. And I could not help but think about the parallel of the conversation we're having here, with the dynamic that we're seeing in the U.S., and I wonder if you have been reflecting on that dynamic based on what you know of the mitigation work you've done in other places, and how you’re repping around this issue.
Rebecca Wolfe: As I reflected in class, on Monday, we started the humanitarian course with the uptick of COVID in that there was an essence, a humanitarian response in this country. And we closed class on Monday after a night of pretty bad looting that distracted from the important protests that were happening.
And I had walked around my neighborhood that morning and just saw all the damage that had been done. And it was an interesting kind of book casing of the course. And there has been talk of UN resolutions against the U.S. What would humanitarian intervention mean here, or if that UN resolution got passed, I mean, it won’t, at least at the Security Council. So, definitely at that high level I had been thinking about it. What I've been thinking actually at the intersection of COVID and this issue is just a complete lack of trust with communities and government and how what's happening now is even going to make that worse. And so, we likely will have another spike of COVID, and how much harder it will be to have those social distancing measures taken up. And so, seeing in my neighborhood how people are not all obeying the rules already, and we're one day out of lockdown. And so, that to me, is just the lack of trust in institutions here now. And so, much of the peace building work I've done with Maurice over the years has been about trying to connect communities to institutions.
Danielle Choi: Absolutely. We need interventions in the U.S. very badly as well. So, thank you for that.
Maurice Amollo: Yeah. And I mean, just to add, we've had similar challenges in my country back in Kenya. I've seen similar challenges in other countries as well and in Nigeria currently. And I think apart from building those strong institutional networks and connections and relationships that Rebecca has talked about, one thing that we continuously challenge people to think about, but which for some strange reason everybody's afraid of - and I mean we can also see it in the US now, is getting familiar with what our emotions teach us when we go through some of these challenges. When we hurt one another. Because when we don't feel acknowledged, or when grief goes underground and gets twisted, when we don't have avenues for response, whether it's embodied or not, but some kind of avenue for response, or when we think that it's for other people, over there, then things get strange and harmful.
And I think that particularly as humanity, we are not even very practiced at perceiving it as harm. It reminds me of those people who are commenting with such compassion for the dog in the video of Andy Cooper, if you've seen that. It's some kind of twisted shame and empathy. We continuously lose our capacity to respond to such things. It happens continuously and our response is not authentic. Yeah. And it's not authentic and it's not from a place of connectedness, and we continue hurting one another. I see it right now among the Christians and Muslims in Nigeria. I see it among ethnic communities in Kenya, whether it is Luos and Kikuyus, and now I see it in this situation in the U.S. It’s some kind of twisted sham that cuts off connection. So, you don't have to perceive it as such, but it's actually a […]. So, we need to really be able to be familiar with our emotions and confront them across lines. You should not be ashamed of talking about some of these things.
Daniel Vallejo: Briefly tell us, what are the next steps? How is this probably going to follow? Do you have already defined what's going to happen?
Maurice Amollo: Oh, so we already have the money. We have the funds –
Daniel Vallejo: Haha, great.
Maurice Amollo: We have the funds to conduct the study, and we have already started with the study. I think we've already trained a group of community mediators and deployed them. On some of them, I think in one state, while we managed to collect initial data, they've already, I think, resolved 125 disputes. We already have communities’ control and test the communities in place. So, the study is ongoing. I think going forward right now is to see to conduct a midterm test, to see where we are with things. We are actually interviewing community leaders in control areas so that we get to know also what their capacity levels is and how they see things, which will enable effective comparison. Then we'll do a midterm evaluation, and at the end of the year, we will now start adding more activities to what we are doing right now and to keep testing and see eventually what we get.
Rebecca Wolfe: We're in about the first year of a five-year program, now. And often you get results of studies like this after the program is over. And because we're doing it at the early part of the program, we'll be able to feed in the results of the study to be able to adapt it and learn from that. And then, as Maurice said, we're adding different components to be able to also look at the differential effects of these various components. One of the challenges of many development and peacebuilding programs today is that it has multiple components. And so, you don't know what's having the most impact on your results. And so, after the first year of implementation, we'll add in those dialogues, so kind of the more contact part of the program, and see what the added effect is, of the relationship building component in addition to mediation. And so, those results would come say two years out, but it’s nice to be able to do it as a more iterative process, versus just, you run a five-year study, and then about a year after the study, the program is over and then you find out what it did. And no one who was involved in the program is around anymore. So, it's very much more of a learning approach we've been able to take here.
Daniel Vallejo: Thank you very much.
Daniella Choi: This was a lovely chat. Thank you so much.
Root of Conflict Introducers: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Maurice Amollo and Rebecca Wolfe. Thanks to our interviewers, Daniella Choi and Danielle Vallejo and to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. To learn more about the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit the Pearson institute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
06.22.20
COVID-19 in Conflict Afflicted States | Frances Z. Brown
Root of Conflict Introducers: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research Institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Yi Ning Wong: Hi everyone. My name is Yi Ning Wong and Sonnet and I are going to be your host for today's episode. Today we have Frances Brown here with us. Frances Brown is a senior fellow with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Democracy, Conflict and Governance Program. We're going to chat a little bit about how the pandemic has changed the political landscape of conflict regions locally and internationally. She recently co-authored Coronavirus and Conflict Zones: A Sobering Landscape, for instance.
Sonnet Frisbie: Thank you so much for joining us today. The report that you co-authored was really interesting. I really enjoyed reading it. Coronavirus and Conflict Zones: A Sobering Landscape. Could you maybe give us a quick rundown of the methodology you used in the reports, since we’re a wonky data and conflict podcast, and some of the key findings?
Frances Brown: Yeah, absolutely. Thanks Sonnet. And it's great to be here with you and Yi Ning. Last month, my co-editor Jarrett Blank, who’s a colleague at Carnegie Endowment, and I released this report and it's actually a compilation of twelve different essays looking twelve different conflicts in fragile states around the world. We asked us a variety of Carnegie experts to analyze their areas of expertise, their country of expertise, and look at how the coronavirus may affect these conflicts going forward. Then Jared and I, the co-editors put together a synthesis high-level report, which I believe you've read pointing out some high-level trends that we see that are shared among these various conflicts. It's worth noting that obviously, this is a really preliminary story. This report was drafted just as the coronavirus was really taking hold in many of these conflict areas and fragile states. So, some of it is speculative or some of it is trying to predict trends that we were just seeing the stirrings of at the start, but we still think it's important and informative because I think it can help us all collectively get our heads around how this virus might affect conflict dynamics in the coming months, and unfortunately, years. It's also worth saying, of course, there's a ton of local variation between these conflict areas and also among other conflict areas that we didn't cover in this report beyond these twelve.
Sonnet Frisbie: I'm going to put you on the spot. Can you list the twelve? And if not, that's totally okay, since you had a coauthor, but maybe the top four or five that you think about and worry about day to day.
Frances Brown: Absolutely. Yes. I think I can list the twelve, although not necessarily in alphabetical order. So, we profiled Afghanistan, the breakaway region of Eastern Ukraine, Iran, Libya, Israel, Palestine, Iraq, North Korea, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela, and Yemen. And Kashmir, and related India and Pakistan conflicts.
Yi Ning Wong: I would imagine the pandemic to really complicate the layer of local variation too, but broadly speaking, how have we seen ways in which violence or economic or health harm have increased in these countries?
Frances Brown: Yeah, it's important to know that, unfortunately, for many of these countries that we look at, the pandemic is coming on top of what were already a couple of crises underway. So, in many places we see the pandemic basically being on a collision course with preexisting violence or conflict crises and pre-existing economic strain. And now, unfortunately, the pandemic is exacerbating those trends in really harmful ways. So, a couple examples of this: we're definitely seeing these mutually reinforcing trends of conflict, health, and economics crisis in places that have a large number of conflict-displaced people or refugees. So, countries like Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Somalia. These are areas that already obviously had a huge displaced population, already had limitations on how they could work. Now, in many cases, they've been displaced yet again because of the virus, they fear the conflict, they fear violence in their areas, they fear working and they're unable to work from the virus. So, we're really seeing harms compound for some of the most vulnerable populations.
In a separate vein, we’re seeing this trend of compounding economic conflict and virus crises in countries that are heavily reliant on oil revenues. And those of you who've been watching the oil markets are probably aware of how this is affecting a lot of these countries. So, countries like Libya, Iran, Venezuela, Iraq, heavily dependent on the hydrocarbon sector, and now they've got a fiscal crunch on top of the ongoing conflicts or political instability in their countries. And unfortunately, here again, it's the most vulnerable parts of the population who really suffer. Another element of this is, less than conflict zones per se, but just across fragile states where informal urban economy employment is a big part of the economy.
A lot of these jobs obviously can't be done remotely. So, we're seeing really huge and scary projections of how many people might lose their work and their income because of the virus. In Africa – there’s just a couple citations on this that are actually beyond the compilation, but that I've encountered more recently – in Africa, an estimated 22 million people work in informal urban employment alone. And obviously, this can't be done remotely, so many millions of these could be pushed into poverty as a result. And then the final element of this to add is that because of the migration restrictions that are occurring now as a part of the coronavirus, many countries now are seeing a decline in imports that are really important for food security. So, one example of this is Afghanistan. It relies heavily on wheat from Kazakhstan. So, as border trade has been halted, as a result, and then it's now been put on a quota, that's had really damaging implications for food security. So, in short, it's a pretty bleak picture when you put together the virus, conflict areas, and economic harms.
Sonnet Frisbie: Right? And a lot of these regions have governments that don't have extremely high capacity, although I have heard some conversations about redefining how we talk about state capacity in light of government responses. But one part of my question is how do you see that compounding the response? And then the other part is, coronavirus has really brought into sharp relief, the importance of information and how information really is power in a crisis. And there have been a lot of debates, looking at data coming out of Africa, for example, is it true that they don't have a lot of cases? Is it just that they're unable to test and collect that data or is there a certain amount of even willful misreporting in some places?
Frances Brown: Yeah, it's such a good point Sonnet. So, on governance capacity to respond. Yeah. This is a huge, huge challenge. A lot of these conflict zones that we were talking about already had really limited either government capacity or legitimacy, and that was already a challenge for their service delivery. Now we've got the coronavirus on top of it. So, what we're seeing is, the pandemic is providing a test of effectiveness for a lot of these governments, a lot of these formal state authorities and also for non-state authorities. So, a couple of examples of that, our collection looks at Kashmir. As you may know, late last year, the Indian government revoked Kashmir's special status. And a key rationale for that was that this would be a way to better deliver effective governance, effective service delivery.
So now the pandemic is here. A lot of residents are viewing this as a test to see if Delhi can actually deliver or not. So, we'll see, the jury is out. It seems like Kashmiris in general are at least accepting lockdown guidance as it occurred. Another example of this that our collection hits upon it is the breakaway in Eastern Ukraine, and our analysts there, Tom DeWaal speculated that if either Russia or Ukraine – who are the so-called parent states who are disputing claims on this area – if either of them does provide an effective service delivery response, that'll win them support. So, governance is a way to win popular support. And so, I think the jury's still out on a lot of these areas. You're absolutely right that a lot of these areas have disadvantages when it comes to service delivery, because they are conflict areas where there were already fragmented governance arrangements.
Already there wasn't a clear monopoly of state authority. So, a couple of examples of this: in Libya, we talk about how there's essentially two competing administrations. There's the UN recognized administration and government, but there's also an insurgent state of Khalifa Heftar who's been trying to exert his authority. So, when you've got that kind of bifurcation, it obviously makes responding to the pandemic that much harder because you've got internal borders, you can't do service delivery across, all kinds of issues of information sharing. So that's a real challenge.
We're seeing a similar dynamic in Afghanistan. There's the government of Afghanistan under Asher Afghani. And it's been going through its own political crisis with Abdullah Abdullah after a disputed election. But then you've also got the Taliban who controls large amounts of the population and of the territory. So here again, when you think about getting response out monitoring coronavirus cases, it's a real challenge when you've got this fragmented governance. We won't really know the full scope of this challenge for probably months and years to come.
One thing that's worth noting is that a lot of governments are recognizing that this pandemic is basically an opportunity to either demonstrate that they're effective or they will be viewed as ineffective. So, as a result, unfortunately, we're seeing some government authorities use concealments or disinformation as a tactic to deal with the coronavirus. So, unfortunately this has huge implications for human suffering. When you think about it, you can hide a pandemic for a little time, but you can't negate its effects forever. And so, as a result of this, these authorities were insisting there was no virus, and so obviously it was much lost time in terms of actually putting together a response. So, it's a really pernicious dynamic. So
Yi Ning Wong: You talked about the real time consequences of how governments handle specific information during the coronavirus. How do these strategies change? How non-state actors respond to conflict?
Frances Brown: Yeah, this is another really interesting trends that our report brought out. What we're seeing across the world is that a lot of non-state actors, so terrorist groups, armed groups, militias, gangs, a lot of them are really seizing on the opportunities provided by the pandemic to instrumentalize them for their own objectives. So, for many non-state actors, they've already had a pre-existing agenda and it might be exerting control on a population, it might be expanding the territory they control, it might be for propaganda purposes. And now, the pandemic has provided them a new way to pursue those objectives. So, a few examples of that. One is the group ISIS, the global group ISIS. In mid-March, it published a newsletter that essentially was a call to arms for its fighters worldwide, to carry out attacks while governments across the world are under stress from dealing with the pandemic, while military counter-terrorism efforts are often either on a back foot or redeployed to barracks or otherwise stretched thin.
So, as a result of that, we've seen an uptake in ISIS-affiliated attacks in places ranging from Niger to Egypt, to Afghanistan, to Mozambique. We're particularly seeing this trend in Iraq, where ISIS in Iraq is taking advantage of the fact that some of the international counter-terrorism coalition has withdrawn, others have gone back to their bases. The Iraqi government is busy dealing with coronavirus. So, ISIS has seemingly expanded its operations, which is obviously really concerning. Other examples of this, we're seeing this in Colombia where there've been really troubling reports of armed groups and death squads taking advantage of the fact that the Colombian government is stretched thin, and they're murdering land rights activists with whom they've had a beef for a long time. Another kind of related trend to this is that we're seeing a lot of armed groups instrumentalize the crisis for propaganda purposes.
So, in Yemen, the Houthi movement has stated in their media that quote, “It is better to die a martyr and heroic battles than dying at home from the coronavirus.” So, they're using this as a recruitment push. Meanwhile, in Somalia, Al-Shabaab has blamed the virus on crusader forces and kept up their previous pace of attacks. So, for a lot of groups, it’s really an opportunity to expand recruitment, expand their propaganda. The second big point to make about what non-state actors are doing as a result of the pandemic has to do with service delivery and trying to get more legitimacy and more popular support. So, you remember before, I mentioned that a lot of governments are viewing the pandemic as kind of an opportunity to show their effectiveness. Non-state actors view that as well, and a lot of them are trying to bolster their own popular support in the light of the pandemic.
So, one example of this is in Afghanistan. The Taliban has launched its own public awareness campaign on sanitation. It has had its own very public PR campaign showing Taliban members managing the crisis, going door to door with temperature checks and distributing hand sanitizer. There are real questions about how genuine an effort this is and how much is just window dressing. But nonetheless, they're really trying to use this opportunity to make the point that the Afghan government isn't effective at governing and they, the Taliban are. Sort of parallel efforts in the Western hemisphere, in Brazil, there've been reports of drug trafficking gangs in Rio imposing a curfew to contain the virus. There are reports that in Mexico, many gangs, including the Sinaloa cartel, which is a major cartel, are handing out food and toilet paper packages to poor residents. And they're calling these packages, Chapo packages. So, in all these cases, this is a double-edged sword, because obviously, response and assistance are badly needed. Imposing social distancing is often an appropriate response, but these groups are obviously not totally or exclusively altruistic as well. They're really trying to demonstrate their own effectiveness, build support, especially in places where the state authorities may not have the most effective or capable response.
Sonnet Frisbie: And that’s Chapo packages like Chapo Guzman, the Sinaloa leaders. So non-state actors, but also state actors are trying to demonstrate their effectiveness. And one thing in your report that I thought was interesting is they're not only trying to demonstrate it to their own constituents, their own people, but on the global stage, in multilateral settings, et cetera. So, maybe you could talk a little bit about the U.S. strategy and goals and the instrumentalization of the coronavirus. For example, China has been touting their efforts and how they were able to control the virus and the outbreak at home, and then setting themselves up as this example of how to respond internationally. And I think that's really interesting as far as a model to follow.
Frances Brown: So, you're right. Many nation States are instrumentalizing either the pandemic or the response to the pandemic to start their own objectives. So, China and the United States have obviously been locked in a war of words and a war of narratives over, first, who's responsible for the virus, and then who's helpful in dealing with it. China has had some particularly high-level coverage assistance outreach to many African nations, bringing in assistance to those countries and elsewhere, trying to make the point that they're helping on a global scale. The United States for its part has insisted that the virus be called the Wu Han virus, trying to ascribe blame. I think the bottom line from my perspective is that, unfortunately, framing this as a competition between the United States and China misses the point entirely. The virus presents a competition on a global scale, but the competition is between the virus on one hand and humankind on the other.
So, every moment and every policy decision that’s spent trying to win this war of images is a moment that spent not trying to deal with the virus. We've obviously learned over the past few months that the virus doesn't respect borders. It doesn't respect immigration restrictions. It doesn't restrict respect, trade restrictions. So really the only effective response has to be a global and multilateral one, but unfortunately, we're seeing trends really in the opposite direction, especially from those two major players. But we're seeing a lot of hunkering down in general as looking inward and even among other countries as well as they try to deal with the pandemic at home. So, I think this is a trend that we will continue to see, many countries jockeying either to provide assistance and win prestige as a result, or to get other policy breakthroughs because of the way that the pandemic has really shuffled the deck on the global stage.
Sonnet Frisbie: And do you think that there should be policy changes as a result of the pandemic as far as U.S. foreign policy? So, you mentioned sanctions against places like Iran and Venezuela. Obviously, there are governments, as you said, who are looking at this as an opportunity rather than purely in the interests of their own populaces but, are some changes maybe merited?
Frances Brown: Yeah, I think on a case to case basis, that's entirely possible. I think the magnitude of humanitarian crisis that the pandemic is bringing up – combined with the fact that again, its ramifications are global, so they can't really be contained – I think it's worth rethinking, again on a case-by-case basis, and so, I don't want to prescribe for any blanket policy on, “Should the United States rethink particular sanctions regimes?” because I think there's a lot of considerations on them. And I think sometimes humanitarian exceptions are totally appropriate because often times, sanctions are meant to be punishing leadership or political decision-makers. If it turns out that they're causing suffering among the population, I think that's worth a serious rethink. So that's my general feeling. Overall, I think the biggest policy rethink that I would like to see the United States make is a move towards a more global, multilateral, cooperative response in many domains. And I think we're seeing the consequences of that in the pandemic. I think the framing of competition and great power competition is having really tangible, detrimental effects to our own U.S. interests in dealing with this pandemic as well as the rest of humankind.
Root of Conflict Introducers: We'll be right back. Hey, thanks for listening to UC3P, The Main Page. We know you're enjoying this episode and we really want to get you back to it as soon as possible. The problem is, if you're listening to this, there's a really good chance you haven't subscribed to the show yet. Don't worry. That's super easy to fix. Just go on your phone, pick your favorite podcast app and type in UC3P, or The Main Page. It's easy to subscribe and we know you don't want to miss any more episodes. Again, typing UC3P or The Main Page and subscribe. Now go tell a friend.
Sonnet Frisbie: You know, beyond great power and competition and all of these issues there are real people and real lives behind all of these issues as you’ve mentioned. Humanitarian workers are not able to get access to a lot of the places where they worked before. I think we'd be really interested to hear - you have been a practitioner, work a lot with practitioners on the ground – what are you seeing during this pandemic for the people who are actually onsite?
Frances Brown: Yeah, it's such an important point. We can get in these lofty conversations about the big trends, but the harsh reality is that people on the ground are being affected in really concrete ways. And unfortunately, the international community's efforts to provide humanitarian assistance, resolve conflicts on the ground is being undermined in really concrete ways as well. So, a couple of examples of this: as you may know, Afghanistan was on the brink of a dialogue among many parts of the Afghan polity on what's the future for Afghanistan.
There was a preliminary U.S. Taliban deal, but then the next step really had to be a broader inter-Afghan dialogue. Unfortunately, now with the pandemic, it’s stalled those talks. It's really hard to build trust remotely. It's really hard to conduct peace talks remotely. And the upshot that is that the incredible level of violence in Afghanistan, the incredible level of civilian casualties just continues on, continues on. So, without peace talks, this horrible, violent stalemate continues. Other examples of this kind of thing, of this impact on the people on the ground. We can look at Somalia. So, Somalia was on the brink of its own dialogue process between the federal government and regional states. It’s a very fragile governments there and it needed a lot of in-person international support to these efforts. And now the international community had to downsize in a really dramatic way. So, there's just going to be much less in-person support as a result.
We're also seeing this kind of consequence in peacekeeping efforts across, particularly across Africa. So, in a lot of African union countries, there's lockdowns and distancing measures. So, it has made it a lot harder for new peacekeeping staffers to be deployed. It obviously undermines peace-building work as well. And then the final, huge way that this is affecting people on the ground, systems on the ground is just the modalities of aid distribution. Gone are the days where you can put five people in a Jeep and go somewhere. It's really undermined the mechanics of aid distribution. We're also seeing a really troubling trend in some places about perceptions of the inequities and distribution of aid and how this might incite more violence. So, as the coronavirus is bringing its own shift in aid in some ways, a lot of citizens, and we're seeing this in Afghanistan, in particular, citizens feel like it's not being distributed in a fair, equal manner, and that's led to more violence.
So, you see this compounding series of challenges as the virus takes hold that unfortunately are making international assistance efforts, which were already really hard. And then the final point to make on this is obviously a lot of these challenges in terms of doing the international community's work are pretty parallel to what we in the United States are facing in our own jobs. We’ve moved to remote work, et cetera, but the problem is in a lot of these countries, you can't really do that. You can do some aid delivery remotely from the air, but not much. And you can't do a lot of remote technology in a lot of these areas that have much lesser communications technology capability. So, it's really hard to think about how some of these realms could be shifted online or to a remote setting.
Yi Ning Wing: So, kind of looking forward. I know you mentioned that a lot of the report is still preliminary. What are the recommendations that we can take away?
Sonnet Frisbie: I think as we’ve covered, unfortunately, it paints a pretty bleak picture. I think I and my co-editor Jarrett really agreed that in most ways the coronavirus is making a bad situation worse in many conflict areas. But we also wanted to stress that that doesn't need to be the full picture, and going forward, we hope it's not the full picture. So, we do know historically that natural disasters when they occur, can potentially provide a window of opportunity or some positive disruption. It can shuffle the decks in ways that might be positive. So, one example we hear about a lot is the 2004 tsunami that helped a pathway emerge towards peace in Aceh. That's one example. Unfortunately, the same 2004 tsunami did not lead to peace in Sri Lanka, which was also affected by it. So, you can see these things can go either way. But the point being, there are ways in which positive disruption could emerge from this, and what I'm going to be looking at, going forward in my own research, and many other colleagues are as well, is “What might be some of those positive ways, and how can we mobilize around them?” At this early stage and from the 30,000 feet view that I've discussed with you both today, it's really hard to predict what those opportunities might be and what chances might emerge in specific conflicts or specific fragile states. They will likely be very localized and specific to that area. You may have seen that the UN Secretary General issued a call for a global ceasefire a few weeks ago. Subsequent to that, we did see a number of arms groups or armed actors or claim that they were temporarily stopping fighting to facilitate humanitarian response. So, we saw this in places ranging from Cameroon to Central African Republic, to Colombia, to Libya, to Myanmar to the Philippines, to South Sudan, to Ukraine, to Yemen.
Many of these declarations of ceasefire have since been overturned or did not stick. This isn’t to actually say that this is a rosy picture, but it just gives you an opportunity to sense that there may be opportunities. So, what I would like to see going forward, and what I'm going to be looking at is “How can we on the international community be prepared to respond to these positive opportunities when they do come? How can we be ready to capitalize on them? Or at least how can we be ready to stave off the worst outcomes that can occur in these conflict areas?” Do we need to think of a different way to monitor developments on the ground, especially as many of us have gone more remote in our own presence on the ground in these areas, especially as many journalists in conflict-affected places are either under siege, still in war or have to be reporting remotely?
So, how do we even get our information? A related question is, do we need to change our assistance modalities somehow to respond to this universe? Do we need more expeditionary negotiation support? Are there other ways we can look at technology to help address these challenges? So these are all the questions that I'm going to be looking at in the coming months, as I, in my own research, try to pivot from laying out all the problems that I've discussed with you two today, to some of the potential, if not, solutions, at least recommended way forward.
Sonnet Frisbie: And it sounds like that would be making the best of a bad situation. If you could look at this shock and see ways in which peace could break out in the midst of a really bad situation.
Frances Brown: That’s the best we can hope for in this pretty bleak picture.
Sonnet Frisbie: Right. Well, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to us today. We really enjoyed the conversation.
Root of Conflict Introducers: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Frances Brown of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Thanks to our interviewers, Sonnet Frisbie, and Yi Ning Wong and to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. To learn more about the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
06.11.20
Autonomy and Kashmir | Salwa Shameem
Root of Conflict Interviewers: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research Institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
News Anchor 1: …the new law, which allows migrants from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan to seek Indian citizenship, though, long as they are not Muslim.
News Anchor 2: Protestors defied a ban on large gatherings.
Protestors: [inaudible] The Citizenship Amendment Act, completely unconstitutional, anti-people, arbitrary, and against the basic feature of the Indian constitution.
Aishwarya Raje: In December of 2019, the government of India passed the Citizenship Amendment Act or the CAA, which would grant Indian citizenship to migrants of certain religions who fled for religious persecution from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh. Muslims, most notably, were excluded from this amendment. This was the first time religion had been used as a criteria for Indian citizenship, and it led to widespread protests across India, particularly on behalf of those who feared they would become stateless in their own country. On this episode of Root of Conflict, we discussed the ramifications of the CAA and its subsequent protests, as well as how prime minister Narendra Modi's decision to revoke Kashmir’s statehood puts the future of India's democracy. In limbo. Yi Ning Wong is joined by guest interviewer, Pranjal Chandra who speak to Salwa Shamim, a policy analyst focused on international development about the CAA. Later in the episode, you'll hear from Rohool Banka, a Kashmir University student in New Delhi who joined the protests and shares his on the ground perspective.
Yi Ning Wong: Thank you for coming here today and joining us before we start our conversation about what's going on in Kashmir. Could you just give us a little bit of context about what's going on in India?
Salwa Shameem: Well, I guess we should start with the most recent events that have emerged in the last month or so, which is that at the end of February, in response to the Citizenship Amendment Act, there have been protests across India, by both Hindus and Muslims and other minority groups. Originally, the CAA is meant to, for undocumented migrants or individuals from neighboring countries around India, give them a pathway to citizenship. But this law explicitly states that Muslims are not a part of that law, meaning that they don't have a pathway to that citizenship. So, for the first time since Indian independence, you've got a law that is explicitly using a religious test to prevent a pathway to citizenship. And so, the reason this is problematic is because you've got the national register of citizens, which is a record of all the citizens in India, or at least trying to create a record of citizenship in India. And what it's asking individuals to do across all of India is to provide proof, by papers or documentation, that you are in fact a citizen.
And the reason that that is problematic is because you're talking about people across the socioeconomic strata, trying to scramble for papers to prove that they've lived here for generations and generations. And if you're thinking about like the poorest or the most vulnerable segments of Indian society, that means poor individuals who have to come up with these papers that they don't have, and then somehow prove that they've been here for however many generations. With the CAA and then the NRC, the National Register of Citizens, you've created this situation in which if you can't prove that you're not a U.S. citizen, or you don't have the papers to prove that, then you can go through the CAA and have a pathway to citizenship. But if you're Muslim, then you are kind of being affected in two ways. You neither have the papers nor do you have a pathway to actually get that citizenship.
Again, I want to keep reiterating that this is not a Muslim issue. Indians across India have been alarmed by this because of how blatant the language was. And so, you've had these protests happen in Delhi, and largely peaceful demonstrations and dissent, and then what you get is, Kapil Mishra, who has this rhetoric of “If the protesters don't clear out, then they're going to be cleared out,” that sort of language. And so, what you get then is mob violence of right-wing Hindu nationalists, who went out into the streets and took those protesters out. And not just those protesters, but that community. So, it was effectively a pogrom, right? When we talk about what actually was going on, we're talking about lynchings, beatings, burning down businesses and homes and rape and sexual violence.
And 53 people have died so far as a result of it. Many of them, most of them Muslim, a lot of them lynched and died as a result of that mob violence. And I think what makes it a pogrom and not a riot is because there's this language around like, “Oh, it's a riot. It's just communal violence between Hindus and Muslims,” again, this language of, “Oh, it's a religious issue.” And again, that's one that's simply not true because you actually had Hindus on the front lines, helping Muslims while they were going through this. Right? But then at the same time, that behavior, that mob violence, that was created, not in a vacuum, but around conditions of anti-Muslim rhetoric that have been going on for a while, such as the statements by Kapil Mishra. The reason this matters is because it's not specific to Delhi, it's not specific to this particular time.
It's part of a larger rhetoric that is unfolding or has been unfolding in India. And, unfortunately Prime Minister Narendra Modi, he has a history of this, meaning in 2002 during the Gujarat pogrom and the riots, as they say, you had up to a thousand Muslims die as a result of very similar violence. And the best view of him in that case is that he stood by and did nothing while it was happening, knowing that the police were sort of allowing it to go down. This is sort of like a resurgence of that violence, and my fear, and I think the fear of a lot of people is that we're going to see more of this, just across many, many parts of India.
Pranjal Chandra: Yeah, I think you spoke about how RSS and BJP are interconnected, and RSS’s ideology in terms of what BJP. Can you describe a little more about how you see the connection between RSS and BJP, and obviously before independence, from 1980 when BJP was formed, and then right now, how you have seen BJP and RSS?
Salwa Shameem: Yeah. Well, it's interesting because the RSS was around before the independence of India and they were quite active even before then. And so, while you had visions of Pakistan and visions of a secular India, you had this other sort of fringe group advocating for like a purely Hindu state. And they were actually banned multiple times. Even within India, they were considered this really, really fringe group. To credit the RSS, they were very intelligent with their strategy, which was, they went to people from all parts of India and said, “This is the vision of India that we want.” Here is how you create that that vision of a Hindu state, right. And Narendra Modi was actually a member of the RSS as a young boy. Like he really climbed the ranks of the RSS.
He was rewarded for that. And then he slowly, politically distanced himself to the effect that he could actually go and run for office, and then rise to power in that way. But it's kind of like mother and child, if you really think about it, it's like a parent organization and the child goes off and has grown up with those values, those principles, and then goes off and does their own thing. It would be foolish to think that just because he no longer officially identifies as a part of the RSS, that he's not connected or influenced, or even directly involved in how that ideology plays out. And again, this is not dissimilar from what we're seeing in America in some ways, which is, sometimes it works well politically to align with even the fringe element, because the fringe element is politically expedient and savvy. And so, I think whether or not all these BJP politicians believe in what the RSS is saying, that vision doesn't matter actually, because for them it's politically convenient either way.
Yi Ning Wong: Is what they're doing motivated by wanting to keep that power and taking advantage of having a Hindu majority, or is it purely ideological?
Salwa Shameem: I think it's something related to both, because aligning yourself with the BJP or the RSS, whatever it is, there's so much groundswell support for it that sometimes it doesn't pay to not be a part of that movement. Right? Especially if it's at risk to your own wellbeing. And you have, like I said, Hindus across India who don't agree with this, but they are also in danger because they're siding with a different vision of India. So, I think the most interesting part about this is like, “What will India be?” And if this is supposedly the world's largest democracy by virtue of the fact that there are just so many – the population is so large – I mean, what kind of democracy is this? Is it a liberal democracy? It is an illiberal democracy, or is it just a charade? Like, that's like the real question we've got to be asking. And I think the other thing that's interesting about the RSS is the support that you see on the ground. It's very much grassroots. And I think that is why it's been so successful, is because it's not necessarily someone promising lofty ideals on a political stage, it's that these people are in the trenches with the community saying, “We're going to train you, we'll provide you resources. Here’s your mission, here's your purpose now.” And if you're talking to people who are economically, politically, socially impoverished, that's a great vision to offer someone.
Pranjal Chandra: How do you see BJP dependence on RSS with respect to that? Particularly because India is such a huge country, and when you have that grassroots mobilization and organization, you can obviously leverage it towards different models. And thus, do you see BGB can ever branch out of RSS completely or do you see them completely dependent on them?
Salwa Shameem: You’re basically asking how much will do you truly have when something is such a groundswell movement, and so politically sort of entrenched. And this goes back to your earlier question of “Is it actually an ideological belief or is it a politically convenient, expedient thing to do because of this groundswell?” I'm not sure what the answer to that is, but I think if about the BJP, and for that matter, even the Congress party, right? It's really easy to bypass true policy change and the real work that needs to be done in India, that requires a lot of hard work and accountability, right? Like true accountability to the Indian people. Supporting an organization like this allows you to kind of bypass that accountability and that responsibility, whether you're in the BJP or Congress. Right? And we're going to talk about the Congress Party. Like, yes, they've distanced themselves from the RSS and of course the BJP, their opposition. But if you look at even the Congress Party's policies in the last X number of years, they haven't always been particularly friendly towards minorities either. Right? So, it goes back to this question of like, what is your vision for India and how accountable do you actually want to be to the Indian public for true change in society.
Yi Ning Wong: Looking at the current regime, through the lens of the ongoing conflict in Kashmir, we know that there's been an internet shutdown, Article 370 has been passed. Can you walk us through a little bit about what's happening?
Salwa Shameem: Yeah, I think it'll be good to rewind to August,2019, where there was a new law passed unilaterally by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his party, his majoritarian party, the BJP, to abrogate or revoke the semi-autonomous status of Jammu and Kashmir, Article 370. And what that article basically means is, or at least what it symbolized, was this notion of Kashmir being a part of India in the sense that the Indian government had control over its foreign affairs, its communication affairs, and its defense. But Article 370 did grant a bit of semi-autonomous status for Kashmiris to manage their own internal affairs. And the revocation of that article is basically saying, “You no longer have any control. You are now a part of the Indian Union, wholesale.” And if we just rewind a little bit further, the reason that matters is because for 70 years, and this actually predates even partition, the desire for Kashmiri independence doesn't happen in 1947.
It actually precedes that. And so, when the partition happens, Kashmiris are offered or promised a referendum to decide the future. Do they want to join Muslim majority Pakistan? Do they want to be a part of India, or do they want to be an independent state? It's all kind of left in the air so that they can figure it out. That referendum never ends up happening. And then what transpires from that not happening is 70 years of militarization of Kashmir. And this is the most militarized region in the world, or one of the most. It's more militarized than the North and South Korea border. It's more militarized than South Sudan and Sudan, than Israel and Palestine, Afghanistan and Pakistan and the U.S. Mexico border. So, if you think of what’s happening at all of those borders, this is more militarized than those.
And so, you have around 600,000 to 700,000 Indian soldiers effectively occupying Kashmir. And we're not talking about a benign military presence. We're talking about a military presence that engages in a series of human rights abuses across a spectrum, ranging from curfews and strict control of movement, to night raids and missing children, kidnapping of young boys and children at night, all the way to obviously violence, sexual violence, rape. And then you've got squashing protests and using pellet guns to blind protestors, all of which is a means to control a population and their political and social and economic will. And so, what happened in August 2019 is, on one hand Article 370 was already quite symbolic. If you talk to most Kashmiris, they'll say it meant nothing anyways, in the sense that they effectively were already treated like they had no political, social or economic will, but the unilateral revocation of that article is a very bold move symbolically because we know Kashmir is a hotbed, it's very sensitive.
You've got two nuclear armed countries, both Pakistan and India, both in conflict over this piece of land. So, it's a bold move to unilaterally make that choice. But even more concerning than Article 370 being revoked is Section 35(a) which is a part of Article 370, which basically protected Kashmiris and their property ownership. Right? So with changing 35(a) what you get is a real economic hit of what happens to our property and our land when Indians from mainland India flood Kashmir and buy our property, or we can't sell, or we can't do business. So, that is like the real time implication of this. While the rest of the world has already found out that the article has been revoked, Kashmiris inside Kashmir don't find out that Article 370 has been revoked and there's a total communication blackout. Internet is shut down, mobile landlines, all disconnected, and that's effectively keeping a population in total silence. So that again, what is the function of that? Why would a democracy do that to 7 million people overnight? And it's again to prevent mobilization, organization, protests, any sort of free will to exercise a dissent against this policy.
Yi Ning Wong: What does revoking the article signal to BJP supporters?
Salwa Shameem: Yeah, I mean that the revocation of that article was a promise that the BJP party made as part of their election. They simply delivered on that promise. And I think what that tells BJP supporters and the BJP is “We'll get what we want,” and what it tells everyone else is, “If you challenge us, look at what we did here.” And it goes back to the point I just made. If you can do it in Kashmir, which has been this contested issue for 70+ years, then it's no big deal to pass the CAA or policies related to the NRC or building detention centers in Assam to house those undocumented Indians who've been living there for generations. That’s what it signals, is success and a groundswell of support for this.
Pranjal Chandra: So, that's what I'm hearing is that Article 370 sends a signal to all the supporters in terms of what BJP is capable of in its delivering on his promises. When Article 370 was revoked, the other narrative was that, “Okay, finally, we have a solution for Kashmir,” because a lot of Indians felt like Kashmir was a part of India, and now, finally, Kashmir is a part of India officially. Is it a solution? Is it not a solution?
Salwa Shameem: The reality is, there's no solution if Kashmiris are not part of that. And that's simply what we see is that no Kashmiris were consulted when that unilateral decision to revoke Article 370 happened. And all Kashmiris have been demanding for the last 70-something years is to be a part of that process. And so, if you want a meaningful solution, well, certainly disengaging, well, not only disengaging, but brutally stamping out any political opinion coming from Kashmiris is not going to lead to any viable solution. It's not sustainable and it's not viable. And it certainly has no credibility.
Yi Ning Wong: So we’ve kind of seen similar patterns across the world in Xingjiang, China, and Rwanda, of like heavy military occupation. Do you think that these places are comparable with what's happening in Kashmir? And if so, what role does foreign policy have to play?
Salwa Shameem: I was going to mention this earlier, but I think if you're really like - it's kind of like the airplane level of what's going on, the 10,000-foot view. If you think about what's playing out in Kashmir and then what's played out in Delhi and will most likely play out in other parts of India, the reason this is so problematic, not just for Indian Muslims or for minorities or the Dalits or whoever, is that, unfortunately, if you look at the region, we've got terrible success cases. And I say terrible success cases because we look at the Uighurs and China, and we look at the Rohingya in Myanmar. I mean, India saw this play out in two countries and it's worked phenomenally, and you're only further confident that you could push this forward. And so, I guess in terms of a foreign policy point of view, 1) if India is the “world's largest democracy,” what is our definition of a democracy in which this is possible? And then 2) knowing the scale, of just the impact in India, knowing what's happened with the Rohingya and what's happening with the Uighurs, it just makes it that much more real and it sounds eerily familiar to a lot of other right-wing extremists, moments of history in which people are round up. And then God knows what after that. And so that is the impact. If you're someone who is here in America or anywhere else, like why is this relevant to you? Apart from the fact that this is just another example of violence and right-wing extremism, it's that it’s going to be done on a scale that you haven't seen before. And I guess in terms of like being more solution-oriented, like what can U.S. foreign policy do, or what can we as policymakers do, is 1) being more aware of this. Right? Because I think most people have a very particular view of India, which is a very sanitized view, and maybe that's changing and in the last few months or so.
India is kind of portrayed as – you think of like Bollywood and food and culture – and those are all still aspects of Indian identity, but the reality for so many people in that country is otherwise. And so, from a foreign policy standpoint, or even from a policymaking standpoint, having awareness of 1) what's going on 2) understanding Western complicity. What is Western or American complicity in this all? Because you just had President Trump visit, right? And in the backdrop of him talking about how India is a great place and a great country, you've got the streets literally burning. And interestingly enough, last September during the UN General Assembly, around that time, the Gates Foundation awarded Modi a Goalkeeper award, and that initially was being rewarded as there was a blackout in Kashmir, as there was violence in Kashmir.
You've got like one of the world's biggest philanthropic organizations, shaking hands and patting someone who has blood on his hands for building toilets. And even that initiative, just as a slight digression, even that initiative that he was rewarded for, it’s grossly overestimated, the positive impact of that particular initiative, in which Dalits were actually forced to clean open sewage areas. Again, reinforcing that you're lower than us. And that is actually partially the reason why that initiative was even remotely successful, is because it was on the backs of Dalits. I mean this is what's happening. And then this man is being rewarded on an international stage for his activities. And that is what I mean by Western complicity. There is even a philanthropic complex. Why are we shaking hands with this individual? Well, part of that is because there's a huge market in India still, and everyone wants a piece of India economically, even in the West, like Silicon Valley has huge interests in India. And so this is what I mean: if we're going to think about being solution-oriented, what is in our control? And from a policymaking standpoint, that is this sort of influence, this economic influence. Like, can we put some pressure on Indian leadership for these actions?
Aishwarya Raje: Now you’ll hear Yi Ning’s conversation with Rohool Banka about his experiences as a student protester.
Rohool Banka: There's a difference – when they entered the library – there’s a difference, because the majority of the policemen in Delhi are in the midst of Muslims, and they have hatred towards Muslim community. So, this hatred, this organization has developed the officer's mind in such a way that they have also actually started beating people with their preferences. Like who is a Muslim, they will beat him wherever you find. Like if they find somebody who is having a long day, they're creating a sort of identity as a Muslim, they will judge him. Preferential treatment towards the certain community is actually gone to the roots, creating a sort of biasness towards these communities. So, we had seen these things already in the English mid-valley where we have sort of military forces everywhere, you are being checked everywhere. It's actually happening there as well, where Muslims, particularly Kashmiris, are also feeling not safe and not able to decide “Should I go back to Delhi for studying or not?” It's creating a sort of question among a lot of youth, a lot of population of Muslims, who are actually reluctant to go back to the institutions where they were studying.
Yi Ning Wong: Right. So local police officers act as a proxy to enforce Modi's ethnonationalistic regime and creating a sense of fear upon Muslim minorities?
Rohool Banka: Definitely, definitely. It's actually going in that way. I mean, it's a creating a sort of, they're creating a sort of otherization towards these communities. I told you last time, if you see most of the Muslims who go to different parts of the country, it's very difficult for them to find even accommodation. Like if I go to Delhi and if I want to stay somewhere in a room, or if I want to book a hotel, I will be checked in a way as if I’m somebody […]. So, this sort of hate mongering and this sort of communal – it is sort of a series of structural violence towards the community. If you see the Bollywood of India, what you will see most of the villains in the movie will be Muslim.
If there is a terrorist, he’s Muslim. So, I would say like this sort of image has been manufactured in this industry. I mean, it's actually creating a sort of Islamophobia among the general public. So, even if you go to some local person in Delhi and ask him for the accommodation, and if he finds your name, which is a Muslim name, he will be reluctant to give you that accommodation. If somebody wants to go to Delhi and wants to study in a good university, or he has to go there and find a good accommodation where he wants to stay, he will not have easy access for that. So, for him, his good choice is to stay at home. So, because education demands security, you need to think creatively for that, and you need to have a security, which is not there for Muslims. I guess I have faced this problem. I realized it at different levels. Right now, I should have been there in the university, continuing my PhD. But unfortunately, because of this violence, because of this sort of events, what is happening is that people like me are staying at home.
Aishwarya Raje: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict. Special thanks to our interviewers, Yi Ning Wong and Pranjal Chandra and to our guests, Salwa Shameem and Rohool Banka. As always, thank you to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org or follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
06.03.20
Preventing Conflict in Fragile States | Liz Hume
Root of Conflict Interviewers: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research Institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Aishwarya Raje: The Global Fragility Act, or the GFA was passed by Congress as part of the 2020 Consolidated Appropriations Act and signed into law on December 20th, 2019. This bill represents a historic victory for the peacebuilding field, which has long advocated for the GFA as a way forward to prevent and reduce violent conflict. The Alliance for Peacebuilding, a non-partisan network of over 110 organizations working to end conflict and build sustainable peace, has been at the forefront of advocating for the GFA. In this episode of Root of Conflict, we spoke with Liz Hume, Vice President of Alliance for Peacebuilding. Liz is a conflict expert and has more than 20 years of experience in senior leadership positions in the federal government, multilateral institutions, and NGOs. In this interview, we discussed methods for ensuring bi-partisan support for the GFA, as well as the importance of research and advocacy in crafting policies that promote peaceful political outcomes.
Thank you, Liz for joining us. So, to start off, can you just tell us about the work and the mission of Alliance for Peacebuilding, and as Vice President of the organization, what are some of your main roles and responsibilities?
Liz Hume: So, thank you so much for having me. So, who is the Alliance for Peacebuilding? We're a membership-based organization. We have over 120 members working in the peacebuilding field, conflict prevention, in many different areas, Universities, academic institutions, large organizations like Mercy Corps and world vision and Catholic Relief Services and organizations that are doing other work besides just conflict prevention and peacebuilding. And then also smaller organizations, like New Gen Peace Builders, that are working in on education and peacebuilding. The field is in some regards, relatively small because of the funding that goes into the field. So, you're going to have larger organizations embedded in big development, and then you might have smaller organizations working in the field as well.
So, we represent our members both in three buckets that we talk about, which is policy and advocacy, learning and evaluation, and partnerships. So, the policy and advocacy really focuses on how do we work with Congress, the executive branch, multilaterals like the UN, making sure that our organizations, their work, their best practices get into policy, find their way into policy in terms of how do we deal with laws like the Global Fragility Act. So, there's all sorts of ways. we just had a big meeting at the Alliance for Peacebuilding, where we were consulting on the new United Nations Sustaining Peace Platform. Those are just some examples from the policy and advocacy. We also focus in on technical areas and this is where it bleeds into our learning and evaluation program. So, looking at violent extremism, there’s a lot of theories of change out there that say, “If you do this, then violent extremism will be reduced.” But we really go deep in looking at it. What do we know? What don’t we know? What is working? What isn’t working? And what else do we need to do? And that, we work very closely with our L&E team. So, really focusing on that evidence piece, but then also how do we build capacity of our members to be able to do more in the evidence space, in the evaluation space. And then around partnerships and promoting this work, how do we bring people into the sector? We have our conference this year coming up on December 7th, and that really will focus on bringing people into the field. And so, that's a lot of our partnership work as well.
Mwangi Thuita: Honing in on the policy and advocacy aspect of your work. Can you tell us a bit about the Global Fragility Act and what the Alliance for Peacebuilding’s role has been in that process?
Liz Hume: So we have to go back to 2016, a long time ago actually now. We were concerned that the peacebuilding field really came about in the nineties, this theory around peacebuilding, and it wasn't just about support to peace processes. You had to get into other sectors, and the peacebuilding field has grown, conflict prevention has grown. However, in the last two decades, we understand the causes of violence and violent conflict, but we don't have an overarching strategy of how to effectively deal with it in country X, country Y. And we've looked at it at a very projectized basis. And again, the funding that has gone into the peacebuilding field has been quite small.
When you look forward and you start seeing the numbers 2016, 2017 today, where roughly 2 billion people live in countries where development is affected by fragility, conflict and violence, and these numbers are increasing, the number of highly violent conflicts has increased for the first time in years. And it's not traditionally what we looked at. We looked at interstate conflicts that could be resolved by a peace agreement, getting all the actors, bringing them to us, a city in Dayton, Ohio and making them stay there until they came up with an agreement. We're not seeing that. Deaths from organized violence have risen over 230%. I mean, you could go on and on and on with these statistics. So, what we're doing isn't working. And so, sitting down and talking with one of our members from Mercy Corps, and taking a look at this, what does it need? What has to change? And so, we worked very closely with our member Mercy Corps to make this idea become realized around the Global Fragility Act.
We needed an overarching strategy for the U.S. government. We needed to do things differently, and that would mean additional funding. It would mean – there’s many things coming into play, and at an evidence-based, both at the program level, but also at the 30,000 foot, is this country becoming more sustainable from a peace perspective? Are we reducing violence? What is it going to take to do things differently in name, your country? What are we doing wrong? And so that's where the idea came about. And then we had to build a coalition around it. And you know, it's not always easy to do that. A lot of people weren't keen on the idea at first, anything that's new is a little scary. People also are nervous about the U.S. government given its national security strategy. So there's a couple aspects of it, the idea itself, selling the idea, building the coalition and then more importantly, today, more than ever, if anything is going to work, it has to be bipartisan. So, making sure we have Republican and Democrats.
Mwangi Thuita: of Republicans or Democrats, our current political system, at least as it's portrayed through the media is highly fraught between both parties. What are the keys to success and ensuring bipartisan support for the Global Fragility Act and what kind of arguments have you found to be most persuasive with lawmakers?
Liz Hume: It's a great question. In this space, and when you talk to Republicans and Democrats separately or when they're working together, I don't want to say it's obvious, but it's obvious what's happening. What we're doing isn't working. We have the evidence to show that. This is what we need, and these are the things that we could do to make an overarching strategy. And this is what it's going to take. And when we looked at the evidence, one of the things that folks on the Hill have asked us repeatedly, show us where programs have had impact. And in the last few years, we've gotten a lot better at that. Some organizations within our sector have gotten a lot better and we were able to show them and prove that we have been able to reduce violence.
We have been able to say that this program reduced people's perceptions and desires to join an extremist group. It’s horrible to say, but you had this incredible uptick in violence in the world coupled with the fact that the nature of conflict has changed. Again, not this interstate, more focusing on violent extremism, regional conflicts, community level conflicts. It’s not this group against this group, that we needed to do something different. That wasn't a hard sell, both Republicans and Democrats, they get it, they understand it. They have been true partners in this approach. And really, we're the champions on it.
Aishwarya Raje: Can you speak a bit to how the Global Fragility Acts focus on preventative measures, rather than perhaps interventionists measures, has really made a difference in getting strong bi-partisan support and getting the legislation passed? And how is that approach different than maybe other foreign assistance packages or legislations that you've seen in the past couple of years?
Liz Hume: Well, there haven't been a lot of legislative packages in the last couple of year, focusing on these issues. You know, we've seen them a lot in the health sector PEPFAR, the malaria fund, the PMI program. And I have to say in early discussions, thinking about this as a PEPFAR for violence, that when we would say that you would see people get very nervous. Looking back at about 2015, 2016, one of the things that people talk about all the time is “How can you prove that you prevented violence?” That's a huge question that we had to overcome. And that’s where I think a lot of the evidence that has started to come out in the last couple of years has been very critical for this.
But we started looking at specific countries in terms of what we were doing. And I always use Bangladesh as a perfect example. And this is not to say Bangladesh should be a GFA country, because you could pick any country and it will look like this in terms of U.S. government funding. So, if you look at the U.S. government strategy for Bangladesh it talks about how important it is. It talks about wants to address violent extremism. It continues on about governance issues, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. What we know in Bangladesh is that the funding levels for development sectors, agriculture are incredibly high, and no one's saying, “Don't do that work.” But at the same time, the U.S. government reports, their conflict assessments, talk about what we need in Bangladesh to address violent extremism, conflict prevention really focuses on a governance approach.
But then when you look at the funding levels, the governance sector, the conflict prevention funding is a blip on the radar screen. It's so tiny. And so, what you're saying is “This is what we want to do.” And our own experts are saying, “This is what it's going to take.” And we know that instability and violence indicators are rising in Bangladesh, but let's just continue doing what we're doing, you know? And so, when you talk about that example, and I've done that at institutions with U.S. government folks sitting there, I had one U.S. government person lean over to me and say, “Good job, nicely done.” It shows – I don’t want to say the ridiculousness of it, these are great people trying to do great things. I worked at USAID, but we need some significant policy shifts. And that, I think when you talk about it and you present the evidence in terms of what we're doing, what isn't working, that violent conflict is going up, that we are able to start proving that these programs are working, it's kind of a game changer. And we're at that tipping point, I think right now.
Mwangi Thuita: You’ve talked a lot about evidence and we're at the Harris School of Public Policy, which places a strong premium on evidence-based approaches to policy, especially through quantitative analysis. While this is a vital piece of creating policy can you speak to the importance of combining the important elements of research and analysis with advocacy, outreach and communications? So how do advocacy-based approaches factor into your work?
Liz Hume: So again, great question. And I've had meetings all morning where we've been talking about this. In our sector, we've gotten away for a long time with not showing evidence, not even showing even unintended consequences, you know, seeing if this program worked, but did it have any impact overall? And again, that's changing, and there are some organizations that are doing a great job looking at this and making sure that this evidence comes into play. But we have to do better and we have to do a lot better. So, we have to publicize when we learn something. It's hard to do a lot of times, because again, a lot of programs aren't doing it, they're doing a lot of focus on outputs. That’s what the donor wants. We spent the money the way we said we were going to spend it, but they don't say this is the impact that we had. These are the unintended consequences that we had.
So, I think that's a big problem. There's a competition. There's not a lot of funding in this field. So, any really good learnings are kept because it's a competitive advantage. And then also, you are working in conflict-affected and fragile states. I was running a conflict governance program in Ethiopia for four years and the government – we weren't supposed to be running that program. So, the government, anything that went out, the government would look at. So, we did not release a lot of our reports. They went to the donor, but they didn't go farther than that.
But there are ways that we can sanitize that information and be able to get it out, even if you're working in a very restricted environment. So, there's some things on us that we need to do as a field, in terms of the evidence piece. So those are the problems with our evidence base. How do we then get the evidence into advocacy? And why is it important? Because 1) people on the Hill have told us, Congress, if you can't prove it, why are we funding this? How do we know what's working and what isn't working? People just keep proposing some of the same programs over and over again. We have no evidence to say they worked or not. So, one of the things AFP has done is, let's say, we've looked at countering violent extremism, that sub-sector, and go down in that. People have areas of change that they treat as gospel. And some of them have even been put out by the U.S. government in the peacebuilding sector.
So, we've looked at them. Do we even have evidence on this theory of change? Does it work? Does it not work? And what more do we need to know? So, we are systematically going through a lot of sub-sector reviews, working with our different partners to say, “Please stop just throwing this theory of change out there.” Even if it's on some government list somewhere. Make sure that you do the literature review, make sure that you know what's out there, what isn't out there. And then, once you do good work, we need to publicize it and we need to understand, “How do we put that back into a package that can be put into a policy document?” One that's no more than two pages because nobody reads in Washington more than two pages. And make sure your recommendations are clear and concise.
And even if you said, “Okay, this didn't work.” But what is the next theory? Okay. If this didn't work, why don't we then look at this? One of the examples I was talking about earlier today was, we have some anecdotal evidence on trauma and mental health in this field, that if you attach some psychosocial programming to other programs that are running, that that actually might that might be more helpful. So, people think they're coming in for this, but they're actually getting a little bit more here. So, we have some anecdotal information from people who have received that programming that has been helpful. Okay. And we've heard about it in other places. So, let's test that theory. But don't just assume that it works, but test it and say,
“Hey, we have this theory,” but what happens a lot of times is that people then just go off and do it and start treating it as gospel.
Aishwarya Raje: So going back to the GFA, you had talked about how many different sectors have to intersect in terms of actually putting the legislation together. But I'm curious as to how you see the potential of the GFA in touching other parts of society around the world beyond just maybe countering violent extremism, which of course is the main kind of crux of this legislation. But parts, society and development like health system, strengthening migration, gender equality, it seems like the GFA can really have a huge impact on all of these different pieces. So how hopeful are you that this legislation can actually do that?
Liz Hume: So two points well, a couple of points. I could talk all day about this. Just to go back really quickly on what you're talking about in terms of prevention and I don't think I answered that question completely:
Why the GFA is so important is because it really is for the first time talking about prevention and peacebuilding, and I think that is the critical piece of it. Now it says of five countries or regions, two at least have to be prevention countries. And that was something that in the end, when we knew it was going to come on the appropriations bill, that we really wanted to hold the line on, because we wanted to see this work in prevention countries and more than one, because we wanted to have a bit of a cross sector. So that's really, I think one of the key pieces of the GFA. On the second side, and what's so key about that is, it is really hard to get donors and the international community to focus on a prevention country. Because when things are blowing up all over the world, where does your attention go? Coupled with the fact of “How do you get people to pay attention?” when there's so much violent conflict, how do you decide where those resources go?
And so that, by far, I think is one of the most important aspects of it. On the issue of bringing in other sectors, this will not work if you don't. So again, I go back to Bangladesh as an example. You have the bulk of the funding that's going in there, education, health, agriculture. If those programs are not part of this design and are not focusing on their work from a conflict-sensitive approach, and that is beyond “do no harm” – the first thing, we want to make sure no program is doing harm – it’s got to be more than that. And it's got to say, “Okay, first, do no harm. Secondly, how is this sector, program, activity helping to reduce violence and build sustainable peace?”
And I will say this, and the education sector has done a lot of work in this area, but it is hard to crack a lot of these other development sectors. And health has been one of the hardest ones. And so, I think what happened, what you just saw happen in DRC, not too long ago, with the Ebola clinics, there was a lot of mistrust around them. The health clinics, violence was sparked. Some were burned down. It is a good time to talk to the health sector, and we've started to say, “1) How do we do no harm?” Clearly harm was done there, but this was an opportunity to help reduce violence and build sustainable peace. And you have to be better at it. And you have to be working in that space. You can't just say we're saving lives, and we don't have time, because that argument doesn't work anymore, coupled with the fact that you're missing a huge opportunity to help in terms of building sustainable peace.
So, that's just an example, but at the same time, the field has to compromise. We have to use the language that they're using. If they don't want to talk about conflict because they want to be more neutral, okay, let's talk about risk then. We have to also simplify this conflict sensitivity so that you don't need a PhD to understand it. We have to help and give them the resources and the technical expertise to build in a practical way, but they also have to be open to it and understand their role in this conflict dynamic.
Mwangi Thuita: So, as you look forward towards the rest of the year, and also the coming couple of years, what are some conflicts that you're keeping an eye on? Are there any countries or regions that you think are being overlooked as potential hotspots for conflict?
Liz Hume: This is just such a hard question because there are so many out there. If you look on one of my favorite sites, the Fund for Peace Conflict, the Fragile State Index, you'll see a lot of countries sitting in the warning site. Ethiopia again is another example. It’s always hovered in the last even probably two decades around number 19, or 20. But you also have to go in and see the conflict dynamics, those indicators are flashing, but what's the flip side? What's holding it back? What's the resiliency side of it there? And so, that, I think, is a bit more complicated than just going in and looking at the grievances and the conflict dynamics that are very targeted into what's wrong. So, in that regard, you have to look at it as more of a holistic approach. And I think we forget to do that a lot of times.
And also, one more aspect of it is that what sparks it, something's got to really spark it. I don’t think anybody predicted what happened with the Arab Spring. You know, if you go down into Tunisia, what was the cause? It was somebody who got fed up and tired. He was told to move his stall, his livelihood. And that was a major spark. I always say it's not an exact science and, and it just isn't, because you're dealing with also human beings that can be very irrational, and they don't do what you think they're going to do. That being said, we have some good examples of, if you look at Burkina Faso right now, a year or two years ago, we had great indicators that there were serious problems in Burkina Faso. And we didn't focus on conflict prevention there. We are now, but the problem is the government has lost swaths of areas where they have no control.
It isn't just violent extremism. You have a security problem with many different issues in terms of splinter groups, some of it criminal. So, what do you do now with Burkina Faso? So, I have people coming up to me all the time. Somebody came up to me after I was talking about Burkina Faso at a State Department conference came up and said, “You just described what's happening on Cameroon.” And right now, Ethiopia is a perfect example. Again, everybody is so excited about this political reform. We just put out a report that says, “You're having great political reforms, and these are the challenges.” And this is again, the Fund for Peace in 2020, we'll most likely say it's one of the worsened states in terms of conflict dynamics. But you had this great political reform. In order to get into the Fund for Peace side or any other conflict watchlist and take those top countries and go in, but then also looking at what is that resiliency factor.
And a good way to look at it is also elections. We know elections are a big spark for violence. So, and again, Ethiopia, right now, it keeps postponing its elections, but right now they're set for August. So those are some of the things that, looking at, and I will tell you, one thing that I am incredibly nervous about is Afghanistan right now. I think it's pretty clear what the U.S. government wants to do there, mainly get out. I can’t imagine what it would be like to be in Afghanistan now, for the last almost 20 years, staying there or going back there and recognizing that this all will be coming to an end soon with an agreement that in the past, or in the recent past, has not been inclusive with safeguards and monitoring set up in terms of any agreement that is decided with the Taliban.
Aishwarya Raje: Well, thank you Liz so much for your time and for your tireless work in creating a more peaceful world.
Liz Hume: Thank you so much. This has been a pleasure talking with you, and also thank the Harris School for its role in producing evidence. I am a big fan of it, and I talk about it and make sure it gets in every strategy, document, law that’s being proposed right now, because we have to do more of it.
Mwangi Thuita: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Liz Hume, Vice President of the Alliance for Peacebuilding. Special thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. Your interviewers today were Aishwarya Raje and Mwangi Thuita. Aishwarya Raje also produced this episode. Mwangi Thuita edited and engineered. For more information about The Pearson Institute, research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
05.26.20
Coping With the Global Refugee Crisis | Cindy Huang
Root of Conflict Interviewers: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Sonnet Frisbie: I'm Sonnet Frisbie.
Mwangi Thuita: I’m Mwangi Thuita.
Sonnet Frisbie: And you're listening to Root of Conflict. So, our guest today was Cindy Huang, the Vice President of Strategic Outreach at Refugees International. She's also a Visiting Fellow at the Center for Global Development. She develops and leads initiatives to build support for improved protection for refugees and displaced people in the United States, but also around the world. So, she really has a vast depository of experience on these issues. She also has been a senior executive in government and of course, nonprofit, and has led major policy initiatives on forced displacement, food security and conflict prevention. While she was in government, she served as the Deputy Vice-President for Sector Operations at the Millennium Challenge Corporation, but also a Director of Policy of the State Department’s Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations, and a Senior Advisor at the State Department.
So, she really has a lot of experience. She had a lot of what I thought were fresh different insights and real evidence-based policy proposals related to refugees. So, Mwangi, I'm really excited about the guests that we have on today. Listening to the news in the last few years, you probably have heard about the refugee crisis, 70.8 million people, more than the population of Thailand, displaced by war conflict and persecution, tens of millions more displaced by climate events and natural disasters. And of course, it's a human issue, but it's also a political issue, with governments either capitalizing on it as a wedge issue with voters or struggling with how they should respond on a humanitarian basis. And there's a lot of misperceptions about refugees.
Mwangi Thuita: And one of those misperceptions about refugees is that they're going to be in a host country for a short while, and then go back home. But increasingly, we're seeing that protracted periods of displacement are becoming more common. And another thing is that living in a developed country as we do, we may be tempted to think that hosting refugees is a rich world issue, but the burden has mostly been shouldered by low- and middle-income countries like Uganda, Ethiopia, Bangladesh, and Jordan and Lebanon.
Sonnet Frisbie: That's absolutely right Mwangi. and not only do we often think that the rich world is shouldering the majority of the burden in terms of numbers, but also, we think of the wealthy world, in particular, the United States as being a real leader in this area. and it's true that the U.S. used to accept, I think it was more than all other countries combined, which is no longer the case, but it's also instructive if you look at it relative terms to population and those trends are really shifting. So, our guest talked quite a bit to that point.
Mwangi Thuita: Another thing that she mentioned that I thought was interesting was that 40% of displaced people today are actually IDPs, that's internally displaced persons. And that means that they're not subject to international conventions and protocols that were designed to protect refugees, who are people who've sought sanctuary in a different country. So, I think the issue of internally displaced people is something that listeners will benefit from hearing about. We also sort of solicited her advice for aspiring development professionals and future managers in nonprofit and government.
Sonnet Frisbie: All right. Well, thank you so much for being with us today. We're really excited to talk to you. So, as we mentioned, currently 70.8 million people are displaced by war conflict and persecution. Can you contextualize that number for us in terms of the last hundred years or so, maybe some of the bigger trends, and how does that look different today, from a hundred years ago?
Cindy Huang: Yep. The number has been on the rise. and so, you'll often hear, and it's the case that this is the largest number of displaced people. At the same time, it's important to then get down to the next level of detail where more than 40 million of those people are internally displaced in their own countries, and about 25 million plus have fled to another country. Another piece of information that's really important is the absolute number compared with the global population. And so, there have been times in history, I think we're kind of reaching parity with the level of displacement, for example, after World War II, as a percentage of population, I will say that it's important to think about those absolute numbers. At the same time, we also know that it's almost less about the numbers and more about our approach to including refugees, because sometimes people hear the number and they feel really overwhelmed and think about what we can do, but there have been times where we have accepted globally, a large number of refugees without the negative political backlash that we're seeing today.
Sonnet Frisbie: Hmm. And what are some common misperceptions about refugees and displaced people? And I mean that both on the part of policymakers, and let's say the public, the average Joe?
Cindy Huang: So, one of the misperceptions is that people flee and after, one or a couple of years, they're able to return home. But the average length of displacement is 10 years, and for those people who are displaced in protracted situations for five years or more, they're displaced for more like 20 years. And I think that makes a huge difference, I think both from the perspective of the public and policymakers, which means that a lot of the solutions that we've come up with, like providing food, water, and shelter for refugees, that makes sense if they're displaced for a short period of time, but think about 10, 20, 30 years, we need more sustainable solutions.
Sonnet Frisbie: And it's interesting because I think one of the misconceptions that I've heard is often that, well, they don't actually want to go home and they're actually economic migrants. And during the recent refugee crisis in the EU, for example, there was a lot of conflating of economic migration and refugees. So, I'd be interested to hear how you describe the distinction between the two and then how should the policies be differentiated for the two groups?
Cindy Huang: Yes. So, for refugees who are fleeing violence, war and persecution, we have international protocols to deal with them. And so, I think it is important to separate them from economic migrants who may also be fleeing circumstances that are very dire, but at the same time, aren't suffering from that same level of lack of safety, and that really is what the international protection regime is about. From a policy perspective. I think that means that we do have to be clear that that system for seeking asylum and providing refugee protection is really critical. At the same time, I understand that some of the confusion in the public mind, because there are cases of people who seek asylum who don't win their case. It turns out that they were trying to use a channel that they don't qualify for. I think people have a lot of empathy for refugees. And I think the issue is that we need systems that are transparent and function well.
Sonnet Frisbie: And I'm curious, what do you see as the United States role in the refugee process? I know a few years ago, I would hear it often touted that we accepted more refugees than any other country, but I know that that was only an absolute term since we already talked about absolute versus proportions. So, how do you see the U.S.’s role?
Cindy Huang: Historically, the U.S. has anchored the refugee resettlement process. And for those of you listeners who aren't as familiar with refugee resettlement, those are refugees who have fled to another country and they aren't able to find safety in their new host country, and therefore, UNHCR and that system identifies them for resettlement to a third country like the United States or Canada or the UK. Historically. we used to resettle as many refugees as the rest of the world combined. And so, it was a very big commitment. However, more recently, Canada has accepted more refugees than the United States. Canada is a much smaller country. So, the role of the U.S. has been not only in accepting refugees, but really in upholding the principles of international protection. And as we've seen U.S. leadership roll back, we are seeing global retrenchment of support for these principles. And it's not always only up to the U.S. but we were an anchor of that system.
Sonnet Frisbie: So, you mention the principles of international protection of refugees? And it strikes me that you also mentioned internally displaced people, IDPs, a moment ago. So, can you talk about where IDPs maybe fall through the cracks in that system, and perhaps where maybe they have advantages? I'd be interested in how those groups differ.
Cindy Huang: Of course, the situations between various refugees and IDPs differ among themselves. So, it's really important to have responses that are locally contextualized. It is very different in terms of legal status in particular. So, I work a lot on access to jobs for refugees, and once you've crossed a border, you are facing a lot of constraints where host countries don't allow refugees to work. If you are an IDP, you're still a citizen of that country. So, in theory, you still have access to services and access to jobs in practice. Often times, people who are displaced internally don't have that access. So, I would say, I think it's, well, there are significant differences. I think it's important to also look at the practical barriers that people are facing, whether they're IDPs or refugees, and try to overcome them. I'll just put in one final plug: there's a new high-level panel of the UN that's looking at IDPs, and we all can be rightly skeptical of high-level panels and what is implemented at the end of the process; however, I do see it as a very positive sign of the attention that's being paid to the unique situation of IDPs and what more the international community can do.
Mwangi Thuita: And you just spoke about labor market access. So, I'd like to talk to you more about that and about some other policies that benefit refugees and how you, at Refugees International approach measuring the evidence for the success of policies. So, living in a Western country, as we do, with a constant stream of news about refugees over the last few years, you would think that most refugees and displaced people are actively seeking sanctuary in Europe or North America. But as we know, most of these people actually end up in low- and middle-income countries in the Middle East and Africa and Asia, and these countries face significant challenges in providing resources. Some of these challenges are material. Some of them are political. There's a fear in many of these countries that allowing refugees to work or have an education or even allowing them access to national safety nets act will act as a pull factor and lead to more refugees, who will stay for longer periods of time. What does the research actually say about these concerns?
Cindy Huang: So, as you noted, the vast majority of refugees live in other developing countries, and that figure right now is around 85%. So, it's really important to challenge some of the misperceptions about who is doing what in this world around refugee protection. I will say that the evidence generation around the sets of questions that you asked is relatively new. And I think it's great. Now we have new actors like the World Bank starting to dig into these questions. My understanding and assessment of the evidence is that, when people are first displaced, those policy conditions that you talked about, like, “Oh, can I have access to the social safety net system? Can I get an education?” When they're fleeing violence war and persecution, people are not really carefully weighing those factors, because – I most recently did a study in Bangladesh and, the Rohingya were fleeing massive war crimes and that, that wasn't really a factor.
So, I think it does depend on the various push and pull factors that are in place. I think we have evidence from a number of cases that shows that other policies beyond the kinds of benefits you can get are far more influential. So, I mentioned some push factors, like what people are fleeing from, also when countries close the border, and that just has a much larger impact. So, I think one other, as you said, rightly, many governments are concerned about the pull factor. I've now, in talking to government representatives around the world, I've heard more about the “stay factor,” meaning that there's concern that by providing these services, refugees won't want to return, even when the conditions in their home country have improved. There is evidence around that that shows it really is mixed. It depends on the policy conditions in the hosting country and the country of origin. And there are examples of people who, when they have access to livelihoods, when they are able to make a living, they might be more likely to return home because they have education and they have assets that they're able to return to their country to rebuild. And that really goes to one of the hearts of the question, which is the vast majority of refugees say, “If my country is safe, I would like to return home.”
Mwangi Thuita: And there are some of these low- and middle-income countries that are increasingly allowing some provisions for refugees to work. I think maybe Jordan, Turkey, Colombia, correct me if I'm wrong. What are some effective ways of convincing these governments, that it is actually beneficial both to them and to the refugee populations?
Cindy Huang: So, there has been movement, you rightly note, and also in Ethiopia where there’s been positive laws that are passed. And then we have some stalwarts like Uganda, which have always had really excellent policies on the inclusion front. So, one of the ways that the international community has been thinking about this question is what are the resources that we can offer to align interests, such that it makes sense for both refugees, host communities and national development to allow refugees to work and increase their self-reliance? And in cases like Jordan, we've seen that the international community has come together to offer Jordan assistance, in particular, this development-led assistance where we as the international community can make investments in their health system, for example, so that their health system can include refugees, as opposed to the traditional model of having a totally parallel system go on for years and years.
And I think it's really important to do that around economic growth more generally, because in all of these countries, you have vulnerable host populations saying, “Oh, it's wonderful for refugees to get assistance, but what about our situation?” And so, I think being able to design packages, which are not about conditionality, not “We'll give you a bridge or a road here if you'll give rights to refugees,” it's really about how can we use these new resources to align interests so that we can overall grow the pie. And people have been so creative there in the Jordan case, there were trade concessions with the European Union. There have been discussions of ways to catalyze private sector investment. I don't want to oversimplify, because the devil's in the details and implementation is really tough, but I really appreciate the creative and new thinking around bringing humanitarian and development objectives together.
Mwangi Thuita: And some of these models for international partnership are relatively new. What can we say so far about how they've been implemented and the successes that they've had?
Cindy Huang: So, I've looked most closely at the compact in Jordan that was around jobs and economic growth. And the one in Ethiopia is quite new, I will say, as you said, this process really started in 2016 or so, and in development terms, that's quite a short period of time. But I do see some bright spots and I'll give two or three examples. So, one is that there's really been learning in the implementation process. So, in the case of Jordan, there was at first a significant focus on refugees being employed in industrial zones and in factories. But when the program was starting to be implemented, people found – well, refugees, that's a long way to travel. They were afraid to leave their families. You've just fled another country. There was fear, there were the costs around traveling to the workplace, there was no childcare. And I think people really did take a step back and say, “Okay, well, how can we improve this system, but not lose the spirit of wanting greater access to the labor market?”
So, there have been changes, like a new regulation that allows Syrians to have home-based businesses, which allows more women to have catering businesses or sewing businesses. So, I think there has been that learning spirit. At the same time, there's still a long ways to go. And I think one of the tricks in all of this will be, how can we implement these projects and compacts in a way where we're seeing positive benefit and therefore there's momentum to do more and more, versus, feeling like there's going to be a backlash because people haven't really seen the benefits that we've promised?
Sonnet Frisbie: There’s a big role for the private sector as well. How do you see – and you mentioned a little bit with like home-based businesses – how do you see the private sector, maybe, companies that want to hire refugees, how have you seen them also influencing the policy process?
Cindy Huang: Yes, I think they they've played a really important role and I want to call out the Tent Partnership for Refugees, which is a coalition of companies that want to do more, both in the U.S. and around the world. And it's been really important to have Tent and groups like Tent at the table and the companies that are in their coalition to make specific commitments around the hiring and the investment that they would make if policy changes were implemented. Because it's very nice in theory to say, “Please make these policy changes and you're going to see these benefits,” but, the countries which are under pressure, they want to know that there's something at the end of that policy change process, which can be quite difficult at times. And I know that in Colombia where there's a more progressive policy around labor market access, there've been conferences and really requests for companies to come in and increase the overall pie.
Mwangi Thuita: You spoke of the differences between cultures of welcome in countries like Uganda, which have historically been very open to having refugees work and be integrated in the social safety system and provided for social services. Obviously, that's a bit simplifying it a little bit. But what do you think are some major determining factors in how open and welcoming a country is to refugee populations?
Cindy Huang: One major one is the previous experience with displacement, and that's the case in Uganda, and now you see in Colombia. So, for, during the civil war in Colombia, Venezuela hosted a lot of Colombians. And so now, as we see the flow moving in the opposite direction, there is a feeling that, we were welcomed and now it's our turn to welcome our neighbors. So, I think historical experience is an important determining factor. There have been studies about the cultural closeness of the displaced and host populations being a factor. And now, there’s new research as well, that's looking into both the economic and the perception of the economic effects of hosting refugees. So, I'm working with a fantastic researcher, Thomas Ginn, at the Center for Global Development, who's looking at how welcome changes when host communities know or don't know that part of the benefits they're receiving are because they're hosting refugees. And actually, that experiment is in Uganda, where now it's quite common, and I think it's a very good thing that is part of a humanitarian response, a certain percentage of the funds should be invested in the host community. So, then there's a question of, does that change people's perceptions and the sense of welcome?
Sonnet Frisbie: So, you had mentioned the Rohingya earlier, and I know that you actually gave testimony to Congress in July of 2019 on that topic. And you talked about among other things, encouraging U.S. to increase international pressure on Myanmar to ensure participation of the Rohingya in the response, and to increase support for Bangladesh as they grapple with the refugee crisis. I would love to hear how you calibrate your message when you're called on to give testimony before Congress, maybe how that experience was for you and how the aftermath has been as far as seeing impact.
Cindy Huang: So, we talked earlier about the fact that U.S. leadership has waned a bit on refugee issues. I will say even with that change, the U.S. is still such an important voice in the international community, and in the case of Bangladesh and hosting Rohingya, the U.S. is by far the largest donor. And you can say that about a number of crises. So, I took that duty and opportunity very seriously because speaking to members of Congress who hold the purse strings, who are leaders on policy in many respects, it was a really great and humbling experience to be able to share my ideas. What impressed me most about it was the level of engagement. As your listeners and you may have noticed, there's just a lot going on in our country now and a lot going on in Congress. So, I thought, “Okay, well, some people will show up and ask some general questions,” and that was not the case at all.
There was a large, maybe even a dozen members who came in at different points in the hearing, extremely well-informed questions, even things like, “What's the curriculum that Rohingya children are being offered?” People who just know a lot about what's going on. And that honestly gave me a lot of hope in our democracy and the fact that it's not perfect, but people were taking time to understand the issues and understand where U.S. pressure and engagement could make a difference. In terms of follow-up, there has been progress on the Burma Act. It hasn't been passed, but that includes a number of measures that I referenced such as greater accountability and individual and business sanctions on Myanmar. I think you can't ever attribute anything, one individual thing to what you've said in front of Congress, but I do think the chorus of voices really matters. And that's something I would say to those who are listening, who have very bright futures in policy and practice, is that it's really about the ecosystem of change. And I think the more you can understand where the pressure points are, and how you can build alliances, including with people who you don't agree with a hundred percent, or even 50%, it's really important. And I, again, was heartened by the bipartisan nature of support and interest in the issues.
Mwangi Thuita: I'd love to hear about what kind of arguments, in your long experience in both the nonprofit sector and the government, what kind of arguments do you find to be most effective in swaying policymakers? There’s moral arguments that appeal to our values as a nation, or perhaps, human rights and refugee rights based arguments, or perhaps and how to take into account strategic considerations, given it's the U.S. government that you're trying to appeal to?
Cindy Huang: Yeah. It's important. It's a lot of work and it's so important to tailor the message and lift up. We always want to be extremely evidence-based and there are always opportunities, depending on who you're engaging to lift up different aspects of the arguments. One thing that I found in my work, which previously focused more heavily on the economic aspects, is that even with the ministries of finance and the more economic actors, that it is still a combination of factors. And so, I'll give an example, which is that when we were talking to stakeholders in Jordan and we were focused on the potential economic benefits of giving greater rights, we learned that making the argument that increased labor market access in many cases would reduce child marriage and child labor was compelling, because these are issues in places like Jordan and in Bangladesh that the government has been working on and paying attention, even aside of the refugee crisis.
These are issues that they've been working on. So, I think to the extent you can really look at shared interests and make an argument that has many pillars, especially when it comes to policy makers. It's important. And then the last thing I'll say is more of my recent research has been on narrative shift and communications. And it's really important for everyone to remember that policy makers are people too, meaning that stories and human beings, contact with human beings, also makes a big difference. So, for example, I think even though you won't have an RCT to show the evidence around congressional delegations, where you bring members of Congress to different countries, or to refugee resettlement offices in the U.S., I can just tell you from experience, it really makes a difference. And so, how do you combine that in a way that, that uses your time and resources wisely, and those of other members of the coalition? To me, that's the art and science of change, policy change, social change that I love to engage in.
Sonnet Frisbie: Kind of an off-the-wall question, but you've had a really fascinating career, and a lot of it in areas where I would say you have to be somewhat of an idealist to keep your optimism. Is there a book or a person who has had a big influence on you and your ideals and morals surrounding your work?
Cindy Huang: Yeah, there are a number of influential figures in my academic life and just reading through the years, hopefully this doesn't sound overly macabre, but I will never forget reading Victor Frankel's Man’s Search for Meaning, which is about how he survived. He's a psychologist and an intellectual, and also just lived through so much during the Holocaust. And that's that it has been a touchstone for me in terms of, without ever being too harsh on ourselves, to say, what other people who have been through the worst of the worst are able to find in terms of meaning in life, and finding hope? I've just had so much luck and privilege in my life and to be able to use that to try to better the conditions of humanity, I see, as not just a responsibility, but a privilege.
Sonnet Frisbie: So, shifting gears a little bit, we're here at the Harris School of Public Policy, and we have hundreds of classmates who are going to go out into the world after graduation, some of whom have already worked in policy, but definitely will work in organizations, many of them in development, let's say, or NGOs. What are two or three things your experience has taught you about working within organizations like NGOs and government – I know you've also had experience there – and what type of advice would you give to those students?
Cindy Huang: So, the first will be extremely boring, which is that management and bureaucracy can be your friend. I did a PhD in anthropology, so I got in intensive interaction with a variety of academics, and I think it's always wonderful to have time to be free to think and write and reflect. I will say, having worked in larger organizations, that you can do so much, with the leverage and power of a team and a bureaucracy behind you, that is change and opportunity at scale. And there is no brilliant idea out there that is adopted just because it's great and brilliant. There is so much blood, sweat, and tears that goes into getting it adopted and scaled and adopted. So, make that investment, it is hard.
Every year, when it comes time to do annual performance reviews, I think, “Oh my gosh, I don't have time to do this.” But ultimately those are the resources that I have to affect change in the world. So that is one thing that I've learned. I would say it's probably not my natural tendency. So, it's one that I've had to work on. The second is that the world out there is big, but actually this community, and the community that you will work in probably is relatively small. The golden rule, when I first went to the State Department, I saw how some people came in, and maybe they're political appointees for the first time, and they were just a little bit too big for their britches, you know? And I said, “Oh, well, that's going to be the same person.” That desk officer you weren't nice to is going to be your boss and you’re going to interact with them at some important meeting.
And I know again, it sounds pretty basic, but really going in with that spirit that we're in a community that is trying to work together is really important. And then the third piece, which is linked to the first two, is as you move up in the world and I know Harris School students, and anyone else listening will move up in the world. Like how can you also create space to go back to first principles? So, I came into all of this as an anthropologist, really believing that refugees, other affected populations have to be at the heart of what we do. That becomes harder as you move up, because there are a lot more meetings so that you can get to scale and have bigger influence, but how do you maintain that connection? And also, it's just good for the soul, because you're being reminded of why you wanted to embark on this journey in the first place.
Mwangi Thuita: That was fantastic. Thank you so much. And in line with that management and bureaucracy and administration are often things that are underlooked. Policy research and analysis is a little fancier and more attractive. But when you look at the vast landscape of humanitarian aid organizations doing good work to alleviate poverty and suffering around the world, what are some things that you think the industry as a whole could be doing better? Is it greater transparency? Is it more evidence-based approaches? Are there any kind of structural or systemic issues that you think they could improve on?
Cindy Huang: I think in the basket of just do no harm and do basic right by people. I think there's a lot more work that could be done. We've seen a number of cases where, NGOs haven't done the basics to make sure that there is a safe workplace or that beneficiaries aren't exploited or abused in some way. So, I think that is important, and that is linked to a broader issue of transparency and accountability. And I do think it's easy again, to put off some of those issues as less about the core policy, new idea or programs, but we've seen some organizations where really it becomes an existential threat to doing your work if you lose your credibility. So, I think that's one area that's really important.
Another area is, after development, we've tried to grapple with this, but I think we still have a long way to go, which is just really, saying the serenity prayer and saying, “”We outside NGO government, we cannot drive or really do development in a country.” It really is about the people living in that country. And it's really hard to hold on to that humility because there are big problems and there are ways that we can help. So, I think having that, there’s a lot of great both rhetoric and starting to be some practice around “What does it mean to include these populations in the design and execution of projects? What does it mean to really work more closely with governments, while still holding them accountable when they are perpetrators of injustice?”
So, I think that's another big area of work. And finally, just because it's one that's really close to my heart, is bridging what I referenced before, in terms of there being a divide between different sectors, humanitarian and development, or you can look across any number of sectors, of really siloed approaches. And just coming back to that reality that people are whole people who live in communities. So, while we know we need different kinds of technical expertise, what can we do to have a more holistic picture of where indicators can be improved, and also including people in the process of setting those indicators?
Sonnet Frisbie: So, it's a difficult question, but to the point of systemic issues and aid, you recently penned an opinion piece along with a couple of other authors in the Oregonian about the sexual scandal involving the founder of Mercy Corps, Ellsworth Culver, and in it, you and your co-authors posit that the rash of abuse scandals in the development community is actually symptomatic of a broader issue and not simply one-offs. So, I feel like I'd be remiss after what you just said if I didn't ask you about that and what you think the future is in the industry and where you think the fixes are?
Cindy Huang: Yeah. I do stand by what we wrote in terms of it. I think it is often too easy to say, “Oh, well, that was just one bad apple, you know? Oh, okay, well, we didn't catch it that time, but now we have this gold standard policy in place.” I think it is about the development community, but it goes much broader. And we see this in the Me Too movement. And we are working against thousands plus years of patriarchy. So, it's going to be a long journey and we should accept that and take from that, that really nothing can be too much in terms of paying attention to these issues and the investments that we need to make. So, I think it, as with all systemic change issues, we need both the policy change and then we need culture change.
And I think we're at a place now where a lot of organizations, partly in response to the scandals at Mercy Corps and Oxfam and Save the Children, they do have the gold standard policies. So, I do feel we're now at a point where it's really about how we set a tone and a set of values to start changing the culture and also make sure that leadership is resourcing those. We need independent audit functions, independent reporting. We need that to become part of the system. And what does that speak to in the broader picture? I think, in addition to just the general power dynamics across the world, I also think we have to be very attentive to the specific power dynamics when it comes to development and humanitarian programs, which is that we are talking about extremely vulnerable people, in the case of refugees, who have fled their country out of absolute necessity who don't have their belongings, whose family members have been targeted and killed. So, I mean, what do we take into that? We have to understand that good intentions are not enough. Those power dynamics are there, and we do need safeguarding. We need systems in place to mitigate the harm, intentional or unintentional, that can be done in those situations.
Mwangi Thuita: I want to close with two quickfire questions. So, first, how does your background – you said you had a PhD in cultural anthropology – how does your background shape your approach to policy research and implementing interventions?
Cindy Huang: I’d be remiss if I didn't mention that I also did do a Master's in Public Policy.
Mwangi Thuita: Yes, at Princeton, at the Woodrow Wilson School! [laughter]
Cindy Huang: Also an excellent school, alongside Harris. [laughter]
Sonnet Frisbie: That was the right answer. [laughter]
Cindy Huang: So how that affects my approach, and you may have heard it in some of my responses, is that we have to put people at the center, and anthropology still has among the most trenchant critiques of why development programs don't work, because there was a cultural insight or a power dynamic that really put things off kilter. And I will say, that's great, and we're asking tough questions, and now the charge to the next generation is how do we do that in a way that also allows us to make the maximum contribution we can to supporting people in their journeys of development?
Mwangi Thuita: Okay. And the final question is about refugee camps. Having visited refugee camps yourself, and seeing the conditions that people live in there, do you think that they're a necessary evil or something we can realistically work to make obsolete in the near future?
Cindy Huang: I think in the near future, it will still be a mix. And I think that does get the point of what are the tailored solutions that are needed. So, there is evidence that shows that, for some groups of people, camps are really helpful because housing costs are too high elsewhere, and they're not able to work. And so, I think what I would love to see is not the camps where we have generations of people growing up without opportunities, but camps as part of a safety net system, where it does make sense for certain vulnerable populations, but that are really a launching pad for new and better opportunities now and in the future.
Mwangi Thuita: Thank you so much, Dr. Cindy Huang. Thank you. Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Dr. Cindy Huang. Special thanks to Yi Ning Wong for engineering this episode, and Aishwarya Raje for editing. Your interviewers were Sonnet Frisbee, and Mwangi Thuita. We’d like to thank UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson Institute's research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
04.30.20
Police Violence in America | Sam Sinyangwe
University of Chicago Introducer: This is Susan Kraken and you're listening to University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast.
Aishwarya Raje and Mwangi Thuita: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Aishwarya Raje: For the last several years, police violence in America has come to the forefront of public consciousness. It's an issue that can polarize the country, but for years, there lacked a data-driven analysis of police violence on a national level, and concrete policy recommendations on the issue were hard to come by. On this episode of route of conflict, Pearson Fellows, Sonnet Frisbie, and Mwangi Thuita speak with Sam Sinyangwe, activist, data scientist, and Co-Founder of Mapping Police Violence, which is the most comprehensive database of people killed by police. Sam discusses the evidence-based approaches to measuring police violence in America, and the importance of conveying the data to the public and to policy makers in a way that can affect real policy change.
Mwangi Thuita: Sam, thank you so much for being with us today.
Sam Sinyangwe: It's great to be here.
Mwangi Thuita: So, when you spoke to us at Harris last fall, you said that your trajectory changed on August 9th, 2014, which was the day Mike Brown was shot and killed in Ferguson, Missouri. Can you tell us a bit about how you got involved with this issue and why you founded Mapping Police Violence?
Sam Sinyangwe: Sure. So, rewind back to 2014 in the context of the Ferguson uprising. At that time, I was working as a researcher in a research Institute in Oakland, focused on issues of educational inequity. So, really helping to support 61 federally funded communities to build out data systems that could hold all of the different institutions, from schools, to healthcare providers, to afterschool programs, accountable to a common set of metrics and outcomes and results for kids and families. And as you said, my life changed on August 9th when Mike Brown was killed, because what became clear in the days and weeks and months following the outpouring of protestors and communities outraged in the wake of police violence, what became clear was that there was very little data on the national level to help us better understand where police violence is most acute, in terms of which communities are most impacted, which cities have the highest rates of police violence, which cities have the lowest rates of police violence.
And that's sort of the baseline information. That's critical to understanding what's working, what's not working, how you can effectively address this crisis in an evidence-based way. And so that's why I co-founded Mapping Police Violence to be a database. Now it is the most comprehensive database of people killed by police. and the goal of the database is to track every case in which somebody is killed by a police officer in the country. So far, we track between 1100 and 1300 cases a year. We have data now for between seven and eight years of data. And that’s why I've been doing the work, because 1) we need the data to better understand what types of solutions can be effective in addressing the issue of police violence and 2) we need the data to hold institutions accountable to actually implementing those solutions and making sure those solutions get results.
Mwangi Thuita: And can you tell us a bit more about how you organize such a large grassroots effort to collect this amount of data? What kind of logistical hurdles did you have to overcome? How do you mobilize this whole effort?
Sam Sinyangwe: Yeah, so, I mean, first of all, Mapping Police Violence stands on the shoulders of a number of crowdsourced efforts that have emerged over the past several years to try to answer this question of how many people are killed by police in America. And one of the first of those initiatives was Fatal Encounters. At that point in 2014, there were these two databases that existed. One was Fatal Encounters, and the other was killedbypolice.net. Other than those two, the only other sources of data on this issue were the federal government's data, and the federal government only collected data on about a third of the total number of people killed by police, because they were entirely dependent on agencies reporting the data in a consistent and reliable way every single year, across all 18,000 police agencies in America. That methodology was just not an effective methodology.
So Fatal Encounters and killedbypolice sort of filled that gap by just posting the spreadsheet online and updating it every single day. They had a system of Google Alerts where if there was an article that had keywords, like “officer involved shooting” or “police shooting” or “killed by police” it would identify those articles. They would then log basic information about what happened in each of those cases. So, the date, the age of the person, name of the person that was killed by police, a link to the article, and then what I did was merge those two databases together, because neither of them had all the records of the other, and then fill in the gaps that neither database actually addressed. So, at that time, still about half of the total number of records in either database were not quoted by race.
So, in working with looking at information in obituaries and criminal records, databases information, online, social media, we're able to fill in the gap around race. So, 90% of the records in our database are now coded by race, similarly coding for the circumstances of what happened, so was a person armed or unarmed. and that really was working to find everything that was available online, as well as working through public records requests, getting data directly from agencies and getting data in collaboration with the volunteers and organizations across the country that were tracking what was happening in their communities, and putting all that in one place and then visualizing the data, analyzing it and better using it to address the crisis at hand.
Sonnet Frisbie: I'm really glad you mentioned data visualizations. I mean, many of us are either current policy makers or will be in the future. And so, we're often trying to figure out how to make visualizations that convey a really difficult point. I've seen some of your visualizations, you have some really, really striking ones. How have you figured out what worked, has that been an iterative process? How do you figure out what actually impacts a policy maker?
Sam Sinyangwe: Yeah, so, I mean, first of all, just being clear about who your audience is and who you are trying to impact or inform with your data? And for me, it has been not producing content that is strictly accessible only to policymakers or data scientists and researchers, but rather producing content that everybody can understand, that is accessible to a mass movement. Right? I think what's been so different about the protest in 2014 and 2015 and 2016 and the resulting mass movements, not only within Black Lives Matter, but a number of movements that have emerged since then, have been how many people who, weren’t involved in this work before suddenly got involved in the work after witnessing an injustice. In order to leverage that enthusiasm, that participation from millions of people across the country, and to figure out how to translate that energy and then organizing into policy, it requires producing information that is important to convince policy makers, but producing it in a format that everybody can understand and use in their own advocacy efforts, in their own local campaigns, in their own conversations with policymakers and other folks in the community.
And so that has been the goal with visualization is to make it as accessible as possible, to as many people as possible, who have now gotten involved in this work. And so, in terms of principles, I think first and foremost recognizing that the way that people access information today is different than it has been in the past. People have a lot of competing influences for their time. They don't have a lot of time. They are most likely getting information from social media, from Facebook, from Twitter. They’re getting information on their phones. So that means you really only have two or three seconds to hook them, to teach them something that is important and can help them in their own understanding of the issue and then advocacy to address it. So that's really been the goal of the visualizations is to be able to reach that person who's scrolling up their timeline, has two or three seconds to interact with your content, and to immediately teach them something about this issue in those two or three seconds.
So, if you look at the website at mappingpoliceviolence.org, there's one interactive map of the country with about 1200 different pins on that map, each one representing a person killed by police. And it's actually an interactive map that flashes. It has a series of flashes that go across the map that correlate with the date at which the person was killed. And the purpose of the map is quite straightforward. It's to demonstrate how widespread this issue is, how it is not limited to any one city or state, how this really is a national crisis that demands a nationwide mobilization to address it.
Mwangi Thuita: Yeah, and I'm one of those people. I follow you on Twitter. I checked yesterday and I think you have 173,000 followers. So, in merging activism and data science, it's clearly important for you to make your research accessible and usable and actionable as well. I just wanted to ask you more about this intersection between activism and data science, with, the group you were talking about Black Lives matter with, with groups like those which have created a movement that's brought the issue of police violence to the forefront of our national consciousness. Do you think more needs to be done for these groups in their efforts to be coalesced into two institutions and a policy agenda?
Sam Sinyangwe: You know, I think that the challenge with this particular issue is that there is not one federal standard for policing. There's not one federal police agency that, if you just change policy in that one agency, or even at that one level of government, if Congress passes a bill, it's just not going to be sufficient to change policing outcomes in all 18,000 departments across the country, each with their own policies and practices and outcomes and leadership. And so, necessarily, in order to get to change at scale, it's going to require equipping people and organizations and initiatives in as many of those jurisdictions as possible with the tools and the resources and the analyses that it will take them to actually change policy locally. and that will affect the trend line at the nationwide level. We haven't yet seen, as you sort of alluded to, we haven't yet seen change in terms of substantially reducing the number of people killed by police nationwide.
The trendline has remained relatively constant every single year. It was between 1100 and 1300 people killed by police in 2013, the year before the protests. It was about that many people, about 1100 people killed by police in 2019. So, what we have seen are a couple of things that we didn't know five or six years ago that we know now, they're helpful in thinking about how to address this moving forward. So, first and foremost, we know more about what doesn't work. So, we know that some of the initial ideas and proposals that were pretty popular in 2014 have been implemented in many places have been studied and have not achieved the desired result in many of those jurisdictions. So, things like body cameras, there was an incredible randomized controlled trial looking at body cameras and in Washington, DC, the largest ever such study looking at body cameras, they found no impact on reducing police use of force.
So that wasn't a solution. Similarly, implicit bias training is something that's being implemented into police departments across the country. We have yet to see research showing that it actually changes police behavior. At the same time, because now we have the data and we are tracking these outcomes and we're tracking what policies are being passed, what impact those policies are not having, we've identified things that do work. Changing police use of force policies, making them more restrictive, requiring de-escalation, banning shooting at moving vehicles, restricting deadly force to only be authorized as a last resort after officers have exhausted all other alternatives available to them. Those policy changes actually substantially reduced police violence, and we've been tracking that. I mean, you look at the largest cities in the country. many of which implemented these policies. Among the 30 largest cities in the country, police shootings have dropped 40% since the protests began and that's huge, right?
40% is a huge number of people who are alive today that would not be alive if not for reforms that have been implemented, and those reforms occurred because of the protest, because of the pressure, because of the research, because of all of those things coming together and impacting policy at the local level, and in some places, even at the state level. If you look at places like California, they've changed their deadly force standard in part based on the research that we've produced, linking use of force policies to use of force outcomes in terms of killings by police. So, all of that matters, all of that is making an impact in the places that have begun to implement those changes. The problem is, again, this is just a massive scale issue. There are a whole bunch of smaller police departments across the country that have just simply not changed at all, if anything, their outcomes have gotten worse. So, if you look at suburban and rural communities, rates of police violence are actually going up, as they're going down in the cities, which produces that flat trend line nationwide. So there's a lot more work that you have to do.
Sonnet Frisbie: So, I'm glad you mentioned RCTs and body cams, which incidentally, I know are used here in Chicago, which is a bone of contention I believe between the police union and Mayor Lightfoot. But you mentioned there was an RCT, which is not really something that you can do for use of force policies. So, from a statistical standpoint, bit of a wonky question, I guess, but how do you find a valid counterfactual to endeavor to establish some kind of causality when you're looking at use of force policies, since there could be a lot of unobservable attributes of the cities which introduced these limits or don't?
Sam Sinyangwe: Absolutely, it's a huge question. and there's no easy answer to this, right? I think you guys in social science, there are many things that we just simply can't know for sure, because of the number of intervening variables. but what we do know is this: over the past 40 years there has been a thread of research, study after study that has looked at the impact of administrative restrictions on police use of force, in particular deadly force. So, these are the restrictions and use of force policies and the impact that that has on police shootings, early on in that research. So, this really started with a professor in New York named James Fife who studied the NYPD and their changes that they made to their use of force of policy, again, in response to high profile police shooting and massive protests that actually happened in the early 1970s.
And this was really was one of the first, like a landmark study that began to look into changes that NYPD implemented, banning shooting at moving vehicles, requiring officers to use alternatives rather than deadly force, but as soon as those changes were implemented in, I believe, 1974, we saw police shootings, which had gone up every single year before that, began to decline and actually declined ever since in New York. So, now, it's a far smaller number of people shot at by police every year, then were back then. Since then, there've been studies that have looked at a number of other jurisdictions. So, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Detroit, LA, a range of different jurisdictions, and I've shown that after implementing stronger use of force policies, there have been declines in police shootings following that implementation. Again, this isn't a randomized controlled trial, there could be a range of different intervening variables.
What we then showed in 2015 and 2016, we looked at the hundred largest cities in the country. So, this was really just expanding on the existing research literature by applying it to a larger number of police departments, and looked at the level of restrictiveness of the use of force policy, taking into account the restrictions that were recommended by the Police Executive Research Forum of Department of Justice, a range of other standard restrictions that there has begun to have a consensus emerging around, and found that the police departments that had more restrictions in their policies were significantly less likely to kill people in those jurisdictions that did not have those restrictions in place. What we actually have been able to show now, because we've added a lot, and a number of additional years of data to work with, is that those jurisdictions that implemented changes to their use of force policy to make them more restrictive, since 2013, have had the largest reductions in police shootings, both fatal and nonfatal, and many of those restrictions occurred as part of either participating in the Department of Justice Collaborative Reform Program, having a Department of Justice intervention, through a DOJ pattern practice investigation and consent decree, or were departments that just on their own initiative, often in response to community pressure, changed substantially their use of force policies, and made them much more restrictive.
And we've seen that even when you control for things like arrests, assaults on officers, crime rates and a range of other aspects, that the actual use of force policy change remains significant as an explanatory variable in the decline in police shootings in those jurisdictions. So, again, this is something that is very, very hard to study. It's very, very hard to say for sure. But there's a lot more evidence that making those policies more restrictive can impact police violence than there is evidence in support of things like implicit bias training or body cameras, and it sort of makes intuitive sense as well. This is almost akin to the broader gun violence conversation where there's a whole bunch of research showing that states and cities that have more restrictive laws on gun ownership have lower rates of gun homicides. And this is not much different here, the cities that have more restrictive laws on police shootings and police gun violence have lower rates of police gun violence. It's just not, it's not like rocket science, the theory, and more and more with each additional study, we're seeing the impact that those policies can have.
Mwangi Thuita: I'm glad you brought that up. I'm very interested in talking about the relationship between debates around gun control and American gun violence in general. America has one of the highest rates of gun ownership in the world. And the 2nd amendment is a uniquely American creation that sets us apart from, I think, most countries. I myself am from Kenya. And so, understanding gun culture and gun violence in America was quite a culture shock. How do you see the link between America's very unique relationship to guns, which results in high gun ownership rates and also very little gun control regulations? And how do you see the relationship between that and police violence? Are they part of the same issue, are police killings in your view inherently linked to America's relationship to guns?
Sam Sinyangwe: So, I think that that's a really complicated question. I think there's no doubt that the presence of so many firearms in the U.S. is contributing to higher rates of gun violence in general. And there are a lot of police who will cite the number and the rate of gun ownership in the United States as a reason why they are edge and more likely to pull a firearm and believe that their lives are in danger. There is some emerging research that has also looked into rates of gun ownership and rates of police violence at the state level and have also found that states that have more gun ownership have higher rates of police violence. So, I think there is a connection there. I think it's clear there is some sort of relationship and it becomes more difficult to advocate for things like having police be unarmed, as the vast majority of police in the UK, for example, are.
Just not having a gun, it becomes difficult to fight for those things in a context where there are a lot of people with guns, a lot of civilians with guns. At the same time, I think what is also clear is that there are a whole bunch of police shootings and other deadly force incidents that don't involve people with guns. And there is no excuse for that at all. Right? I think you know, when you look nationwide, about half of the people killed by police had a gun and were alleged to have been using it in some way or reaching for it. And this is predominantly based on the police narrative. So, that's probably overestimating things a little bit.
But you know, the other half of people did not have a gun and in any other country, it would be highly unlikely for the police to kill that person. When you look at a country like Japan, with about 140 million population, a huge country, they haven't had anyone, any civilians killed by police in the past decade in Japan. And it's not like they're not dealing with people who have knives or baseball bats, or who are unarmed and fighting people, like all those things, the police deal with routinely in contexts like Japan and contexts like the UK, in much of Europe. And nevertheless, the police don’t kill people. It's exceedingly rare for police to have killed people in those circumstances, whereas in the U.S., it's almost treated like if the person had a knife or if the person had let's say a bat or a stick, or even if they were unarmed, but they were alleged to have been punching somebody or something.
There's almost an assumption that that the police were justified in killing that person. Whereas anywhere else among wealthy nations, it's very rare to see the police actually do that. I was actually in a cab in London and the man who was driving the cab. He asked me what I did. We started talking about policing in the U.S. and he was saying there was this case that I saw recently in the news. And there was somebody who just had a knife and the police shot them, and it didn't make any sense to me. And I think in that moment, I sort of realized how the culture in the U.S. is so different that people really just assume that if the person had a knife, that the police were justified in killing them, and that's not always the way that that things have to be, it's not the way things are outside of the U.S., and it shouldn't be the way that things are in the U.S.
Mwangi Thuita: So, recently researchers at UChicago received $1.2 million from the National Collaborative on Gun Violence research to develop a police training program. And some of that is spearheaded by Harris professors like Oeindrila Dube, and they're working with the Chicago Police Department to increase police safety and community safety by training officers to process high-stakes situations more completely and more accurately. So, this is supposed to allow officers to make better decisions and reduce the extent of excessive use of force, including officer-involved shootings. What are your initial thoughts on this approach, in terms of training police officers on situational decision-making?
Sam Sinyangwe: So, it's tough. I don't know. I think the problem with training is it's very difficult to study the impact of police training. Methodologically, it's very tough because there are so many different training models. The qualities of the trainings vary, the things that are required to be a part of that training depend, like the modules depend by city, they depend by state. It’s very hard to isolate the impact that participating in a training for a particular officer would have versus another officer. We do know the trainings can change police attitudes, implicit bias trainings can impact police attitudes on race and other issues. But we just haven't seen conclusive evidence that trainings are changing police behavior in ways that reduce use of force doesn't mean it's not happening.
It's very hard to establish methodologically. I'm hopeful that this training can make a difference. I am also mindful that one of the things that we know we can do right away is actually scaling back the role of the police and responding to a range of types of situations, that can be handled by other providers, mental health providers, social workers, community gang intervention, outreach workers. So, if I were making an investment in addressing police violence and reducing police violence, that investment wouldn't go towards training the police, it would go towards scaling up models, first responder models that don't involve the police. They just have no likelihood of escalating to deadly force because the people intervening are not using deadly force. So, you look at the cahoots model in Eugene, Oregon, for example, and they have a huge number of their 911calls are now diverted to mental health providers who are the first responders. For instance, that may involve someone having a mental health crisis or homelessness or range of situations that police currently are involved with and often times involve themselves in ways that escalate the situation further.
Sonnet Frisbie: That’s really helpful, really interesting. I wanted to go back a little bit to, talking about driving change and getting buy-in, and you mentioned our federal system and how it makes it often difficult to get sort of large changes. Although on the other hand, you have the possibility potentially to get quicker change on a smaller scale. I'd love to hear where you feel like you've seen real differences being made and whether you've come up with like a theory of change over the last few years that you've been doing this.
Sam Sinyangwe: Yeah. So, I think first and foremost, what is important for people to know is that there have been cities, there have been large areas of the country that have made substantial progress in reducing police violence, particularly when it comes to deadly force. And that is true in places like Oakland where the city went from an average of between seven and eight police shootings a year, just six or seven years ago, and every single year prior to that was between seven and eight police shootings, and then dramatically reduced it now to between zero and one police shootings a year over the past three or four years. And that's substantial progress. Lives saved. As I said, in the largest cities, the largest 30 cities in the country, there's been a reduction of police shootings by 40%.
So, change can definitely happen and is happening in some places, some places more than others, even Chicago. Chicago police shootings have gone down, I believe about 70% since 2011, which is huge. And looking at all of those changes, looking at the places that have reduced police violence and examining some of the factors, sort of the ingredients, as you're referring to, that actually can produce change. There are a couple of things that come to mind, first and foremost, organizing matters, right? I think when you look at the places that have made changes, there are cities that have a pretty sustained and dedicated organizing base, where they can get people out into the streets. They can pack the city hall, and the city council chambers with people who are testifying and holding elected leadership accountable.
So that matters. so resourcing investing in those efforts and sustaining that organizing is a critical ingredient. I think the other piece is an analysis of the policies and practices of the department and being willing to actually change those policies and practices to do a couple of things. 1) Strengthening the use of force standards of the department 2) strengthening the accountability structure within the department. We're seeing some departments begin to do that at the individual officer level, through the use of early warning systems and using a predictive technology to actually identify which officers will be using force at higher rates, or the next officer to shoot somebody, and intervening before that happens. Also, at the department level establishing oversight structures that have the power to effectively hold police accountable and discipline officers and subpoena documents and witnesses in order to get to the bottom of misconduct cases.
I mentioned earlier the role of the Department of Justice in forcing departments to implement changes that they otherwise would not have. As I mentioned, many of the departments that have actually reduced rates of police shootings substantially over the past six or seven years have been departments that have had a Department of Justice intervention. So, Vice News did a great investigation of this. and they got access to all the police shootings data for a group of the largest law enforcement agencies, 40 or 50 largest in the country. And they found that those departments like Oakland, like Seattle, like Chicago, like Baltimore that had Department of Justice interventions that were required to change their policies required to strengthen their accountability systems, actually did see some results from that saw a reduction in police shootings following those interventions.
The problem is that again, all of this is happening at different levels. So, at the federal level now, with the current administration, they're not willing at all to engage in those investigations, those consent decrees. So, we sort of lost that tool. Now it's at the state level, we're relying on AGS to do that and except for in a few cases, they refuse to do so. So, it's a mix of things that are important. Organizing, policy change, and then interventions from the federal government that have all come together in some places to get results.
Mwangi Thuita: So, a lot of your work in the area of police violence, it seems like it's motivated by, our overarching goal of addressing structural racism in the United States. And we know that there is an element of structural racism in the way that police departments handle use of force disproportionately, in a way that negatively affects African Americans and other minority groups. So, while it's important to collect data and do rigorous analysis and present this to the public and policymakers, do you think that's enough to convince people to pursue change? It's still hard for some people to believe that racism is an issue in the United States, even today. So, is there an ideological factor that makes arguments based on data, and sufficient on their own and in your work, how do you see the two things, the activism addressing America's legacy of racism working with your data analysis?
Yeah, so, I mean, first of all, we don't have to convince everybody, right? I think this idea that everybody has to understand and acknowledge racism in order for us to make progress, it's just not true, right? We've never been in a place where across the board, people understood and rejected racism. It's always been hard fought. It's always been something where there has been an opposition that's been highly organized, with a lot of people on their side who've been resisting any effort to move forward any type of racial progress. At the same time, I think we have more than enough people who are willing to not only accept that racism is real, but also willing to do something about it. We have more than enough people to actually make progress. Right? And I think the challenge is less convincing new people – I mean, if you're not convinced by now, after all that's been happening, I don't think our resources are best spent trying to convince you, right?
I think you are by definition at this point, difficult to convince, even despite all of the both emotional and data-driven arguments that have happened over the past several years. At the same time, if you look at survey research, it's actually a majority of Americans that believe that racism not only still exists, but that we still need to implement further change in order to achieve racial equality in this country. And those numbers have been increasing over time since the movement began. When the movement began, it was actually not a majority of Americans who believe that. Now it's about 59%. And we're talking about a shift of about 40 million white Americans and their attitudes and beliefs about this issue that have happened since the movement began.
And that's important. Now the question is how do we organize the people that we already have, and the people that are willing to listen, so that we can actually build power together and achieve these changes? And that's an organizing challenge, right? It's a challenge that you see in many different mass movements, where you have millions and millions – if you think about climate change, for example, you have billions of people who support the need to address climate change, and yet how many people are actively being organized and engaged in advocacy for climate justice on a daily basis? Not even a fraction of that total number of people. It's the same for police officers, the same for other forms of gun violence, for any of these issues, immigration, same thing.
There are always more people out there than are current that would be involved in the work that are willing to get involved in the work, that might have unique skills and capacities, that could add value to the work. More people that are interested in getting involved than are currently involved, or the existing infrastructure of organizations has the capacity to onboard. I think solving that problem is actually the more important problem than figuring out how to convince more people to get involved. I think people are already convinced, they're reaching out, they're sharing content, they want to get involved, but they're just not enough pathways for people to get involved in meaningful and actionable ways to address issues that are often complex and are localized. So, you may be interested in addressing police violence, but in order to make progress on that in your community, that requires understanding what are the key levers of power and change in your city or in your county, and what are the key outcomes that need to be changed with policy?
So, it's different by community. In some places, you may actually have relatively lower rates of death before, so, police use of force in general, but much higher rates of arrests in particular drug arrests and drug arrest disparities by race, or ticketing and fines and fees, civil asset forfeiture. There are a range of different dimensions to this problem. And so, part of this is making information as accessible and actionable as possible to help people in each community understand how they can get involved in the most meaningful ways that are driven by an analysis of, what are the biggest problems? And data is a tool to help us do that analysis.
Sonnet Frisbie: All right, Sam, you've been very generous with your time. Thanks so much. Thank you.
Aishwarya Raje: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Sam Sinyangwe. To learn more about the topics discussed on today's episode, visit policescorecard.org, or mappingpoliceviolence.org. Thanks to UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support of this series. For more information on the Pearson institutes, research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
03.09.20
Future of Defense: Big Data and Cyber Warfare | Liam Collins
Aishwarya Raje and Mwangi Thuita: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Sonnet Frisbie: Hey, this is Sonnet Frisbie.
Haz Yano: And I'm Haz Yano.
Sonnet Frisbie: We're both currently master’s students at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy. And today we are joined by Colonel Liam Collins. Colonel Collins is the Executive Director of the Madison Policy Forum and the Viola foundation. He's a retired Army, Special Forces Colonel and former Director of the Combating Terrorism Center and Modern War Institute at West Point. We covered two main topics with him 1) the measurement revolution in national defense and 2) cyber warfare in the Russia-Ukraine context.
Haz Yano: Americans are the baby boomer generation who remembered the nightly enemy kill counts from the Vietnam war and that ominous feeling during the period that this was not how to measure success. Indeed, someone claimed that we didn't even know what success in Vietnam should even look like. Moving forward and looking at the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, Colonel Collins talks about how U.S. forces continue to have challenges in trying to identify measures of effectiveness and what should constitute so-called significant actions. He is on a mission to train military and civilian defense leaders to ask better questions. The surprising solution: train them to think like statisticians.
Sonnet Frisbie: We discussed cooperation between practitioners and academics and how that relationship works in an ideal world to further the study of conflict. Who should study, what, how does data get shared and analyzed? Then in the second half of the show, we take advantage of Colonel Colin's expertise on Russian aggression against Ukraine and others, to ask about the present and future of hybrid warfare. We'll talk about how this interlaces with information operations and the limitations of cyberwarfare.
Haz Yano: So, starting off, you recently penned an article for the online journal, War on the Rocks, with UChicago’s very own Ethan Bueno de Mesquita along with Kristen DeCaires and Jake Shapiro. So, the article offered some thoughtful insights on how the defense community is failing to take full advantage of the measurement revolution in thinking about modern conflict. Can you offer some specific examples, maybe some personal ones where you saw defense leaders making erroneous decisions based on the misuse or misinterpretation of data?
Colonel Liam Collins: Yeah, I mean, if you go back, this has been a problem for a long time. I mean, during the Vietnam War, we’re kind of aware the dominant metric that they use with the body count, which clearly didn't work. But I would argue, even in Iraq when we're looking at counterinsurgency, I think we got a little better, we had a lot more metrics to go with there. But the one that really kind of aggravated me was the one we call SIGACTS, right? Which was significant activity. And what it measured in terms of significant activity was basically hostile fire incidents. And so, just by calling it, giving it that name, significant activities kind of meant that everything else was devalued and gave it extra weight than it probably shouldn't have. And so, even then we were biasing one set of data over the others. It probably wasn't the best indicator in terms of what we were trying to accomplish there. And so, it’s repeatedly problematic in the defense industry or defense community for a variety of reasons.
Haz Yano: In particular, the article notes how senior defense leaders are like woefully under-trained in statistics and data analysis causing them to misinterpret the conflict data and in turn develop counterproductive strategies. But the way you're talking about it also seems to be just a complete misunderstanding of not just like the data statistics or just the conceptual pieces, but also just a misunderstanding of what should be considered significant in conflict.
Colonel Liam Collins: Right. So, part of it is that, and then part of it is they just really haven't had the training and education on that. So, most of that's kind of at the tactical operational level, but not really understanding those aspects once they get out of the conditional fight, right? It's real easy, think of like a World War II, right? It's really easy to measure success, right? You just look at where the line is on the map, where's the line of control. Are you moving closer to Berlin or are you not moving closer to Berlin? It's a lot easier to determine how your performance is, but in most of our modern conflicts, it's not that simple to figure out where you're at. It’s not for lack of trying, right? I mean, so organizations are constantly trying to assess their effectiveness.
And so, what they're doing is often relying on quantitative indicators, right? Some quantitative metrics that tell them if they're succeeding or not, but because of the complex world, right? Too much information, overwhelming complexity, they're trying to take cognitive shortcut. And so, some kind of indicator or a dominant indicator in terms of a strategy, is a strategy succeeding or failing, and then understanding different cognitive biases that you have, right? If you have four or five different metrics you can choose, right, the bias to choose the one that actually tells you your story, that you're succeeding. So it's not, there's all these cognitive and psychological aspects that also explain why we're not good at it.
Haz Yano: So how prevalent would you say this problem is currently within the higher echelons of the defense community? Not just military, but also like the civilian defense leaders? I mean, are there any like enlightened leaders or thinkers or like a shift in the way people are thinking about the problem?
Colonel Liam Collins: I mean, I'm not going to name names, but they want to do better. There's the psychological aspects, the lack of education and understanding how to actually get better at it. I'll give you another example. If we look at Ukraine, right? And what, if we go back to earlier on in the conflict with Ukraine, should we provide more aid to the Ukrainians? Right. And so, Susan Rice is a national security advisor and coined this term lethal aid, right? We wouldn't provide lethal aid to the Ukrainian, just non-lethal aid. First, I don't understand lethal and non-lethal aid, after 25 years in the military, it's defensive aid. But second of all, it's understanding what is your theory of the world, and then looking for the evidence that will support.
You got to identify what evidence would support the theory or contradict the theory. So, if you're thinking of Ukraine, some argue it’s international relations theory of realism, right? So, it's a response. The more we push and NATO's expanded, it's a natural reaction for Russia to push back. So, if we give Ukrainians more aid, well, what are the Russians going to do? Right? If we give them javelin weapons, a really state-of-the-art anti-tank weapon, the Russian response should be to be more aggressive. That's what we'd expect. But if in turn, the theory that explains why the Russians are being aggressive is more of a cultural explanation, it's Russian imperialism, or maybe it's a domestic explanation? They want to have an enemy, well, then providing this aid is not going to warrant a more drastic response from the Russians.
Cause you don't want to trip into a World War III scenario with the Russians. But if you just kind of assume this is a response without actually testing it, then you’re conceding politically your policy options to them. In this case, we ultimately gave them javelin missiles. And the rhetoric at the beginning of in 2016 was like, if you do this, then the Russian rhetoric was, we're going to ramp up our response and we're going to get more aggressive. And then by the summer of 2017, it was clear we were going to give them the missiles, their rhetoric changed and was kind of like, “Hey, this won't change anything,” we're still going to continue support for Ukraine. So, it kind of supported the second theory. But if you haven’t identified that evidence, what will support which theory, and it's not always that quantitative evidence, right? It's qualitative as well. That helps support a theory.
Sonnet Frisbie: It sounds to me like you see some drawbacks as well as benefits to the measurement revolution and maybe you're advocating for a smarter measurement revolution. So, making sure that we measure what, what actually matters,
Colonel Liam Collins: Correct. it's understanding, right? What if it's a causal relationship and understanding what relationship matters? We run a course and everybody there hears the terms, correlation and causation. And they're not the same. And in the first 10 minutes, we pretty much everybody that they don't understand it as well as they think they did. And it depends on what you're doing, right? If you're a firefighter, then as long as correlation is all that matters, right? If you see smoke, there's probably fire. That doesn't mean the smoke causes a fire, but you can go there, right? If you want to inspect restaurants, then you might look at low Yelp ratings, right? Because those are ones typically have more health problems. They're correlated. It doesn't mean the one causes the other necessarily, if you have limited resources in the city of Chicago, then that's where you're going to apply those limited resources, inspect restaurants. And so, it's the same kind of in the defense community. It's trying to figure out what is the relevant metric or metrics that will help you determine that?
Sonnet Frisbie: How do you inculcate that kind of thinking, not just amongst military professionals, but in general? And then how do you make sure that that kind of thinking is pushed all the way to the top, where you have people making the strategic decisions about what to measure?
Colonel Liam Collins: I think on that, it comes from education and examples of where you've had successes, because I think fundamentally, most people want to do smart policy options. A lot of these aren't necessarily Republican or Democrat, they're kind of bipartisan, or even if they’re partisan, you want to make a good one that's informed on decision. And so, I think a good chunk of it is education and getting it inculcated from the start. I mean, another example is when I was at the Modern War Institute at West Point, we would do with some of our cadets, they would do projects. And so, one of them was for a civil affairs unit and they were trying to evaluate measures of effectiveness for their civil affairs units. And too often, what we measure is measures of performance, right?
How much money, how much are we pushing in here? And when I talked to the unit, I said, well, how do you actually measure if you're effective? And they said they have no idea, right? So, if it's a shorter-term project, it's harder to do, right? But if it's going to be a multi-year project, it's thinking from the onset, how do we actually measure if we're effective. How do we actually know if we're being effective? And then, how do we actually measure that? And so, you're thinking of it, you're actually doing it, somewhat of a controlled experiment. You have limited civil affairs assets, look for two identical towns that have some similar characteristics, you apply the treatment in one, you don't apply the treatment in the other, ideally more than just one, because there could be other things at play. But you do this and kind of over a year cycle or whatever, you might do public opinion polls or whatever, but have that as part of the project from the onset, thinking about actually true assessments to measure how you're going to be effective before you go and spend that assets. And a lot of that's in the developmental world as well for the State Department, how do we actually measure. If we're doing that, we can base it historically. We know some things are going to be more successful than others, but maybe this country you're applying it to is unique in some way that it's not going to be effective.
Sonnet Frisbie: The military is going to be conducting large-scale randomized controlled trials with its strategy and tactics.
Colonel Liam Collins: Well, what you want is you want this strategy, but you want to be able to test it like an experiment.
Sonnet Frisbie: Gotcha.
Haz Yano: So, you mentioned this in the article as well, but the need for increased education and training for people in the defense community to better understand what good metrics are to use of big data, et cetera. Specifically, you and your colleagues suggest incorporating classes on evidence-based, decision-making into different levels of professional military education. And I think the example that you provide with the Civil Affairs Unit and other things that we've seen recently, like in Vietnam, indicate that this kind of thinking is really valuable at all levels of leadership in the military, whether it be at the tactical platoon level or higher up with generals at the strategic level. But what exactly would this kind of training and education look like? I mean, are we talking collegiate level of classrooms, statistics classes? Are we looking at in-depth case studies? Are we looking at like incorporating these kinds of metrics, or is this kind of thinking into simulations, war games, joint exercises?
Colonel Liam Collins: No. I mean, to be a leader, understanding the data, you just have to be able to ask the questions of the analysts to make sure that they're not overlooking something. So, you don't have to go to college or take a graduate level statistics course. It's great if you have, but you don't need to have that. We’ve found pretty good success just with a two-and-a-half-day executive education course. So, really you're just talking a handful of hours incorporating at the right level within the professional military education, in the military or the State Department or others, in a lot of these organizations, the CIA as well, they all have different kinds of professional schooling opportunities outside of the formal civilian education and just giving them the tools to understand, “Okay, what is correlation? What is causation?”
I measuring my mission? What are the unintended consequences? An example we like to use is okay, you're probably a little too young to remember, but the original Miami Vice back in the eighties, right? It was trying to stop the drug routes in the Caribbean. And it was very effective at stopping the drug routes into the Caribbean. Did it stop drugs coming to the U.S.? Not at all, all they did was move to another area and basically created the landline or the land routes through Mexico. And so, did we really accomplish what we want? If you said, “Hey, we just want to stop transiting of drugs to the Caribbean,” it was very successful. We want to stop transit of drugs into the U.S., completely unsuccessful. You could argue it helped probably create the drug cartels that you have there now. And so thinking about those things in not just your narrow mission, what are you ultimately trying to accomplish, and are you being effective? So, kind of providing those kinds of examples for them to think about.
Haz Yano: Would you say there's like a big demand or an appetite for this kind of education or training within the defense community right now? Or is it still kind of completely, like, people don't even realize that this is what is needed?
Colonel Liam Collins: I’d say probably a mix. I think they don't realize it's needed, or if some do, I think they're still overly focused on the, “Let's just focus purely on kind of conventional military operations. Let's get really, really good at that,” but it's a balance of, okay, maybe we spend a few less hours doing that, but a few more hours doing other things that are also important outside of that one mission. So, it's balancing the hours they have, where they spend it, and I think the balance is too much on kind of conventional military operations. And by doing that, we're assuming risk in all the other kinds of operations that we have to do.
Haz Yano: So, it sounds like this is part of a large discussion about whether to focus our military resources on conventional warfare or on irregular warfare. I mean, a lot of analysis on Iraq and Afghanistan seems to indicate that the importance of distinguishing between measures of performance and measures of effectiveness is especially crucial in counterinsurgency. I mean, would you say this is an element of that dichotomy?
Colonel Liam Collins: Yeah. I mean, that's an element and there's always a challenge when you're out there actually in it, it is trying to get balance. Getting the perfect information or getting certainty and you're trading off certainty for time. Right? And so, in that environment, like developmental projects, you can take more time, kind of get a good assessment, figure out how you're doing and redo it. In a fight, it's a little bit harder to figure that out. And that's kind of in all things, I mean, early on when we were looking for former regime element leaders, Alcaide in Iraq, it's the same challenge, right? Do you go after the target that you find, kind of this low-level guy, or do you try to build the network? For us, it was learning how to build it, like a organized crime ring in the U.S., dismantling that. Well, if you go after every little person and try to get them, you never really get anywhere eventually. Right? You got to figure out how to get to take down the entire network and it takes patience on that.
Sonnet Frisbie: So I want to go back to what you were mentioning earlier about the military needing to investigate its own actions and use that data to then generate better decision-making. How would you characterize the balance between military practitioners and researchers cooperating and sharing information? Because, of course, the military has and will of course in the future generate a lot of data on its operations. Researchers would love access to that, but then they also, of course, want to publish their results, whereas the military might have some very understandable feelings and restrictions on the dissemination of that data.
Colonel Liam Collins: Yeah. It's kind of a complicated story, but I think most times, most people in the military want it to be public because it's useful to them. And our advantages really are our leadership or our mission command as we call it. So, if, to me, if you put it behind a closed-door system where you need your ID card to get on there, nobody's going to get that data. It's great if you have it, but none of your own people are reading it. And so, I think if it's out there, then anybody can get it, but we can leverage it better than anybody else. But in terms of the data, I had a colleague write an article about how you would think we have all this data, cause back in the day, it was write letters and do all this kind of thing in paper copies, but a lot of times that data just gets purged when units change over, just kind of erased and gone.
And so, the data isn't always there as you would think. I think usually, I mean, General Patraeus would bring academics out there and have them kind of study it, whatever he could learn from them that would be helpful. I think there's just more of a desire to do that, and it's just kind of pairing up the right people. I mean, we had great success in the Combating Terrorism Center getting documents, declassified, right? Cause that's typically the challenge, depending on who owns the classification, but anytime we can show Al-Qaeda for who they are, it kind of undermines who they are. They’re hypocritical in what they preach and practice in a lot of cases. So, anything to undermine the organizations a win.
Sonnet Frisbie: This podcast is in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict. So, there are a number of faculty members here doing really interesting research in conflict zones and in sometimes indirectly defense related topics. In which areas specifically, do you see the most potential for academics and researchers to make a concrete contribution to the defense literature? Is it in doing the statistical analysis on the large data sets or perhaps in behavioral research, things like mediation and conflict?
Colonel Liam Collins: I think probably the area that the most help is probably conflict resolution. I mean, I always would jokingly tell people it’s real easy to take down a government, but really hard to kind of start one up and get it running. And so, I think that's probably it, and it's hard because the total number in the data is pretty small, but trying to get a better understanding of how you can transition into conflict resolution and maintain a lasting peace, and the things that go into that, counterinsurgency figures into that. That’s kind of where I see why there needs to be more help. Where does development fit into that? Where does economic aid fit into that? Are we just fueling the insurgency? Are we actually helping the counterinsurgency? And I think there's a lot of uncertainty on that. Drones, right? A lot of work's been done on this in recent years, but do they create more insurgents or terrorists than we're killing or is it being effective? And I think more work needs to be done on that.
Sonnet Frisbie: You bridge that gap in many ways, you are an academic and also a retired military professional. If you were building that pipeline, the academia and defense pipeline, how would you construct it? How would you improve identifying information gaps where academic research might be beneficial and then providing that access in a concrete way?
Colonel Liam Collins: Yeah. I mean, it's just figuring out how to have better collaboration. I mean, one is investing in intellectual capital. It’s more and more important as that complexity of the world increases. So, increasing the number of officers and possibly senior noncommissioned officers that go to graduate programs so that they have the right intellectual tools. They need to understand it. That's part of it. But also, while they're in schools, they're meeting academics, they have connections they can reach back to. A lot of stuff’s built on relationships versus organizational construct. And so, they can reach back to peers or at least understand, “Hey, I need some help. I can just call up our friend to come out here instead of not knowing where to start.” But a lot of it is just kind of going out and seeing it.
And that was the success we had with the Combating Terrorism Center. We would go overseas and then we would see a problem that they wouldn't necessarily see, or they wouldn't know how to address. Early on, it was the Haqqani network. Who are they? Are they somebody that we can engage in dialogue with? And so, what we did was look back, okay, who did the Haqqani say in their own documents, going back for a decade? And it gives you a pretty good picture of what the organization is. And so, you look in and you understand the organization better, and you can make an informed decision about how likely it is that they are going to be partners you can work with. But you don't see those problems until you're down there collaborating with one another. So, it takes kind of that collaboration throughout.
Haz Yano: So, we're going to take a really quick break here and we'll be right back.
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Haz Yano: So, welcome back. let's go and pivot to a different topic now. So, that's another one that you've written about quite a bit, just shift towards the topic of cyber warfare, particularly as it pertains to Russian aggression in Ukraine. You highlight some of the developments in this field and the number of articles you wrote for the Marvin Warren Institute back in 2018. Can you expand on this a little bit?
Colonel Liam Collins: So, I spent a couple of years from 2016 to 2018, going back and forth with General Abizaid as a Senior Defense Advisor to Ukraine for Defense Reform. So, got to kind of research and see kind of what they're doing over there. And they’ve basically been using since 2014, that area really is a test bed to test their equipment, test cyber capabilities, test their information operations against a real enemy and seeing some pretty significant effects coming out of that. And so, in terms of cyber, so the first time we saw a cyber used with a conditional military operation was in 2008 by the Russians when they went into Georgia. And then they kind of perfected that over the next few years. While they were focusing on improving what they learned from their incursion into Georgia, we were focused on Iraq and not really paying attention.
And so, really what you see now, or what we've seen in Ukraine is the ability to kind of combine cyber information operations and lethal operations all together to have an effect. And so, that's kind of unique. And so, the one thing, I guess you could thank the Russians for, because before Ukraine, everybody kind of understood cyber as a threat, kind of at the strategic level, are you going to get our banking systems? Are you going to get some kind of a infrastructure, command and control thing, but they've shown how cyber can actually have lethal effects at the tactical level. So, I guess we can thank them for that. So, we can understand that the cyber person isn't just off on an island now, they are more valuable.
Haz Yano: I feel like it wasn't that long ago when you had defense experts or people in the establishment saying that cyber threats are really limited in their military applicability due to the low or the unreliable rate of success. I remember reading back in like 2010, 2011 the likelihood of successfully hacking and manipulating an adversary's network for military applications was too low to be reliably employed. And that's clearly no longer the case as we see in Ukraine. So, all that said, you said we took our eye off the ball in 2008 because the U.S. has focused so much in the Middle East. Are western militaries now, such as the U.S. and NATO adequately prepared to deal with these evolving cyber threats? I think there's an understanding that the threat is real, as we saw by the elevation of U.S. cyber command to a full, independent unified combatant-command just a couple of years ago, but I mean, where are we in this?
Colonel Liam Collins: Yeah. I mean, cyber is a little more challenging to get at because you use a weapon once, the coding or whatever, you only get to use it once, and then it's out of the bag. People can copy it, or whatever else. Cyber is a little trickier, but I think if you look at collectively at what the Russians are doing across the board and understanding the democratization of technology in the states that lost our monopoly of violence. And so, I prefer to look at, okay, let's look at the capabilities the Russian have and whether you face them or someone else as this technology diffuses. That's what the concern is. So, you've got the cyber, you got the information operations, but also their electronic warfare capability. And I would say our defense establishment, by and large, has not and is not capable or not responding adequately to what we're seeing done. There's a lot of rhetoric to it. But what we always want to do is defer to a technological solution, a technical solution. And oftentimes it might just be changing how we operate. But if that's inconvenient, then we don't want to do it.
Haz Yano: So, would you say, instead of coming up with these technical responses to these threats, it's, again, a matter of changing the way we think about the problems, similar to what you mentioned about the measurement revolution?
Colonel Liam Collins: It's both. I mean, technology has a role in it. It's kind of like – think of the improvised, explosive devices or IEDs in Iraq that were killing a lot of American soldiers and Allied soldiers, Coalition soldiers. So, for that, a lot of people’s solution was we just need to get jammers. We need to have some kind of technology, build this giant IED task force. That costs millions or billions of dollars and 400 people to look for a solution to this problem. It's a weapon or a technique. Last time I looked, we're not looking for a solution to stop bullets or stop field artillery rounds. It’s not possible. The IED taskforce, kind of its original origination kind of split into two, one Joint IED Defeat Organization, JIEDO and then Asymmetric Warfare Group, and others were more like General Cody, who is a Vice Chief of Staff in the Army saying we got to get left of them.
We got to find the placers of this, right? It's all about war fighting. It’s a human fight. We have to find the humans that are putting them out there and that's what we have to counter. And so, it's the same thing for this, right? Those technology or tools, but you have to figure out how to, how to fight the humans or what the role the technology plays in there. But we have a bias to look for technology as a solution. If there was talk of a revolution in military affairs during the first Gulf War, this is the way future of combat will be, we'll just have sensors out there. We can identify everything, standoff weapons, engage them. That works well in the desert, but anywhere else, it's not really helpful. It didn't help me in the streets of Ramadi or Fallujah in 2003.
Haz Yano: If I rephrase what you've kind of talked about, instead of a dedicated unit or group of specialists in the realm of cyber, it's more about educating that infantry brigade commander on how cyber is going to affect the battlefield and how they will need to train their personnel to respond to those threats.
Colonel Liam Collins: That's right. Exactly. And it's not to say that you don't need to have a separate cyber command more at the strategic level, but you have to figure out how to integrate them at the tactical level. I mean, an example, like an information operation. So, in the U.S. Army, the functions are diffused across the staff and it's really an afterthought, right? They come up with a plan and then we kind of figure out where does IO maybe fit into this plan that we're doing. And for the Russians, it's completely reversed. IO, information operations, may be their main effort and they're figuring out how their lethal or kinetic operations kind of support that effort. And it's a major consideration when they're doing their planning. And for us, it really is just an afterthought.
Sonnet Frisbie: Yeah. Can you talk a little bit more? I know that Russia and Ukraine has used some information operations tactics, sometimes in conjunction with their other operations tactics like blackmailing military members or man in the middle where they insert a Russian operative in between conversations. Can you talk a little bit about the information operations piece of this and how we see them even expanding that perhaps beyond Ukraine to non-battlefield situations?
Colonel Liam Collins: So, when in Ukraine I mean, what we saw in some cases during the early part of the conflict where most of the fighting was done, but what someone coined pinpoint propaganda. So, basically soldiers would have their cell phones out there, which you, you really don't want to have in combat, but everybody seems to be dependent on these things. So, they would have them out there. They would get an artillery barrage, would come and hit them. And then right after the artillery barrage, everybody in the area would get a text on their phones that said, “Is your corrupt oligarch president worth dying for? Go home and protect your family.” So, it can have real effects if you have – in the U.S., I don't think that would have a major effect on our soldiers, but in Ukraine where you had a president that would have an approval rating at like 15% or something, it would rival our congressional approval rating, then it can have a real effect.
And so, tying those together and to broaden that, where do you see it going beyond that? I mean, to the Russia again, they kind of perfected after 2008 Russian-Georgian War, they were trying to argue that it was a responsibility to protect, and they were protecting the south from the aggressors, which were the Georgians. But both sides were somewhat at fault, but I think more people believe that the Georgians were preempting a Russian aggression that was going to happen no matter what. So, we were just going to do it on favorable terms. It was preemption by the Georgians. And then Russia is kind of like, “Hey, we lost this major IO information operation that was trying to blame the Georgians for the start of it.” And we were going in to protect. And so, that's the reinvesting in RT, and this just misinformation, right? Just enough misinformation out there so that it buys some time.
Sonnet Frisbie: Due to various moral and legal considerations, the U.S. often can't, or won't apply similar tactics in its hybrid warfare as perhaps Russia would, for example. Does this mean that we are handicapped in the information operations field? How do we think about defense versus offense and how do we engage?
Colonel Liam Collins: I think it provides them some advantages, I guess you could say. It doesn't handcuff us., It’s hard with the internet because you don't know who you're influencing, and you can influence American citizens. So, it's challenging in that regard. But it doesn't mean you have to concede defeat on that. I mean, we have the same problems with countering violent extremism. What's effective against that? How do we go in there and do that? I think it's just more being aware and smarter about it, so, okay, we know they're trying to influence elections. You can try to take down websites and work with that, but part of it is also having a slightly smarter electorate, so they aren't going to fall prey to that.
You’re not going to get them all but try to influence the ones that really are trying to make an informed decision. And so, it does give them some advantages, just like the same thing. And a lot of enemies we face aren't going to follow other rules of war. Every mosque I ever went to in Iraq, it was an ammo storage depot, right? Because they think we aren't going to go in there because it's a holy place, a protected site, but you can go in if you need to do. The same thing, they'll put their artillery systems right next to schools, hospitals, those kinds of things making us force our hand and worry about collateral damage.
Sonnet Frisbie: It seems that often we are reactive instead of proactive, especially when it comes to false narratives or fake news stories. So, denying a story rather than pushing out proactive narratives. How do you see particularly the defense community, but the larger administration or the larger U.S. government responding to this? And if you don't, how do you think they should be responding?
Colonel Liam Collins: Yeah. There’s examples out of Russia. I mean, we know Russian have been all over the […] to the Eastern part of Ukraine and it just kind of never makes the news, right? It's clear that they're in there and commanding and controlling a lot of those Russian-led separatists, but we don't show what they're doing. Right. You don't have to necessarily counter their fake news story. Let's just show what they're actually doing. Don’t even really, to some extent, give credit to their false stuff, just show what they're actually doing in that case. But I mean, it does play into the Russian hands. Early on, most Western leaders didn't want to get involved in Crimea. They knew who the little green men were. But it gives them arguably plausible deniability. I say deniability, because I don't almost nowadays, almost nothing's plausibly deniable. But it allows them not to act until it was a fait accompli and they had Crimea. And then it's, then it's too late. So, yeah, I think it’s a challenge.
Sonnet Frisbie: So, maybe one final question, if I could, you mentioned earlier the challenge to the monopoly on violence, that cyber sometimes plays the monopoly on violence by state actors. Do you see us moving towards this dystopian science fiction, novel version of warfare where you have guys in computer-filled rooms fighting remote wars, or do you think that that is a pure fiction, and it's always going to be a hybrid combination?
Colonel Liam Collins: I mean, the monopoly of violence has been eroding for years, right? The information, explosives, right? So, that's been going on for a long time. Will we ever get to the point where – I remember a Star Trek episode with Captain Kirk and he was at some planet and they were fighting a war where he's like, “What are you doing?” They're like, “Well, I'm reporting to the disintegrator because they just bombed us and killed 200 of us.” And he's looking around like, what bombs? He's like, “Well, it's all simulated now, but we just take away the violence other than we still get killed.” And he's like, “What is this?” So, he violated the prime directive and screwed him up, tried to stop him from fighting wars that way. But fundamentally, war is a human endeavor, right? And it always will be. Technology will play a role in that. You will have some automated systems in doing this but it's not going to be Terminator, machines, fighting wars. It's going to be humans fighting wars and as we constantly forget that, then we're going to be putting ourselves at a disadvantage.
Sonnet Frisbie: Okay well, Colonel Collins, this has been a really fascinating discussion. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us today on route of conflict.
Colonel Liam Collins: Thank you.
Sonnet Frisbie: Thanks to all of you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict. Be sure to subscribe to our podcast on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts. Also be sure to check out the many podcasts under our umbrella organization, the University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts, that website is www.uc3p.org.
Haz Yano: This podcast is partnered with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website, at www.thepearsoninstitute.org. This podcast was engineered by Mwangi Thuita, edited by Yi Ning Wong and produced by Mwangi Thuita. The views expressed are not intended to reflect the official positions of the Department of Defense or any other government entity.
Root of Conflict
02.10.20
The Wars of Queens | Oeindrila Dube
Aishwarya Raje and Mwangi Thuita: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Oeindrila Dube: Some queens, especially single queens found themselves attacked to a greater degree. When Elizabeth was ruling England, King Phillip II of Spain thought he would be easily unseating her and restoring Catholicism to England.
Recording of Queen Elizabeth: Tell Phillip, I fear neither him nor his priest nor his armies.
Oeindrila Dube: But then the war of the Spanish Armada suggested history would take a different course.
Recording of Queen Elizabeth: Tell him if he wants to shake his little fist at us, we're ready to get him such a bite, he'll wish he'd get his hand in his pocket.
Oeindrila Dube: So, Phillip had at the time amassed what was the greatest fleet ever, 130 ships.
Recording of King Philip: There is some wind coming, Madame, that will sweep away your pride.
Oeindrila Dube: Despite this, Elizabeth outmaneuvered him.
Recording of Queen Elizabeth: I, too, can command the wind, sir! I have a hurricane in me that will strip Spain bare if you dare to try me!
Oeindrila Dube: The perception that the queen would be easy to unseat may have led other monarchs to attack them.
Aishwarya Raje: The story of Queen Elizabeth is just one example in European history of how female leaders were no less likely to engage in warfare than their male counterparts. In fact, as we'll soon discover, the research shows that women leaders in this period of history were more likely to go to war than male leaders. My name is Aishwarya Raje and in this episode of Root of Conflict, I spoke with Dr. Oeindrila Dube, the Phillip K Pearson Professor of Global Conflict Studies here at the Harris School of Public Policy. Professor Dube recently co-authored a paper titled Queens, which examines the question of whether states led by women are more or less prone to conflict than states led by men. Professor Dube walks us through the empirical approaches used in this research, as well as how to interpret these findings within the broader context of the study of gender and conflict. Professor Dube, thank you so much for joining us.
Oeindrila Dube: Thank you for having me.
Aishwarya Raje: So, to start off, shat led you to do this research specifically? What led you to want to answer the question of whether states experienced more peace under female leadership versus male leadership?
Oeindrila Dube: I was actually inspired by the work of Esther Duflo who received the Nobel Prize in Economics this year. She had done some work with co-authors that showed that when there are female leaders, in a development context, you actually end up getting different policies. So, she was looking in the context of India and she was looking at Indian villages that were ruled by female pradhans and finding that when you had female leadership, you had a different set of outcomes than when you had male leaders. I thought this was fascinating. And I started thinking a lot about whether this could be applied to the context of conflict.
Would we observe that areas led by women actually display different conflict behavior than areas led by men? As I started thinking about this, I realized this is a question that has to be answered at a different level than a village. It has to be really examined at the national level because most conflict policy in a broad sense is set at that level. That in turn led me to the challenge of thinking about how would you identify a causal effect of female leadership on war. Because women tend to come to rule during certain time periods or electorates that are willing to elect them into office, might have certain views that also influence conflict. So, it seemed challenging to disentangle this in the modern-day era. This is what actually led me to look in the historical context where I thought conditions of hereditary succession would actually enable us to come up with a credible answer to this question of whether female leadership affects war.
Aishwarya Raje: And just given the popular notion that women are inherently less violent than men and the women led states are bound to experience more peace and prosperity, were you surprised by your own findings that show that having a female leader increased the chance of going to war by 39 percentage points during this almost 450-year time period in European history you examined?
Oeindrila Dube: I thought it would be a fascinating question to answer precisely because so many leading thought makers of our time have made very strong claims that female leaders will be more conciliatory than male leaders. Francis Fukuyama has even said that the recent period of democratic peace between the worlds’ developed countries can be attributed the female leadership. Steven Pinker has written that men are responsible for all the wars and genocides in the world. When I read these claims, it really reinforced my desire to want to answer this question. And I suspected that the answer we would find is not necessarily one that female leadership leads to peace.
I thought we might find there's no difference. In that regard, I was surprised to see that the effect actually goes in the opposite direction and that states led by women historically in the context of Europe found themselves participating in wars 39 percentage points more as you highlighted.
Aishwarya Raje: And it would be great if you could just walk us through some of the main variables that you used in your statistical analysis, as you went through this research. I know one of them was, you controlled for the number of siblings that previous monarchs had, and you also, had the, the firstborn male variable. I mean, how did some of those factors and some of those variables contribute to your overall finding?
Oeindrila Dube: Yeah. Let me give you a bit of an overview of the approach that we used for the analysis. So, I mentioned earlier that we focused on Europe under conditions of hereditary succession. And we did that because essentially hereditary succession under those conditions, it was largely accidents of birth that would determine who came to power. Specifically, if the previous monarchs happened to have a firstborn child who was male, you were much more likely to get a king the next period. Conversely, if they had a first-born child who happened to be female, you were much more likely to get a queen in the next period. If the previous monarchs had a sister to whom the throne could pass, you were also more likely to get a queen the next period. Notice that these forces of gender, such as whether the previous monarchs happened to have a firstborn child who was male, are largely determined by nature, they're as good as random. So, in essence, during this period, history gave us a series of natural experiments that we could exploit.
So, how did we exploit this natural experiment? Well, we actually used these two gender forces, whether the previous monarchs had a firstborn child who was male, and whether they had a sister, as instruments for whether or not a woman was in power. So, this gave us exogenous variation that we could use, in instrumental variables framework, to look at the causal effect of female leadership on war. We also included other control variables. For example, we included polity fixed effects, which meant we were basically looking within a particular polity like within Spain or within England and looking at time periods in which, within that polity, there was a female leader versus a male leader. So, this takes care of a lot of potential confounds by controlling for any time-invariant features of a polity that may happen to be correlated with conflict outcomes. We also control for decade-fixed effects because there's just decades where conflict happened to be higher.
And we also controlled for the number of total siblings that the previous monarchs had. This is primarily motivated by the use of the sibling instrument. Notice that you might be worried that the chances of a previous monarch having a sister may be higher if two periods ago, those monarchs had a whole pile of children. And so, there is a higher chance of having one of them be female. Plus, then you would get from the angle of this period, a whole bunch of aunts and uncles who might also be duking it out for the throne, fighting over the throne. This would create the worry, just that the presence of all of those other types of aunts and uncles running around would itself create fights over succession. So, we wanted to control out for that effect. And we did that by controlling for the presence of these aunts and uncles.
Aishwarya Raje: In addition to these controls, you also had to make sure that you would address potential small sample bias in this experiment, especially because you are looking at 29 Queens over this period. So, can you talk briefly about some of the methods that you use to reconcile that?
Oeindrila Dube: Absolutely. So, when we put this data together there was no pre-existing data, the track to the genealogy of all the polities from 1480 to 1913, which is the time period in which we were working. And that also considered the genealogy of all these polities, as well as the extent of war they experienced. So, we put all of this data together. We actually coded Wright’s epic book, A Study of War, and matched all of that to the genealogy data to come up with our sample. So, in the sample, we have 18 polities that have at least once had a queen historically, but we're able to track all of these 18 polities for the entire time period that they were in existence.
So, we get a very long sample of 3,586 polity year observations. And we use all the years of data, but we are looking at time periods in which a queen is ruling versus a king is ruling. So, that's the overarching view of our sample. Now within these 18 polities, there are 193 distinct reigns of monarchs, distinct sets of rulers who are willing at a given point in time. And 18% of them, or 34 of these reigns are ruled by queens. And within those 34 reigns, there are 29 distinct queens as you highlight. So, this is not a large sample. So, what are the ways in which we actually address this small sample issue? We have two approaches. The first is we want to make sure that there's no one outline queen who is very aggressive, who is driving the entire effect. So, we take a series of steps to look at this.
We drop each polity one at a time. Then we drop each queen one at a time. Then we drop two randomly chosen queen, two at a time. And we verify that none of the estimates are sensitive to any particular outlier. That's one approach. The other approach is anytime you have small number of polities, like in our case, we have 18 polities, and we want to essentially make sure we're getting inference right, by doing something called clustering our standard errors on the level of the polity, because in general, we think the extent of war is going to be correlated over time within a polity. and we want to control for that effect when we're doing inference. So, we cluster our standard errors at the level of the polity, but anytime you have very few clusters – in our case, we have 18 clusters and that's smaller than 40 – and if you have a smaller than 40 clusters, you can undertake a procedure called the wild bootstrap procedure for the standard errors, where it's essentially as if you're resampling your data over and over again. And using this adjustment, we are able to show that the effects remain in place after appropriately using this wild bootstrap procedure. So, that's the other way in which we address the small sample bias that can affect inference.
Aishwarya Raje: So, in addition to that, I would imagine when you're doing these very robust statistical analysis, when you're studying something like gender dynamics within political structures, you would also have to take into account factors like social norms and discrimination against women. How, as a researcher, are there any challenges that you face and taking into account these very important factors that aren't necessarily as quantifiable as some of variables that you just mentioned?
Oeindrila Dube: Yeah. I think in our case, social norms played a big role in the story that we were telling. And even though they are, as you highlight, very difficult to measure directly, we looked for patterns in the data to tell us something about the norms and the gender norms of the time. So, as an example, when we first saw that there are effects on queens participating in wars more, what we immediately recognized was this was in a time period when based on gender norms, a lot of people perceived women to be very weak rulers, and that created the possibility that the war participation may have arisen because they were actually being attacked by others rather than going on the attack. So, this led us to actually look separately at participation in wars, in which queens were attacking versus getting attacked. And when we looked at this outcome, we saw that on average women were actually participating in wars as attackers.
And there was actually no significant difference in the rates at which women were getting attacked relative to men. And we think this countered the idea that on average women were getting attacked more, but at the same time, we did uncover interesting nuance based on the marital status of the monarch. So, when we desegregated further, what we saw is single queens, that is queens who are not married during their reign, did actually get attacked more than single kings. And so, we thought this was consistent with the idea that single queens in particular may have been perceived as weak by others and therefore attacked more. But on the flip side, when we looked at the tendency to attack, we saw that married queens actually attacked more than married kings or, and single kings, which of course led us to wonder why would that be the case?
Why would married Queens go on the attack more? We dug into this. And what we found in terms of our exposition also had to do with the role of gender norms. What we found is that married queens did something married kings were less inclined to do. They often put their spouses in charge of official positions and key aspects of governance, which boosted the capacity of their reigns. And they utilized this greater capacity in order to pursue more aggressive war policies. On the flip side, perhaps because of gender norms of the times, married kings were not very inclined to put their wives in charge of official governance positions. As a result, they had lower capacity in their reigns. And this could explain the difference between the rates of aggressive war participation, especially amongst married queens relative to married kings.
Aishwarya Raje: For me, this was probably the most fascinating area of your research. You were looking at Europe specifically from 1480 to 1913, as we mentioned, which was a time period where quote, unquote, winning a war was mostly correspondent to gaining territory. And the research that you conducted shows that not only were female monarchs more likely to go to war than male monarchs, but there were also less likely to lose territory in the wars that they participated in, meaning they were more likely to be victorious in these conflicts. And I think there are a couple ways to interpret this, but what do you make of this piece of research?
Oeindrila Dube: Yeah, So, we were finding that women were participating more in wars and more as attackers. So, it was natural to wonder, were they better off on account of it? And we didn't find anywhere an existing coding of what it meant to win the war. No one had coded, this was the winner. This was the loser. So, we decided to look at territorial gain as a proxy. And as you highlight, what we find is that queens were more likely to experience territorial gain relative to kings. Not only that, but we also, found that queens were no more likely to face internal revolt. They didn't face higher risks of civil war. Their reigns were not shorter. They were no more likely to be assassinated, which is all part and parcel of an account that they were not worse off, and if anything, experienced territorial gain. Now you might wonder, how does the territorial gain square with the finding that some queens, especially single Queens found themselves attacked to a greater degree? So, here I think an anecdotal account is actually quite useful. So, the anecdote that I would like to share about this is the case of Queen Elizabeth.
When Queen Elizabeth was ruling England, King Phillip II of Spain thought he would be easily unseating her and restoring Catholicism to England. But then the war of the Spanish Armada suggested history would take a different course. So, Phillip had at the time amassed what was the greatest fleet ever, 130 ships. Despite this Elizabeth outmaneuvered him. The armada had set sail for England and was going to the Port of Calais. And the British sent in eight fire ships that were ships ablaze. And these fire ships caused chaos. The Spanish ships tried to cut their sails and run in the process. They collided with one another. And the next day they faced a fierce naval battle with the English, in which the English pioneered all these new techniques, like how to conduct a bombardment from afar without having to board the ships.
It was a total victory for the English and a disaster for the Spaniards. Only 67 of the 130 ships made it back to Spain. Only 10,000 of the 30,000 sailors made it back. And this launched England into a period of naval supremacy for hundreds of years to come. So, what we draw from this is that sometimes the perception that the queen would be easy to unseat may have led other monarchs to attack them, but they ultimately prove victorious. And this is consistent with why they didn't lose territory. If anything, they gained it.
Aishwarya: Do you feel like this research could speak more broadly to the causes of conflict? And I know you in the paper, it very specifically says, this is not a commentary on whether or not women are inherently more or less violent than men, but how much of the roots of conflict are the causes of conflict? Do you feel, based on this research, it’s solely based on individualistic tendencies of the leader, versus maybe internal struggles and turmoil, or is it just a combination of two?
Oeindrila Dube: I think surely both play a role. A lot of my other research has looked at how broad-based conditions such as economic conditions can lead to conflict. But I think what this research highlights is that there is room for leaders of certain types to play a role, both in terms of how they conduct their leadership and how they structure their reigns and how they structure the way in which they rule. These factors can actually play a role in terms of decisions to be aggressive, and this can also lead to an effect on conflict. So, I would say that the circumstances matter, but so does leadership and that's part of what this research highlights.
Aishwarya Raje: I think the natural reaction for anyone who has read this Queens paper would be to want to apply the findings to a modern day context, and to see if it's true that in modern day, our female leader is also statistically more likely to engage in war than male leaders. And in the paper, you've cautioned against making that direct connection because just the face of international warfare has changed so much in the past century, and because a lot of current or more modern female leaders are democratically elected – they're not necessarily selected as leaders through familial succession – but you do mention that there is still a positive relationship between female executives and power and more recent conflicts in modern democracies. So, can you speak a bit more to the potential modern-day applications of your findings?
Oeindrila Dube: Sure. So, the findings that you're referencing of the positive correlation in the modern-day era is actually worked on by Koch and Fulton, who show that for the sample of the developed democracies in the post-1970 period, when you have a female executive, you actually have greater spending on the military and you have more participation in conflict behavior. Now there again haven't been too many female executives in that period, so, we have to be careful in terms of drawing too much from that correlation, but certainly that same correlation is there in the modern period as what we observed historically. So, it certainly doesn't seem like the existing evidence for the modern period is inconsistent with what we're finding. And I think the applicability of what we're finding, goes back to what you said about how my takeaway from this isn't a statement about the inherent violent tendencies of one gender over the other. My takeaway from this is even if men as individuals are more aggressive in certain settings, or even have more violent proclivities, when it comes to leadership and the state, leaders do what is best for their country as a whole and policies aren't necessarily set based on one's own individualistic, genetic tendencies. A female leader will consider what the consequences of conflict are for her state as a whole and make decisions accordingly in the same ways that male leaders might.
And to the extent that we see differences emerging in the rates at which leaders are engaging in conflict, they have more to do with the approach they take to organizing their reign and perhaps in the modern day to organizing their cabinet and who they bring into power and how they structure the way in which their administration will function, which will then lead to different policies. So its applicability to the modern day era is that female leadership styles might be different, different organizations and organization styles may emerge as a result, and these may produce a different set of policy outcomes.
Aishwarya Raje: And just going off of that and going back to statements by Francis Fukuyama, Steven Pinker, even President Obama a few months ago said in some remarks that if we had more female leaders in the world, we would be more peaceful, better decisions would be made. So, just based on your remarks, do you feel like the gender of a leader is overemphasized in determining whether or not we can see a more peaceful world, and how do we still encourage more female leadership and more female representation without conflating between gender and more peaceful political outcomes.
Oeindrila Dube: That's a great question. So, first let me say that there is this whole emphasis on women as peacemakers and people who claim that women should get involved in peace processes because that will inevitably produce a more peaceful outcome. My response to that is should women be involved in peace processes? Yes, they should be. They're typically underrepresented in just about every political process, including peacemaking processes. So, yes, they should be included, because women are 50% of the population and they should have equal voice in all kinds of policies, including in the ones that are geared toward producing peace.
Does that necessarily mean that women disproportionately will be favoring the peaceful outcome? That is not clear, but I think that the question of whether they should be part of the process should be separated from what the presumption is that they will be doing. Reflecting on why it is that women are 50% of the population, but much smaller fraction of world leaders, it's possible that part of the reason could be because of this overly simplistic view that women may not be appropriately aggressive as world leaders. During the last presidential election, you had many statements by-then candidate Trump claiming Hillary Clinton was weak, that she would be weak as president. These kinds of statements, these kinds of presumptions may create hesitation in electing female leaders to office. But if we look at the evidence, we do not think that we see any evidence suggesting that women will be overly conciliatory and that the policies they set will therefore inhibit or hurt the development of their state.
Aishwarya Raje: My final question is simply, what do you hope to see as the next chapter or the next frontier of research on gender and conflict? What do you think are some questions that still need to be answered?
Oeindrila Dube: Two come to mind. I think it would be interesting to see a kind of micro, modern day analog to the work that we've done by seeing if mayors who are elected to municipal governments end up experiencing or putting into place different types of policies around crime. And therefore, if there ultimately are any effects on things related to crime and violence, this would be a way of building on what we've done historically at a macro setting and bringing it into a kind of modern-day micro chapter. So, I hope some work comes out that is able to speak to that. I would also be really interested in this question of whether peace processes end up producing systematically different outcomes with the participation of different types of leaders including female leaders. I do think it's a fascinating question, and I think we would have a lot to learn from an analysis that would look at that head-on and look at that directly.
Aishwarya Raje: Great. Professor, thank you so much for your time.
Oeindrila Dube: Thank you.
Aishwarya Raje: Thank you. Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Professor Oeindrila Dube. Special thanks to Mwangi Thuita for producing this episode and UC3P and the Pearson Institute for their continued support, the series for more information on the Pearson Institute’s research and events, visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
02.03.20
Building Peace and Social Accountability: Lessons from Sierra Leone | Andrew Lavali
Aishwarya Raje and Mwangi Thuita: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners can conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Mwangi Thuita: That was my vote, my life, a civic education song, encouraging Sierra Leonean citizens to turn out and vote in the 2018 general election. The song featured some of Sierra Leone's biggest music artists, and it was produced with the support of the Institute for Governance Reform. I'm Mwangi Thuita.
Aishwarya Raje: I'm Aishwarya Raje, and in this episode of Root of Conflict, we spoke with Andrew Lavali, the founding Executive Director of the Institute for Governance Reform or the IGR, a research and evidence-based advocacy think tank based in Sierra Leone. In this interview, we discussed the concept of social accountability in a post-conflict context, as well as the IGR’s work in promoting sustainable development and strengthening political and economic governance in Sierra Leone. So, some of what we'll discuss today, you've discussed in your presentation, but mainly we want to start with, what are some of the root causes of the conflict in Sierra Leone, which led to the creation of the EGR as well as your role as Executive Director. And then we'll jump into some of the details of the kind of projects that you work on and what you see as next steps, et cetera. So, thank you very much, Mr. Lavali for joining us.
Andrew Lavali: Yeah, it's a pleasure. It's a pleasure being here in Chicago.
Mwangi Thuita: Sierra Leone experienced a traumatic civil war from 1991 to 2002. The report received by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission for Sierra Leone, which was created after the conflict ended, concluded that it was years of bad governance and corruption and the denial of basic human rights that created the deplorable conditions that made conflict inevitable. Do you generally agree with this assessment of the root causes of civil war in Sierra Leone?
Andrew Lavali: So, the war actually started as a politically based conflict, as a straightforward expression against injustice and misrule. So, later, it became a monster that nobody seemed to be able to handle. But when you look at the cause of war, it's was a sad accumulation of many things set in motion years back by what we refer to as insensitive band of politicians. In many ways, it’s quite true for anyone that has been paying attention to civilian, the denial of rights, lack of basic services. Sierra Leone has been at the bottom of the human development index way before the war. Growing up in Sierra Leone, way before the war, there was a common saying that we need to fight before we can have the country moving. It was difficult for, during the one-party era, for people to have dissenting voices. Even when you talk about the way public officials have been treated, they can wait for months to get their legitimate salary for which they have worked. So, that was the story of many, many parts of the country.
Aishwarya Raje: And you’re the Executive Director of the Institute for Governance Reform based in Sierra Leone, which is an evidence-based policy research organization that also engages in advocacy work. So, can you tell us a bit more about what is the IGR and what led to its formation as well as what are your main responsibilities as the organization's executive director?
Andrew Lavali: Yes. The Institute for Governance Reform, as the name implies, it's an organization established five, six years ago out of a need to bridge the gap between knowledge and policy. We realize that we have a country where the policy making platform and the policy development platform and even implementation are so polarized. So, the policy process is so simplistic, and it can be so superficial. So, Mr. X is saying this because he is Mr. Y, he comes from that region, Mr. Y is saying this because he comes from that region. So, facts and evidence never matter, the university was removed from policy making processes. So, we decided to see how we can help people in the decision-making authority to have their decisions based on evidence too often. It can be difficult to make that possible because people do not have evidence or they don't know that they need evidence to make decisions, but politics is about likely interest.
So, we actually, we brought a new calculus into the decision-making process by saying, let us try to see how we can give consideration to public goods, not just private interests of politicians or regions. Our goal was to see how do we bring in the parameters of public debates. So, see how we can make public debates inclusive and to see how we can support policymaking processes, which is much more evidence than just narrow interest. The biggest research piece that launched us was a couple of years ago on the census. So, there was this attempt to undercount one part of the country and to overcount another part of the country. So, we realized that the census was in error by about 35%. So, one of our research advocations was, how do we get a good sense of data for planning purposes?
It's not just about who wins the election. It's really about how do we plan for healthcare, for education, for young people. Given the data we had at that time, it doesn't matter which mathematical formula I use. Sierra Leone was destined for complete failure. What we did in that piece of research was to see how we can provide planners with an alternative argument as to how to do a better census, we always provide incentives that if you do this, this is what you stand to gain. It's not just about lambasting, because too often people think civil society is just a terrain of contestation between citizens and leaders. But we, in our work, ensure that there is always an incentive created. So, if you do this, this is how you may look good and is how people will appreciate you. And your longevity in power, in public office, can actually depend on that.
Aishwarya Raje: And I'm curious to know if you could speak a little bit about the survey methods that you use, basically getting a sense of what are the most important policy priorities for citizens in Sierra Leone. And were there any challenges in terms of reaching the populations that you wanted to reach and collecting the data that you wanted to get? How was that method? How was that survey administered?
Andrew Lavali: We actually did three surveys. It was part of the advocacy on free fear peaceful elections, but on top of that, how do we have meaningful elections? Elections not based on vote buying, not based on giving cheap alcohol or identity politics, but what we did in those surveys, to see how we can make that shift. We adopted lot of participatory approaches to ensure that we get data, both for us over and beyond collection of data. But how do you use data to inform decisions? How do you use evidence to inform policy making process? So, what are the incentives to ensure that policymakers actually use evidence? Because, too often, we believe that people in decision-making can be benevolent. You know, if you are giving resources, you are giving the right advice, they can deliver good results, or if they don't, they are corrupt. We make these assumptions without understanding what their pressures are, without just doing the sole view, what are citizens’ views, what are the voter priorities?
How are institutions situated to deliver the results of those priorities? So, we have a randomized process where we statistically ensured that everyone in a country has a fair amount of chance opportunity to be spoken to. So, we actually collected votes that are registered for 2012. First, we did what we call stratification of the country because in the country there are 14 districts and there are shades of opinion in every district. First and foremost, we consider how much pots of money do we have for this research? And second, how much time do we have to do it? So, based on that, we stratify the country because we don't have the money to do a census. We have money to do a piece of research to inform elections. On the basis of election results, over the last three elections, since the introduction of democracy, we realized that there are three clusters of the country.
There's one cluster. That is what we call the strong goal of political parties. These are the batch of districts, about 8 to 7 of 10. These are districts where one political party consistently won elections by over 55%. There are another four sets of districts that we call competitive districts. So, the criteria for competitive districts, these are districts, either one political party has to be winning elections, but the margin of defeats was not above 55%. The top criteria was what we call these swing districts, where you only have two districts. So, these are districts that are swung from one side to another, over the last three elections. So, for strong goals, you satisfy two criteria. It has been won by one person and consistently the margin of defeat or victory is about 55%. So, in competitive districts, there can be two of those variables, and the swing district, none of the tables applied.
So, based on that, based on that stratification, we formulated our research tools and we got our sample sizes. We did a rigorous sampling with the support of statistics early on. So, we hired enumerators, about 90 of them for us to do the data collection. For us, what is more important? Every academic can do research, but what is more important for a policy practitioner? What's going to be the optic of that information? We just try to tick the boxes that it was not our own views, our own opinions. It was actually done through a rigorous methodology that would drive the data, but over and beyond, that is how do we ensure that there's an optic 1) how do we ensure that data generated is going to be used to improve performance of electoral management, elections management institutions, and over and beyond that, how are we going to ensure that politicians actually take citizens feedback?
And the only politicians can do that is when they trust the source of data, they are part of the data generation process, or they at least understand how it all went on. At the end of the day, there will be backlash. They will disagree because if the data swings in a certain way, to say this party is not going to win or is going to win, there will be some, some critics. We've had Donald Trump talking about fake polls. So, the issue of opinion polling, I mean, in Africa, in Sierra Leone, I could say that those are the very first ones we’re getting so far. So, you expect the set interest to fight against it, bots, interviews we are taking. So, to some point that if you take that same methodology, you repeat in another survey, you will get the same results. So, we ensure that that was done.
Mwangi Thuita: So, the citizens manifesto, that idea, along with the 720 civil society groups, which included women's advocacy groups as well. You guys came together to produce a landmark citizen manifesto before the 2018 elections. So, this was supposed to set up a framework for debates on citizens' expectations of aspiring candidates in 2018. Could you go through some of the core issues that were highlighted in the manifesto and what were some of your outreach strategies?
Andrew Lavali: So, the first that we did was to do what we call the KAP, a knowledge, attitude, and practice survey. So, we did three KAPs. So, the first one was to get a baseline. The second one was to get a midline, and then we had to see the end line to see whether all what we're doing is yielding results. So, we ensured that political parties were involved. For the first time, we brought political parties together to agree on a tool to measure. Some opposition parties were not happy because they think we're giving so much to the ruling party because they have the financial muscles to campaign. So, if they know what citizens want, they will have greater muscles to campaign. So, what we did in terms of outreach was to broaden the constituency around that, so that it's not seen as one organization, it's not seen as one region in a context where there is massive polarization historically over time.
So, the question was, how do we ensure that this seems to be all sides of the box being represented? So, we brought in religious leaders, we established a steering committee of people. So, the consortium brought together 45 members. So, those 45 members that were co-chaired by the inter-religious council. Sierra Leone has two major religions. 23% of us are Christians, 75% of us are Muslims. So, by bringing Islamic and Christian leaders, you've actually brought the entire country under one roof. And we agree on a dissemination strategy. So, if the Archbishop of the country speaks, how do you ensure that that message spreads in all churches in a day? How do you ensure that the mosques all get all of that? We brought together loose groups, structured groups. In many ways we try to see how the citizens manifesto priorities can be used as a basis for election. The things they agreed to when we did the first KAP, the most important for them was water.
People say, we need water. We need someone who can bring us water. I can see one of the things that influenced that research was because the research was done in March. It's a big dry season where most of the water wells were run dry. So, it may not be the case if we do it at another time. So, it was water, it was food. They talk about livelihoods. It was jobs. Then later down, you talk about infrastructure, and politicians always know that those are immediate priorities. If you need water, you can get water. I can get water for you in an election week. I can get food for you in an election week. But the idea behind the citizens manifesto is how do we address the perinea of the problems that haunts us? How do we translate elections into results? Because many African countries are doing competitive party politics. They are doing competitive elections. And how do you see elections translating into real development outcomes? So, the citizens must manifest to also initiate a conversation as to how could policy matter in an election’s environment.
Intermission, Just China: As China's role grows greater on the global stage. You want to stay up to date on the issues most pressing to China, both domestically and internationally, check out the Just China podcast for in-depth analysis on recent headlines and investigative reports on Chinese matters that affect our globalized world. We are Just China. Find us on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you enjoy your podcast listening.
Mwangi Thuita: Did the leaders embrace the proposed reforms that you came up with in the manifesto? do you think it had an impact on the electoral process? What are the lessons learned from 2018 that you will take moving forward?
Andrew Lavali: By the next election, there'll be another citizens manifesto. So, at least something fundamental was introduced. We wanted to achieve this. We got this. But fundamentally we introduced a culture of having policy-based conversations at the time of elections. How do we ensure that young men as a country coming from conflict, where there are always incidences of electoral violence? So, the citizens manifested in many ways provided that basis. And it dovetails into the first presidential debate, over 40% of the country listened to that debates, and over at least 12% of the people said I voted because I listened to that to the debate and it changed my view. So, if you look at the electoral map after the elections, this was the very first time Sierra Leone had, well, in a major way, because Sierra Leone has been having some, apart from the two major parties, some minority parties coming in. For the very first time, we have four major parties in Parliament. It actually should, it differentiates a different democratic shape.
So, the citizens’ manifesto was a big democratic milestone for Sierra Leone. It laid the foundation for conversation. Seven of the priorities that we have selected, one was a lot of women were saying they want to be represented in parliament, because one of the biggest causes of Sierra Leone’s war was exclusion and young people were saying we want 15% of the candidates nominated by political parties to be young people. Women went as far as 40%. And there was a third choice where people were saying we need accountable, ethical leadership. So, we want to use the citizens manifests to address corruption. So, in a way the citizens manifesto was used to introduce conversation around political behaviors, how it's not just about providing water. Well, how are you going to assure us that you will take a certain set of behaviors that will make you provide water once you're empowered?
Aishwarya Raje: That's great. And a lot of your work examines how political incentives can shape institutional performance, especially in fragile state context. And you've spoken a bit about social accountability. So, what does that mean to you? The term social accountability, and how does it matter to the democratic processes of a weak state? And additionally, in terms of since the IGR was founded, what are some changes that you've seen socially or politically in Sierra Leone?
Andrew Lavali: Yes. I'm glad you mentioned social accountability. For a weak state, if you push institutions that are already weak, there's a tendency for them to collapse. What has made us not slide back into conflict since the war ended about 18 to 20 years ago is how do we always make sure that we are mindful of where we came from? We demand accountability, we demand standards, but we were mindful of fragility as well. So, you do that by building trust. So, always ask ourselves, how many blocks of confidence, how we build it. So, you build trust between citizens and governments. We make sure that our institutions are not perfect. It's not a U.S. Senate. It's a weak parliament where these officials can be polarized, but at the same time, we use citizen voices as a platform for conversation, like the paper we did on the census, where it was the most influential paper we've ever done.
Parliament spent at least 40% of one of its debate looking into the same census, taking it to otherwise to say this group wants to be marginalized by the other group and that it will have resorted to violence, but we introduced that and then it provided a foundation for conversation. So, that's always what we do. For IGR, with our mantra being, “bridging the gap between knowledge and policy,” we believe that the biggest area of conflict has been around resource allocation. So, we've done quite a number of papers. One of the papers we did was the cost of politics. We asked ourselves, “Why are institutions not performing the way they should perform? Why is the parliament weak? Why is their executive weak?” So, instead of really just sitting down and blaming, we always ask, what can we do to make institutions perform properly?
One of the theses we have is that institutions behave unproductively because the context in which they operate is not just about – yes, the leaders can be wicked. You can demonize them for all you care. But certain times, the context in which institutions perform do not produce results. So, if you take a Sierra Leonian politician to the UK, to the U.S., the institutions in those countries will not necessarily allow them to behave the way they behave. So, in the cost of politics, we specifically looked at what is making parliament ineffective. So, we look at MP allowances, MP salaries, and we'll compare that to MP expenditures, and realize that if you compute the MP allowance and salaries in a given month, in a given year, it’s way lower than what an MP earns. And this crucial factor actually shifts politics, the way citizens demand, what are citizens expectations, because people always demand very personalized benefits.
So, this MP should give me money when I need money, they should give me address to my medical needs. They should address to my child's education educational needs. So, we realize all that makes parliament dysfunctional. So, we need a conversation between citizens and parliamentary institutions. How do we ensure that parliament is better situated to support citizens’ priorities? So, the cost of politics was about that. After we published the cost of politics, six months after, there was a big backlash from citizens after Parliament published their request for a pay raise. So, IGR was among one of the only organizations that came to the rescue of Parliament, that we need a broader conversation. We know citizens are angry with you. Maybe you've made a raise too much, but we know what your problems are. So, how do we get a conversation on this? So, we did a paper on pay and composition of members of parliament.
Mwangi Thuita: So, IGR’s mission is to bridge the gap between knowledge and policy. There's also a gap between policy and politics, and politicians exist in the political arena. And we have to think about how to incentivize good behavior. We can talk about weak institutions, but that's kind of abstract. Politicians within those institutions, within Parliament, within executive agencies in Sierra Leone and countries like that in Africa have incentives to participate in corruption, to mobilize voters along ethnic lines, and to do things that are not in the voters’ interest. So, how do you at IG take seriously the reality of the political process?
Andrew Lavali: Normally, what many politicians wants is to stay in power. And normally what many citizens wants is to get better welfare. And too often, citizens in the weak and polarized states, there's a tendency for citizens to get distracted. And then they kind of pursue the agenda of the politician. So, instead of demanding healthcare, they say I'm supporting my brother, brother does not deliver. I normally say the story that if you dress two major colors, party colors, red and green, and they are situated in the South and East and in the North and West. So, geographically, the country is kind of divided along those party lines. So, there is a tendency for you to dress someone that is unaccountable in red. And then that person sees just a popular language in the North, and then votes for that person. You can do the same for the South.
You can dress someone unaccountable in green. [….] So, what we normally do, we introduce not only rewards, but we introduce sanctions. I think the biggest challenge that many organizations face is how to align those interests. Yes, you want to come, you want to stay in power, or you want to come to power, but they are certain things we consider for you to be given, to trust that authority. For 2018, in particular, we develop what we call the Bio meter. In the elections, we are tracking campaign promises of all leading aspirants, at least the four leading aspirants. So, the Bio meter is really following some of the actions that have been supported by the Open Society Initiative for west Africa. In Nigeria, you have the Buhari meter, in Senegal, you have the Sall meter, after Macky Sall.
So, in Sierra Leone, Maada Bio won the election. So, we track his promises, he made 556 promises. So, put that in one document, and it becomes the measure for opposition parties to hold him to account, and for civil society to hold him to account. So, we disaggregate those promises by clusters. These are your promises in agriculture, promises in health care. Every year. By next year, we'll be publishing the Bio meter for year two. We’ve got people within government that are doing shadow scoring of the biometer. So, they also score themselves. Like I said, our mantra is to not antagonize them, but just make sure that we have the same journey, we want good health care, good education. If you do not deliver to us – in fact, we are not putting this target for you. You set the targets, if you do not deliver to us. And what does democracy provide? Democracy provides one environment where you have all the totality, a given period. We can talk about changing that party after elections.
Aishwarya Raje: So, my own background is in global health. So, I'm particularly interested in learning a bit more about the IGR’s work in monitoring health investments in Sierra Leone, post Ebola outbreak of 2014, 2015. And when you have a country like Sierra Leone that already has weakened institutions and is really making an attempt to develop economically, what were the unique challenges that the country faced? When on top of that, there was this disastrous public health outbreak that not only caused health problems in the country, but economically, it was really difficult for the country to recover. So, what have you seen in the past three, four years since the outbreak that the IGR has been monitoring in terms of health investments or just economic investments to try to rebuild from that outbreak?
Andrew Lavali: I think one of the things that Ebola did was to further destroy service delivery infrastructure, delivery of health, delivery of education. I think for many commentators, they argue that Ebola is just a microcosm. It just showed a microcosm of a Sierra Leonian problem. It showed that healthcare was not working. So, Ebola came 18 years after post-conflict peacebuilding, and it showed that we did not invest much in decentralized services. We did not invest much in local institutions. So, you have this massive presence of NGOs over time. So, less than 1% of aid actually goes through local structures. So, it was very easy for Ebola to overrun from the border of Liberia, the Kailahun area. It was very easy to overrun, to hit the capital and destroy over 4,000 people within a year. So, what we've been doing is to see how do you build health systems after Ebola? Rebuilding Ebola was about rebuilding health services.
You build an educational service, for education, a basic Ebola control message. You say you have to wash your hands. You have to do this. For many people that are illiterate. It was difficult for them to literally understand that overnight. So, you actually need to have long-term development investments in education at the same time as health care. How many drugs are going to hospitals from the capital, are going to hospitals in rural areas? We saw that those accountability structures are non-existent. So, post Ebola we devised a tool, what we call the service delivery index. The service delivery index literally looked at the delivery of basic services in MP constituencies and local councils. So, for the first time, we collect the government own data on health care. How many nurses are being recruited in this small clinic? Which clinics have drugs? We approach all the social accountability.
The idea is not to embarrass them. The idea is to say, this is the challenge, and people will love you more as a member of Parliament if you work with them to address this. So, we did this ranking. So, in some ways, some of the questions we'll be asking is who determines the health priorities of Sierra Leone? Is it donors? Is it government? Is it the people? And how do we bring citizens and that stronger presence of government into that conversation? The last time we checked, less than 8% of drugs are being procured by the government. So, most of drug procurements are done internationally. So, we asked ourselves, how do we ensure that the best set of drugs have been procured, who determines which drugs? Which analyses have we done to ensure that those drugs are actually used? I know WHO does quite a lot of those analyses and there are certain things we are not so competent to comment on.
Mwangi Thuita: Do you think Sierra Leone is a good case study of a good example of successful foreign intervention? What can it teach us about how to support the recovery process after conflict?
Andrew Lavali: Yeah. Sierra Leone is an interesting case of multi-lateralism. Yeah. In a number of arguments, there is one country where multi-lateralism has really walked effectively, but beyond the international success, there was quite a lot that we can give to the leadership at the time and the people at the time. Sierra Leone had a leadership that conceded to the rebels and you hardly see this in other African countries. Say you know what, you want power, get off the bush and come and share. So, that made us to go to Luma in 1999 and develop an instrument that outline the disarmament, demobilization of some 75,000 fighters. So, after that, the country has been really resilient. The people, we are easy to say, you know what? We have limbs that have been chopped off. So, you've done that to us.
Let us forget about that and move on. Even when we'd walk, these days, we have to keep in hindsight what happened during the war and how do we ensure it is not be repeated. So, the appetite for peace is growing, it’s ever there, but it's growing. In fact, there is an argument out there that even at the time of war, Sierra Leone, by the level of tolerance that people have, could be more, much more peaceful than some other countries that have not tasted war. Because it is easy for me to, for the past five, six, seven years, our performance on the peace index has been very high. I think we had about the second highest in West Africa. So, peace is there because the culture of the people is really peaceful. There is nothing really to worry about. So, we believe that if we fix the problem of accountability, and as you rightly described from the start of the conversation what the TRC painted, that neglect, disregard for rights, and neglect of basic services, made somebody say, “I'm going to monopolize the grievances, I'm going to fight,” but the moment that ended, I think we can have a forward-looking country. Yes, it’s possible.
Mwangi Thuita: Thank you so much for your time for visiting us here at Harris.
Andrew Lavali: Yeah. It's my pleasure meeting you here. Thank you very much.
Mwangi Thuita: Thank you for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict, featuring Andrew Lavali, Founding Executive Director of the Institute for Governance Reform. Special thanks to Yi Ning Wong for editing and the UC3P production team and to the Pearson Institute for their support.
Aishwarya Raje: For more information about the Pearson Institute’s events and research, visit thepearsoninstitute.org, or follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
01.27.20
Perspectives on the Colombian Peace Process | Sergio Jaramillo Caro
Aishwarya Raje and Mwangi Thuita: You're listening to Root of Conflict, a podcast about violent conflict around the world and the people, societies and policy issues it affects. You'll hear from experts and practitioners who conduct research, implement programs and use data analysis to address some of the most pressing challenges facing our world. Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P, in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflict, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.
Camila Perez: I actually have a very interesting anecdote. In 2017, a year after the peace agreements were signed, I was working in Monteria in the northern part of Colombia. This city is one of the epicenters of the ongoing conflict in my country. And during the night I went to this show of five former FARC combatants. They were playing Andean music, and the show was organized by a social leader in Monteria. And the objective was basically to foster recapitulation scenarios. And back then, I couldn't imagine combatants holding anything different than weapons in their hands. So, it was very touching. And at the end of the show, I hugged him because I was very moved by the whole experience. And I congratulated him and thanked him for the experience. And he just smiled and he left and he was like, “Oh yeah, this has been great. But I just hope I don't get killed.”
He's 21 years old. This was two years ago. And a couple of weeks ago in Colombia, we celebrated the first local elections after the peace agreement. And I heard that he was elected as part of their, of the Municipal Council. He’s very young and he's very brave. And he passed from being threatened of death to actually represent his community. He's also part of the LGBTQ community in a very conservative city. So, this just to say that the beautiful thing about the peace agreement is that it just changed the narrative of the country.
Mwangi Thuita: My name is Mwangi Thuita. I'm one of the producers of Root of Conflict. In 2016, the Colombian government signed a peace agreement with the revolutionary armed forces of Colombia or FARC, a militant group whose insurgency against the government lasted over 50 years. The agreement was not without its critics. When first put to a referendum in October 2016, it failed with 50.2% voting against it. Almost two months later, the government signed a revised agreement, which was then ratified by Colombia's Congress. The final agreement addresses topics such as rural reforms, political participation, the end of hostilities, solutions to the production of illegal drugs, the rights of victims, and the mechanisms of implementation and verification. Critics of the agreement complained that the terms were too lenient. Guerillas would not serve time in prison. They would automatically be awarded 10 seats in Congress. Some claim that the deal would legalize narco-trafficking and legitimize violence within the country. One of the people responsible for ending the conflict is Sergio Jaramillo, who served as chief peace negotiator for the government. On a recent visit to the University of Chicago, as part of the Pearson Institute’s Distinguished Speaker Series, Mr. Jaramillo sat down with Manuel Bustamante and Marina Milaszewska to discuss his role in the peace process and how the lessons learned during the negotiations can be applied to conflict resolution efforts around the world.
Manuel Bustamante: You gave the inaugural lecture of Pearson Institute back in 2017, and on that occasion, your lecture was titled The Possibility of Peace. Let me just start by asking you, what is the Colombian peace agreement in your own words? Are you optimistic about its implementation?
Sergio Jaramillo: Well first, let me thank you for this invitation. I'm very pleased to be back here at the Pearson Institute. I have very good memories of the lecture. Two years ago, the Colombia peace agreement is an agreement that ended a 50-year war, 53-year war actually, between the state of Colombia and the largest insurgency in the history of Latin America, which was the FARC. But it is also an agreement to try to establish measures so that this violence would not recur. So, it's not simply an agreement about DDR, although it's also that it's an agreement that tries to address the factors that kept the violence going over these years.
The implementation of the agreement is naturally tied to the political situation. We have a government that won the elections a year, year and a half ago on a platform of opposition to the peace agreement. So, that in principle, does not look very promising, but actually, I think the reality itself is pushing everyone in the right direction. The Colombian institutions, the judiciary, the constitutional court, the Congress, remained very committed to the peace agreement and especially the communities on the ground are very committed to the peace agreement. So, the government is slowly but surely waking up to the fact that the best thing to do is to implement the peace agreement and seems now to be taking slowly a more positive view.
Marina Milaszewska: Many of us wonder what it took for one of the world's most protracted civil armed conflicts, a so-called intractable conflict lasting more than 50 years, as you just said, to finally end in 2016. What were some of the reasons that you believe the negotiation with Colombia's largest guerilla group, which we know of as FARC succeeded in 2016 when peace processes in Colombia had previously failed time and time again?
Sergio Jaramillo: Yes. Well, the first thing I would say is that we did our best to learn from our own past mistakes. I am a big believer myself in the idea of lessons learned, if you know what you're doing, and you understand that each case is different. You can learn a lot from others, but you can learn the most from the mistakes you've made in the past. So we tried this time to do things differently and to be very careful. In that Pearson Lecture, I refer to what I call the strategy of prudence, of doing things step by step. And I think there the critical move was to begin with secret talks, to agree to a framework agreement. I think really that framework agreements set the whole process on very solid rails. The framework agreement took six months of secret talks February to August, 2012, the final agreement took four years from October of 2012 to October, November of 2016. Still having agreed already, not just to the subjects we were going to talk, but number one to the narrative, that this was about ending the conflict, coming up with a new narrative that sent a clear message to Colombia at this time, it was serious. And secondly, agreeing previously to what you might call the structure of the deal. It was already clear that there had to be disarmament. There had to be political participation, but there was also going to be justice for the victims, that there was also commitment from the government to the rural development. Some of the more difficult things had already been previously agreed in the framework agreement, so that it then became a question more of fleshing out that then of striking the basic deals. There were many other things that were important, but I think that may have been the critical move.
Marina Milaszewska: As you said, major strides have been made in resolving the Colombian conflict, but other countries around the world, such as Syria, Yemen, and Venezuela, continue to struggle in the face of internal crises. Can you share with us some of the insights that you learned from the negotiation process with the FARC in Havana and how do you think policy makers can apply them to conflict resolution and peace building efforts beyond Colombia?
Sergio Jaramillo: Again, I think that one should always be humble and not think that one knows everything and try to learn from others. But of course, as an economist would say, you just take the best practices from one place and put them somewhere else. I mean, you need to sort of understand where you're coming from and what your needs are. So, one has to also be quite humble at the time of offering anybody any wisdom from one's own experience. But I do think there are certain things that we did that can be applied in many places that have to do more with the structure of the negotiation. I mentioned a moment ago, the idea of doing first, a framework agreement in secret talks. I think in situations as difficult, for example, as Afghanistan today, with which I'm a little bit familiar, it seems to me that would be exactly the right thing to do, because once you go public, you come under massive pressure from society.
There are all kinds of different interests and the negotiators have much more difficulty in doing things because they have to always be looking over the shoulders, looking back, making sure they're not upsetting their own constituency. So, they lose a lot of margin of maneuver, a lot of flexibility that is sometimes needed to come to a consensus. So, I think that's one thing. Another thing is being very methodical, preparing things very carefully. If you look at the situation in Venezuela, which is absolutely tragic, the world is not conscious of the human tragedy that is happening today in Venezuela. And yet, it's now been going on for a number of years at this level. And above and beyond the politics, part of the reason also is that they've had great trouble organizing themselves around what talks should look like and having a disciplined approach to talks and preparing themselves.
I think preparation is critical to success. You need to really have as clear a map in your head as possible of what you want to achieve. You can’t just sit down and talk to about sitting down and talking to somebody, talk about having a clear plan of where you want to go to and trying to see how you fit your counterpart within that plan. And there were other things, but I will stop those.
Manuel Bustamante: So, many of us, especially I, as I’m Colombian, don't understand how the referendum held in 2016 to ratify the peace agreement with the FARC resulted in people rejecting the agreement, albeit by a very low margin. The resulting peace treaty was one of the 14 unanimously adopted decisions in the United Nations Security Council’s history. What do you think went wrong? Or how do you think that the public narrative regarding the peace process in 2016 shaped these results?
Sergio Jaramillo: First, we need to recognize that we lost the referendum in October of 2016, but we also need to tell your listeners that sadly, the turnout was low. It was very low, only about 37% of Colombians participated and the no vote won by 0.3 of a percent. So, in the end, it was only 18% of Colombians who rejected the agreement and won by 0.2 percent. So, in terms of the legitimacy of the result, it was low. It has to be said that if it’d been the other way around, it would have been also a problem for us to win with such a low turnout and such a low percentage. The campaign itself, as many know, was very similar to what had happened a few months before in the UK with Brexit, a lot of things were said that had nothing to do with the agreement, stories were put out that we were going to corrupt children, that we were going to introduce something they call gender ideology, that we're going to turn Colombia into Venezuela, and of course, all of that affected things.
But still, a lot of people voted against because they just rejected the FARC. And then obviously they had their also the good right not to be in agreement. So, we also have to be humble enough to sort of understand what it was, above and beyond the lies that went wrong. Did we not explain carefully enough? That's something that still needs more analysis, including from our side, from those of us who were promoting the yes vote, especially.
Manuel Bustamante: So your conversation to the Pearson Distinguished Speaker Series, is titled “How to Change a Society.” Some of the issues that were included in the agreement with the FARC are not only issues that the FARC had been fighting for, but that the whole country desperately needs such as rural development; however, the Colombian state has been remarkably incapable of providing them. What do you think that it will take for Colombian institutions to finally get to a point in which they are able to tackle these questions? Do you think we are close to getting to that point?
Sergio Jaramillo: No, not particularly, but I do think that a peace agreement is an opportunity for change. It does introduce some change itself directly, such as stopping a war, which is not a minor thing, stopping the violence that’s derived from that war. But mainly it creates a framework for change and it has to be taken advantage of, it's not going to happen on its own. So, for example, a major program derived from the peace agreement are a series of programs called rural development programs with the territorial approach. There were 16 large development programs, which cover more than a fifth, perhaps close to a quarter of Colombian territory.
And there are designed to precisely bring development to the regions of the country that were hardest hit by the conflict, but also in a sense, to repair. They are a form of reparations of damage done from the suffering. And they're premised on the idea of a very strong participation through a so-called participatory planning process. The good news is that this has happened. Close to 250,000 people have in these programs and the government, the new government, even though it was not sympathetic to the peace agreement is taking this program seriously and has decided to start implementing them with more vigor, which is good news. We need more resources, but the political decision is important. And what the programs actually do in the end, to answer your question, they don't just try to produce public goods. They're trying to, in a way, redefine the relation between state and society in those regions, by making the citizens much more active participants.
And by acknowledging that the citizens of Colombia, those communities that suffered a lot, had already organized themselves to survive the violence had already been engaged in very serious peacebuilding exercises. So, the question was, how can we build on that? And how can we put the communities and the authorities in the regions, in the driver's seat and have a development model that is much more built upon those capacities than thinking that technocrats from the capitol are going to solve everyone's problems.
Marina Milaszewska: Just to wrap up, we are going to bring it back to the local elections that were recently held in Colombia, where most observers consider the opposition to the current government of President Iván Duque to have come out on top. Most of these parties present themselves as an alternate to traditional politics that support the 2016 peace agreement. Do you think that this marks a change in Colombian politics,and more generally, do you think that politics need to change for peace to cement itself in Colombia?
Sergio Jaramillo: Yes, and yes. So, the first yes is I do think that these elections mark a change, I think they are directly related to the peace process, not because the people weren't necessarily voting for peace as such – they were voting for their local mayor – but the fact that the peace process ended the war and that the narrative of what you think about the FARC was no longer at the center of things opened up the field to a new politics and put the challenge at the table of, “Okay, what are we going to do about the problems that are really pressing problems for urban Colombia?” And that's what opened the space for these alternative candidates to come in with anti-corruption agendas, with modernizing agendas, with a new politics agenda, because there was more space. So, I actually associate the results of his elections directly to the phase in which Colombia is in thanks to the peace process.
And of course, if you want to implement the agreement properly, you do have to do a new politics. And it's not just a cliché. For example, I was describing this rural development programs. And in some of your students here, such as your interviewer is studying this, “Why does Colombia have big problems with using public goods in peripheral areas?” Well, the quickest answer is because of the politics, because of the way that politics work works and public goods are distributed and filtered through regional political interests that block those public goods from getting to where they need to get. So, you need a new way of relating the state to the citizens and making sure that public goods, and I would say, institutions at large can be strengthened. And for that, you need a new politics.
Manuel Bustamante: Perfect. Thank you. So, thank you, Mr. Sergio Jaramillo for joining us on the Root of Conflict, a University of Chicago Public Policy Podcast.
Sergio Jaramillo: Thank you very much for this invitation.
Chicagoland Podcasters: Chicago, The Windy City, The City of Broad Shoulders. The second city is complicated, known for its legacies of segregation and political corruption. Chicago has a lot to grapple with. On Chicagoland, we bring you conversations with activists, journalists, politicians, and others who are working to address these issues. You can find Chicagoland wherever you listen to podcasts. From University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts, this is Chicagoland.
Mwangi Thuita: A great thing about being at Hatteras is how international the student body is. In addition to speaking with Sergio Jaramillo, we wanted to hear from Colombian students about the impact of the peace accord and their expectations for the future of their country. We are joined by Camila Perez and Daniel Vallejo, two first-year master's students at Harris. Daniel is a civil engineer focused on rural reform in Colombia. He previously worked with Fundo Colombia en Paz where he supported post-conflict implementation of the rural reform measures of the peace agreement. Camila came to Harris after a stint at the Electoral Observation Mission, a Colombian NGO that fosters citizens' political and civil rights. This conference has been going on basically your whole lives. Can you tell us a bit about your experience of the conflict growing up? How aware of it were you and how did it shape your political imagination?
Camila Perez: I mean, Colombia has been in a conflict for the past 60 years. It's still going on. It was part of our history classes. This is part of the way that people read me when I was abroad. I was always in the airports – I have this memory like of always being separated and inspected even more because I'm Colombian and I'm a woman and because I'm young, like maybe I would like carry some drugs with me, who can tell? And I think that we were all related. Relatives of mine were threatened by guerillas. And I think that we all have stories like this. I have this very vivid memory of a guerilla attack in Bogota, in a very wealthy club. A bomb exploded there in 2003 and it was right in the core of Bogota.
One thing about the Colombian conflict is that it has mostly affected the rural areas. But during the first part of this century, the guerillas actually got to the cities. My dad was supposed to be there that night and he wasn't. So, yeah, it has been tough, but also you see how things evolve and I was actually telling another student that in 2000, when was the world cup in Brazil? It was 2016, right? I was wearing my Colombian t-shirt on the day that we lost against Brazil. And for the first time in my life, people approached me to take a photo with me because of something positive of my country. And I'm not saying that this is because of the peace agreements. I'm just saying that the way that people see us after the agreement is way different. It's way more positive, not more positive, but at least more complex. We are not just Pablo Escobar. We're not just drug dealing. We are more than that. That's not the only story that we we have to tell
Mwangi Thuita: How would you explain the concept of territorial peace?
Camila Perez: So, this is a concept that Jaramillo exposed first in a conference in Harvard. What he says is basically that peace is not just about the absence of conflict, right? Peace has to be built up from bottom up. it has to be with the participation of the community themselves in the sense that the institutions understood us, the set of social rules that we use to regulate our behavior. And we have to rebuild that in Colombia because we have solved all of our conflicts with violence. Not just the armed conflict, but on a daily basis, that's how we react towards conflict. We react violently. And the comfort will always be there. But the core is that in order to get an ongoing peace, what we need is to rebuild this institution, these social institutions, and imagine ourselves dealing with our conflict in a peaceful way. The conflicts will always be there, but we have to choose between being violent or actually negotiating.
Mwangi Thuita: Daniel, your past work in water resources has taken you to too many rural parts of Colombia. Can you speak about those experiences and how the conflict impacted some of the communities that you were able to engage with?
Daniel Vallejo: For some years, I've been working in rural regions in Colombia, especially on a region called Montes de María, it’s on the northern part of Colombia in a little town called El Salado. So, I've been there. I was there for two years working on water resources. So, I was focused there on some regions near El Salado. Salado was a town that suffered a massacre, not by guerillas, but from the paramilitary, when the guerillas started increasing their violent acts on rural regions, or even in some urban regions. Some civilian groups armed themselves, and became the defendant of the people initially against the guerillas.
There are some theories where these come from. There were some groups supported by some of some local governments for these self-defense groups, but they quickly grew into another thing. And in the 2000s, these groups became much more violent, because they were fighting those that were supposed to be guerilla helpers. For example, this town, El Salado. As the guerillas have existed since long ago, many towns that were forgotten by the government in rural regions had had a lot of guerrilla influence influencing their everyday. So, the paramilitary actions were to clear these villages, eh, so that people that were supposed to support the guerillas were killed or were displaced or were disappeared. That was the mentality of it. Who are they to judge? No one.
How did they judge? No idea.
For example, this town, El Salado, I know a lot of the story about these towns, but there are over 60 of these massacres in the country, like strong massacres, small massacres, can count a lot of them, but in this town, one day, like the guerillas used this town as an important point for cokedrilling. And when the guerillas started losing a little territory there, they moved, and the army came into the town. I’m telling it from what the people there told me. One day in the middle of the afternoon, the army went out of the town. They just left the town. Nobody understood why. When the army left that same night, a whole group of paramilitaries invaded the town. And in this next morning, they start killing a lot of people in one of the soccer fields in the town.
There are books about this. It's horrible what happened? There are a lot of dark histories in, but there was a special case of a girl there, that the day of the of the massacre, they killed her father. And she went running to her house. A lot of paramilitary followed her and she was raped until a point that she couldn't even remember how many were there. That was terrible. But what was amazing about this was when I was working with her, I was working with her during the period of the peace assignment agreement, and guerillas did some very harsh things as well. And these people were not even guerillas nor paramilitary. They were people, they were farmers, rural people who had nothing to do, that had to assume that a lot of people came with guns, that must have assumed what was happening there.
And she was, after suffering all this, she was one of the strongest supporters of the peace agreement. I was amazed. For example, after the peace agreement went for the plebiscite, I got curious. They didn’t win. So, like the peace agreement lost. And I went to talk with my colleagues there, from El Salado, from the rural regions in Montes de María. And they couldn't believe it. Like, of course, they didn't agree with forgiving FARCs actions, but they preferred to forgive than to continue the war. They are the ones that suffered the war. They are the ones that are poor because of war. Yet, they are a minority. Rural communities in Colombia represent – the ones that work the land – 13% of the people. So, they don't show a majority in the votes, some even can’t because they live far away. So, they cannot represent their speech on public participation, yet they are the ones that are paying all the offering.
Mwangi Thuita: You later went on to actually work on the peace accord. What was it like working on the implementation of rural reforms that were part of the peace agreement?
Daniel Vallejo: Some years later, I had the opportunity of working in the presidency with the post-conflict direction. That was the office in charge of implementing or monitoring the implementation of the agreement. And I was fascinated. I had to read the agreement in different ways, not only like literary reading, but understanding it. And what I started seeing is that the agreement is quite magnificent, because what is different from other peace agreements is that this is not a ceasefire treaty. This is way far from being that. Like, the agreement divides in six main points.
Only one of these points is the ceasefire. The other points are focused on the rural regions, on how to prevent this from occurring again. And that's what I think is amazing about this agreement. For example, I’m going to tell you a little bit about the six points. The first one is the rural integral reform, which is rural development. And it's focused on climate change, environmental protection, but rural reform. The second one is political participation. The third one is the end of conflict. So, you can see that part as the ceasefire, it is much more complex than a cease fire, but it's like the idea there. The fourth point is the drug conflict, which is very important here because it’s the economic source of this violence. So, it has to be put in there.
The fifth point is the victims. So, I was telling you, and that was what impressed me a lot. This agreement is based on forgiveness, it’s the most important part of this. And forgiveness is not an easy thing. This conflict has been for more than 60 years in our country. So, the amount of dead people due to the conflict is huge. And you must convince people that, “Please forgive, or we won't get anywhere.” So, there's a big part here for victims, where FARC has to accept what they did, where people want to hear what happened. They don't want to judge. They just want to hear. Where is my mom? Where is she buried? Is she's still alive. When did you kill her? Why did you kill her? That's a very important part for victims. And the six part is the monitoring and verification of disagreement.
But what I want to highlight about this, maybe on a personal opinion, I think the rural development part of this agreement is amazing because what it tries to do is refocus the rural model way of seeing the country. We have a lot – people in rural regions are way poorer than people in urban regions, and they are usually forgotten. So, this part looks to change that, and to prevent a new group from appearing because that will happen if we don't fix that part. And thus, to conclude, there is one thing that I am worried about this agreement, and about the implementation of the agreement, is that initially when the agreement was shown to the public, there was a very big part about land redistribution, like land, property, redistribution, and property in Colombia is very badly distributed.
And that's the source of some of the most rural inequality. Unfortunately, that land is in the hands of important people and nobody wants to give their land. So, that ended up not being on the peace agreement or kind of is, but not as strong as initially. And it’s not being implemented, that part has been left behind. And what worries me is that it can make the problem resurge in some time. But in general, I invite people to read, not the agreement, it’s like 2000 pages long, but there are summaries that you can read and see why it was a so interesting agreement.
Mwangi Thuita: Thanks for listening to this episode of Root of Conflict. Marina Milaszewska and Manuel Bustamante were your interviewers. Thank you to Yi Ning Wong and Aishwarya Raje for editing this episode. Be sure to subscribe to Root of Conflict wherever you get your podcasts. For more information on the work underway at the Pearson Institute, please visit thepearsoninstitute.org and follow them on Twitter.
Root of Conflict
11.24.19
Finding the Narrow Corridor | James Robinson
Manuel Bustamante: Hi, I am Manuel Bustamante.
Sonnet Frisbie: And I’m Sonnet Frisbie.
Manuel Bustamante: And you're listening to the Root of Conflict by University of Chicago Public Policy Podcasts.
Sonnet Frisbie: We are excited to have with us today, Dr. James Robinson, Director of the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts at the Harris School of Public Policy. He is also the Reverend Dr. Richard L. Pearson Professor of Global Conflict Studies and the coauthor of the international bestseller. Why Nations Fail. We're talking with him today about his new book, The Narrow Corridor.
Sonnet Frisbie: Dr. Robinson, thank you so much for joining us and welcome to the podcast, my pleasure to be here. So, let's jump right in. I wanted to talk a little bit about your previous work and how it then transitioned into your current work. So, in your previous book with your coauthor, Daron Acemoglu, Why Nations Fail, you argued that the level of economic prosperity in a country largely depends on institutions, which are themselves an outcome of political processes. How did you get interested in institutions? Why institutions?
James Robinson: I think that was because when I was an undergraduate at the London School of Economics, I read this book by North and Thomas called the Rise of the Western World, which is a famous institutionalist interpretation of the Industrial Revolution. We read a whole bunch of books like that. We read Weber's Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism and all sorts of different interpretations of industrialization. And I just remember that book really stuck with me. I just found it really convincing, a lot of it is about Britain, and I'm British and it resonated with what I understood about British history. And it's a very powerful institutional and political theory of the emergence of the Industrial Revolution. I think Acemoglu also read that book as an undergraduate at the University of York. So, we were both very big fans of that book. And I think that's how we both started thinking about institutions and economic development.
Manuel Bustamante: And I think that one of the most fascinating features from the framework describing your previous book is that extractive institutions do not stem from the ignorance of policy makers, but that exists from design. Why do you think that is the case? What is the logic behind extractive institutions not arising from ignorance of policymakers?
James Robinson: One is just kind of empirical. It seems very difficult for us to explain the observed variation in policy and institutions by comparative ignorance. And the second is just field work or practical experience of talking to policy makers and working in the developing world. Time after time, I've been in situations where it's perfectly clear what needs to be done, and everybody understands that, but they can't do it because the politics just won't align with it. So, it's also just many, many real world experiences convinced me that this can't be the right way. This ignorance, what we call the ignorance hypothesis, and why nations fail. Even though it still dominates the economics profession – in fact, three people got the Nobel prize on Monday for promoting the ignorance hypothesis. It's always been completely baffling to me why. That's the paradigm in economics, but it never seems to explain anything I've looked at in detail.
Sonnet Frisbie: And in The Narrow Corridor in contrast, it seems like you're focusing more on how these institutions emerge initially and the new concept, or the concept you really focus on is the idea of needs. Can you talk a little bit about, about liberty itself and how you honed in on that concept? Yeah.
James Robinson: In some sense that's exactly right. There’s two big kind of new things in The Narrow Corridor. One is trying to understand in a deeper way, these long run dynamics of political institutions with a framework that allows us to talk about things that we couldn't talk about and why nations fail. And the other thing is trying to shift the discussion on what's the ultimate dependent variable. What is it we're ultimately trying to understand? What is it that people value or makes for a society worth living in? Yes, that's economics, obviously people care about material things and living standards, but they care about other things. And I think we try to take the view that liberty – that's not some Western notion connected to some particular political tradition - it's actually something that humans aspire to everywhere.
But it's obvious when you look around the world, just as with economic development, there's enormous variation in the extent to which people in different societies experience liberty. So again, why did we focus on that? Well, I think it's trying to broaden that discussion. You could say Amartya Sen tried to do that in his work on development as freedom, so it's related to Sen’s agenda of trying to put – Sen himself was much more of a philosophy. He never really proposed a positive theory of when development is freedom arises or doesn't arrive, it's a much more kind of, “This is what we aspire to” and it's a much more kind of normative point of view. So, I think that's just something that we've always thought is important and I work a lot in Africa and I think Africans value liberty just as much as anybody else, wo it's not something peculiarly Western, and it's nice to have a non-Western theory of the emergence of that. Look at people in Hong Kong, what is it they're fighting for? It’s not about economics, and Hong Kong is an extremely prosperous and dynamic place economically, but people are extremely concerned about basic rights, it seems to me.
Manuel Bustamante: Like reading your book, we found that it presents an alternative vision to that of political liberty being this durable construct that is arrived at by a process of enlightenment. So according to your book, liberty is kind of an outcome of a process, which is a constant struggle between the state and the society. And you use an allegory to the Red Queen, which is a character in Lewis Carl’s Through the Looking Glass. I don't know, if you can please explain what is the Red Queen effect, how does it work and what does it have to do with labor?
James Robinson: I mean, that's one of the key ideas in the book is that, whether or not you get liberty depends on this balance between the power of the state and the power of society, that if the state dominates society, that's what we call a despotic situation. Then it's very unlikely that you're going to have liberty. Think about China today. But it's also true, you can have the polar opposite situation, think of Yemen where the society, in some sense dominates the state, and that's very common in world history. There's many parts of the world today in the Middle East and Sub-Saharan Africa in South Asia, which are like that, but that's radically different from China, but it also doesn't create much liberty. It's when you get this balance between the state and society. But what we emphasize, and this is coming to this Red Queen effect you mentioned, is that the balance between the states and the society is not just kind of some one-off moment of constitutional equilibrium or something.
It's actually a race. It’s a kind of race and the balance has to be maintained. And it's a struggle in some sense. And the metaphor of the Red Queen from Through the Looking Glass is where Alison, the Red Queen are engaged in this race, but they don't go anywhere. They just stay in the same place. And the idea with the Red Queen effect is that if you want to stay in the same place, if you want to maintain this balance between the state and society, there's a lot of work. And there's a lot of struggles in that. It's a process, but here's where the metaphor doesn't work completely. We emphasize that in that struggle and in that process, actually the state and society both get stronger, their metaphor doesn't completely work.
The idea is to put something that sticks in your mind, that kind of emphasizes the importance of this mechanism. This is not about enlightenment, like at the start of Chapter 2, we talk about the history of political institutions and liberty in classical Athens. And to me, there's a struggle to build state institutions, to control them. And that goes backwards and forwards. And people are fighting for liberty to create institutions, to figure out how to write constitutions or use social norms. So, I think that's a brilliant example of what we're talking about.
Sonnet Frisbie: I'm glad that you mentioned China and Hong Kong, that's a really interesting topic. And I'm curious to know how you view the role of technology in this dynamic tension between society and the state. Because on the one hand, you have China exhibiting qualities of what you call in your book, digital dictatorship. While on the other hand, you often have protesters using technology to organize in North Africa and elsewhere. On net, do you think technology is more likely to shore up government or societies in this dynamic tension?
James Robinson: Our view is that there's no one implication of technology, it all depends on the institutional environment in which it's being used. So, technology can be good or be bad, just like natural resources can be good for economic growth, or they can be bad for economic growth. It depends on the institutional context in which they arise. So, I think technology can have either of those effects, but how it's used is just going to depend on the initial institutional equilibrium. That's our view. So, if you're in China, the state can co-opt all of this and it gives the state more effective tools for monitoring and controlling society. But if you're in the United States, hopefully, something different happens, can empower people and there isn't censorship or control. But the point of the Red Queen effect is that it's somehow in the DNA of the state to try to use these tools, to monitor and control, as we learned from all of Snowden's revelations. So then, people have to be very watchful in this context of technological revolutions, where somehow, suddenly, the state can do all sorts of things that previously it couldn't do. That's a moment of enormous risk in some sense for society.
Sonnet Frisbie: Is it in the DNA of people to push back?
James Robinson: I think society has established norms and they established precedents and expectations. And I think what you see in the corridor, when the Red Queen works, is that people do understand that their liberty is threatened and they're willing to protest and organized collectively and fight to protect their liberties. But sometimes it's difficult. It's more difficult for society to act collectively, I'd say, because you have to recognize it and you have to have a common interpretation.
Manuel Bustamante: Yeah. And I think that, your book, you may be using concepts on social norms to explain this. So, you use the cage of norms, which maybe prevents some societies from pushing back and constrain them. So, can you please explain how these social norms can limit liberty and at the same time constrain the emergence of this?
James Robinson: You put your finger on a very important part of the book. I think that there's a cardboard cutout critique of institutionalism quite a few economists have rolled out, which is that, “Oh if you look at the constitution and the electoral rules and the law, Colombia doesn't have such bad institutions.” So, it can't be institutions that explain why Colombia has GDP per capita, 20% of the U.S. level. But institutions, it's not about that. There's a much broader set of institutions as irrelevant for the way societies function. There's what Douglas and North called informal institutions. And anyone who's ever lived or done research in a developing country knows that there's all sorts of norms and practices, which have massive consequences for economics and politics, but which are not in the constitution, written down as laws. And so, I think perhaps in the past, these things are much harder to research and they much harder to measure as a social scientist.
And perhaps that's one of the reasons why in the past, we've shied away from that a little bit. But I think one of the advantages of this current framework is it allows us to talk much more about that. And we know that's a big topic of research for us. And I think we'd like to push that agenda. So the way it comes up in the book at the moment is the way we start talking about it, is to say, if you have a despotic leviathan, as we call it, following Hobbes’ terminology where the state dominates society, that doesn't create much liberty. And the opposite situation, like I mentioned, Yemen earlier, where you could say the society dominates, the state doesn't create much liberty either. And in some sense, there's two reasons for that.
One is a very traditional Hobbesian reason, which is that there's no state, there's no neutral arbiter. So, there's a lot of feuding and violence in a society like Yemen, every man has a dagger and a gun. And so, that's a Hobbesian war. So, that's the first reason there's not much liberty in Yemen. But there's another reason which is, you see in all these societies without strong central authority, this is very evident in Africa. Social norms, proliferate to mitigate the risk of conflict or violence or disputes breaking out. This is extremely well documented by anthropologists. So, there's actually much less violence in these societies. And Hobbes would have imagined, because societies create ways of avoiding situations that would be conflict prone. How do they do that? They do it by restricting people's opportunities. Yemen has the lowest participation of women in the labor force, in any country in the world, and why is it that women are shuttered away and kept in home?
And that's just part of this, trying to kind of create a society where disputes don't arise, where conflicts don't arise and that manifests itself in the economy and every aspect of life. So, we call this the cage of norms. So, the cage of norms is a fundamental obstacle to creating a more inclusive society. And part of what the Red Queen does is to erode that cage of norms. And we tried to give some examples from European history in that chapter where, as this race between the states and society takes place, the state gains capacity or whatever, but society changes also. And that's a very crucial part of creating liberty, it seems to us.
Manuel Bustamante: And you also mentioned the role of like political entrepreneurs in breaking the schedule of norms sometimes. So, the case of Solon, you mentioned the case of Shaka Zulu and others. So, how important do you think these political entrepreneur, or the kind of individuals, are in breaking the cage of norms? It seems to be something that will take much more time, but at the same time, there are some particular times where things change really roughly.
James Robinson: Yeah. I mean, I think as an economist, economists are very happy to talk about innovation, technological innovation. Thomas Edison invented the light bulb, why did he do that? Well, he was just a creative chap and he had this idea. Economists are happy to write down models of technological innovation and how technological innovation is critical for economic development and raising productivity and living standards. But, for some reason they're much more reluctant to write down models of institutional innovation. People do innovate. If you look at the U.S. constitution, first day of the U.S. constitution, James Madison showed up with his Virginia plan, what was that? Here's a blueprint for how we do things. It was an institutional innovation, and that's a very interesting moment.
If you've ever read the oral history of African societies, every oral history of African societies involves things like that, involves a - Sundiata eats all the clans’ totems in Africa, clans have these totems, which is usually an animal that you're not allowed to eat. So, Sundiata eats all the clans’ totems, but he's rejecting the kinship, the clan system, he’s breaking with the clan system because he's in the middle of building institutions. That example is not in the book, but like at some point you just want to get finished and there's too many examples.
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Sonnet Frisbie: You mentioned the U.S. Constitution. And so, there are sometimes implicit norms, but there can also be implicit compromises. And you talk about how, in some ways, the U.S.’s entry into the corridor was a deal with the devil. I think you called it a Faustian bargain. Can you explain the implications of this compromise, maybe presently?
James Robinson: Yeah, it's uncomfortable talking about things like that. We talk about this deal and how liberty, or at least liberty for white men was created in the U.S. at the time of the constitution. And women even lost some political rights. Under the colonial institutions, women who had enough wealth were actually labeled to vote in some states like in Philadelphia, if I remember correctly. So, they lost rights. And obviously, there was then this racial aspect of it. That is a dirty deal, because it was powerful. The powerful people were Northern mercantile interests, nascent industrialists, what Southern slave owners like Madison and Washington and Jefferson. You had to somehow create a system of rules that respected their interests, and that went on for a long time. the Missouri Compromise in the 1820s, but nothing is perfect.
I think the big picture of the U.S., if you compare it to Latin American countries like we do in Chapter 18, is that they all had very similar problems to solve. On balance, the U.S., maybe the word dirty deals, but they solved it much more effectively than any Latin American country did. So, I guess from that perspective, the U.S. has been a success story, but obviously you see the legacy of that dirty deal. If you go out of the Harris School and turn left and go two blocks, there's still an enormous amount of exclusion and marginalization in U.S. society. And things like the Bill of Rights – it was implicitly recognized that this did not apply to black people, essentially until the war on the court in the 1950s and 1960s basically forced dates to apply Bill of Rights, to protect black people's rights.
So, that legacy of exclusion of Afro-Americans is still with us today. And it’s just outrage in some sense that we tell the story of how that propagated itself over time, up to redlining and the creation of these urban ghettos. I still just have never understood. I’ve been in the United States a long time, and I've never understood how that can persist without outrage, = people should be outraged about that in this society, in this country. But they're also used to the way things are that nothing happens.
Manuel Bustamante: So in this podcast, we also try to understand the Roots of Conflict and what can be done about it. So, it seems that the issue of populism has been linked to conflict in the past. So, with some Harris students, we just returned from the Pearson Global Forum in Berlin. And I think that what I find striking is that the fact that Hitler was initially appointed under a democratic regime under the Weimar Republic, which seems very paradoxical. So, I was wondering how does your theory help us explain the rise of populist leaders and why do you think that voters sometimes dismantle the checks and balances that can help constrain their leaders?
James Robinson: Yeah, I mean that's an interesting example of a phenomenon that we would have had a hard time dealing with in Why Nations Fail, but actually, coincidentally, not by design, the framework in The Narrow Corridor actually can help you think about that. Because why nations fail, in some sense, citizens are always in favor of inclusive institutions, and it's hard to imagine citizens overthrowing. The emphasis is very much on examples where inclusive institutions collapse, because of almost an elite fermented coup like in Venice. But I think the Nazi example is a case where, in some sense, like popular discontent, people, ordinary people get so discontented and alienated from the institutions that they they lose all faith in them and they’re willing to overthrow them. So, we tried to talk about that in the book, in this chapter, The Devil in The Details.
I would say the framework is flexible enough to talk about that. I'm not sure I completely understand it. I think I think if you look at the German case, it's a moment that's difficult to understand, nowadays, in the sense that if you look at the way the Weimar Republic functions, there were a third of the Congress that were communists, who wanted to have a Soviet style revolution and thought that democracy was like a bourgeois institution. And then there was the Nazis who didn't like it. And then there were all of these traditional Prussians and conservatives who wanted to restore the monarchy. And so, there was this very heavy hand of history of the moment of the Bolshevik revolution, the 1917 revolution.
But the big fact was until the depression hit, the Nazis still only had 2 or 3% of the vote, and then the depression hit and the Weimar institutions were completely incapable of dealing with the economic crisis. And then the Nazis surged. So the way we try to talk about this is that sometimes challenges or shocks can just run massively ahead of the ability of the institutions to cope with them. But it was really a kind of, I don’t know, it was a double whammy, it was a triple or quadruple whammy that sunk the Weimar Republic. So the good news is that it's hard to imagine that happening again. And the bad news of course, is that if it does happen, it has calamitous effects for human beings and human society. We try to talk about how challenges, and maybe that is happening a bit now, there's this massive increase in inequality, a lot of social and economic dislocation, which has been created by globalization, that institutions in the United States and Britain and elsewhere have singularly failed to address. And people don't know what the problem is. People blame it on migration and that problem is not going to go away and people are scared. So, there are a lot of shocks and crises. And I think what you do see is this disillusionment with institutions and then people can reach for radical solutions. Yeah.
Manuel Bustamante: But I think the response was very different in the U.S. with the FDR and the crisis. And like in Sweden, as you mentioned in the book, so the response to the same shock can be very different in different places.
James Robinson: It could be but it's good to remember when we're talking about migration, that the U.S. severely restricted immigration in the 1920s. Before the 1920s, you could basically show up at Ellis Island, and if you didn't have tuberculosis, they let you in. But enormous restrictions were put on. And one thing we do try to point out is that people are very selective in their memory. I think populism, the progressives. So, for example, in the 1890s, William Jennings, Bryan, and people remember good things about that, the support for antitrust and fighting big business and making the Senate directly elected, getting women votes. But there were also lots of really awful ugly things associated with populism. Antisemitism. Anti-immigrants. Blaming Chinese people. Roosevelt. What about Roosevelt? Well, Roosevelt tried to pack the Supreme Court, Roosevelt flagrantly and sneakily violated term limits, two things that Trump hasn't even – I was going to say he hasn't dreamed of, he's probably dreamed of them, but he hasn't tweeted about them.
I think our memories a little bit selective about lots of these social movements. Often there's a package, and it's two steps forward, and one step back and we tend to remember the two steps forward. So, like the optimistic view of what's going on now is that actually there were all of these discontents and grievances in society, which are perfectly legitimate and they need to be addressed. And I personally think that there are some issues, which you can't make compromises over. I don't think you make compromises over discrimination against women or against minorities or black people, or anti-Semitism, there's no trade-off there. But I think discussing migration is a legitimate issue in a nation state. What rules do we want to have? I think that's a legitimate discussion. That’s a discussion that every country in the world has had in the past and the fact that that's coming up now, that's because people are unhappy about the current situation and that's perfectly legitimate in a democracy.
Sonnet Frisbie: It is. It reminds me of the term that was coined by Viktor Orbán in 2014, illiberal democracy, and he's a leader who's talked a lot about migration. But it seems that based on your theories, illiberal democracy would be a conflict in terms.
James Robinson: The way I would think about it is in terms of the cage of norms. Think of the example that I was just giving a Weimar Republic, where there were huge legacies from the monarchical regime about how things should be done in the 1920s in Germany. And I would say, in Hungary, there's all sorts of legacies from the past. Legacies of antisemitism and conservative with a small c, views. This is how I'd think about it. And I think if you look at Europe, what historians point out is that there's this very steep gradient from west to east. There was mass serfdom and feudalism in Hungary until the 1848 revolution when the serfs were freed, that Eastern Europe never modernized in the same way Western Europe did until very recently. So, there's a long shadow of the past in Eastern Europe.
And I think what we've seen with the European Union is that people massively overestimated the rapidity of social and institutional change, and they didn't have a realistic view. They somehow thought that this could all be wished, that Hungarian or Romanian and Bulgarian society could be completely reformed in a decade by the European Union. I think what we've seen is that that's not true, and the adjustment is slower and we just have to live with that, I think. I think if you look at the history of Western Europe, you look at the nature of Western European society. That's very different from what you see in Eastern Europe. And you just have to accept that, you have to work with that. That's what Solon had to do.
Sonnet Frisbie: I wanted to pivot a little bit. You were talking in the book refuting Francis Fukuyama's famous claim about the end of history in 1989 with the fall of the Soviet Union, and that it would usher in a period of increasing peace and prosperity. Instead, you warned us to expect diversity, which is a bit unsatisfactory. Do you see any trends within this diversity that you can point to, more countries entering the corridor or fewer?
James Robinson: The pattern in history is divergence, not convergence. And the convergence of all of these countries to liberal democracy was a very unlikely outcome. And Professor Fukuyama makes a more subtle claim. So, in some sense, he doesn't really push the positive claim. He wanted to push, I think more a normative claim, which is perhaps more interesting. And I'm not sure I have much to say about that. I think he's probably completely wrong about that too, because the Chinese, this idea that somehow liberal democracy established itself as the only legitimate system of authority in the world, I don't think that's what the Taliban think. That's not what the Chinese think. I think there's very different political philosophies in the world, in my experience. There's very different ideas about what constitutes legitimate political authority. And it doesn't look like liberal democracy.
I'd like to write that book next. I think Acemoglu maybe disagrees with me, but in his defense, Professor Fukuyama is a very interesting, clever man. I think he was more advancing the normative claim. He understood it was difficult, positively. But I think both the positive and the normative claim are wrong. The book is about the positive claim in some sense. I think what we tried to say towards the end of the book is of course, the modern world is different. Talking about serfdom and the 1848 revolution, labor oppression has disappeared throughout the world. Discrimination against women, non-heterosexual people is falling in large parts of the world. You see many things. Why is that? Well partly, that's to do with power.
It's partly to do with women mobilizing and getting organized. But it's also this language of rights, which we talk a little bit about, which I find interesting. We're trying to do some research on this in Colombia and what was the impact of the 1991 constitution that introduced these notions of rights? What was the effect of that on mobilization? And did it influence people's ability to engage in collective action or did it lead them to demand different things? My sense is that that's been very important in making the corridor wider. It's much more difficult to have a despotic society with this language of, “You could do it if you were powerful like China or North Korea, or you can really repress people,” but it's more difficult. And so it gives people a language to kind of interpret what the problem is.
And so, I see that all over the world, you see that in rural Sierra Leone, people demanding their rights. That’s an interesting thing. I'm not sure that globalization or technology has these unambiguous effects, but I do think you see some things about the world that make the corridor wider and easier to get into. But the big picture for us is always this persistence. If you went back to North and Thomas' book, I mentioned earlier, The Rise of The WesternWorld, they trace this emergence of political and economic institutions in Britain, which formed the basis for the Industrial Revolution back to these changes and conflicts in the 17th century. But I guess our view has gotten deeper and deeper on that.
When we talk about that, when is it that Western Europe really starts to diverge, it's actually in the Early Middle Ages for us. It's not that it's very late in the day. And that's how I see the world. And Manuel was mentioning earlier entrepreneurship. And you do see that, societies do change, but they do it in a remarkably context-dependent way. I think if you thought about these examples in Colombia of political entrepreneurs, trying to change things and trying to harness the Red Queen effect, actually the big picture is the improvements are small. The enduring improvements are small.
Manuel Bustamante: Now that you mentioned Colombia, I can't leave without asking you to comment on the peace agreement that was signed in 2016 between the FARC guerrillas and the Colombian government after more than years of 50 years of civil conflict. So, do you think that the peace agreement can help Colombia move closer into the corridor, or what I personally wonder is, what conditions can contribute to a broader coalition in favor of - depending the diplomacy, because I've seen, as you, some responses as you discuss in your book? So kind of what kind of conditions are necessary for these changes?
James Robinson: I think the peace process was a fabulous thing, and it was just an extraordinary achievement of Sergio Jaramillo and Humberto de la Calle to get the FARC to re-imagine their relationship to Colombia differently. And it's great that 10,000 of those people demobilized, but has that changed Colombia? No. First of all, the government is incapable of implementing the policy. So, the FARC are more serious than the government, as far as I can tell. And there's a recent report in the summer about the staggering failure to implement large parts of the peace agreement. And luckily, most FARC people have reconciled themselves to that being the case and decided that they want to reintegrate themselves back into Colombian society anyway, and a couple of thousands have gone back to fighting. But that's still a good thing to me, that there's very interesting aspects of the peace agreement, this whole truth and reconciliation process, and getting people to talk about their crimes.
A few years ago I attended some of these sessions where paramilitary leaders were confronted by their victims. People were very skeptical, but actually I found it extremely real. Like it was real. This guy Ramón Isaza, he was almost in tears. Lots of terrible things happened that nobody ever intended. There was real reconciliation, it was actually extraordinary. That on a large scale could be something fabulous for Colombia. Somehow they have to change the way they think about things. But of course, the government is busy gutting that process already, and they have no commitment to that. President Uribe gains political capital out of these conflicts, he he has a need for enemies, you could say. So I think it's been a good thing and it's a great thing and the FARC will never come back like they did before. And that's a great thing for Colombia, but has it turned Colombia into something different? I think the answer to that is clearly, no.
Manuel Bustamante: Just to end the podcast, since you are a professor at the Harris School here at the University of Chicago, we've felt that some of your theories may leave some policymakers feeling somewhat hopeless. So, first, I wanted to ask you if the, if you think that there is something that are best practices in policy, and what do you think are the main takeaways from your book for policymakers and students so that they can design better policies?
James Robinson: I think there's always best practices in different domains. I think that if you want to improve the capacity of the state, we understand lots of things about how you have to introduce meritocratic recruitment and promotion, and we know a lot about incentives, and the difficult thing is making any of that work. When President Macri came to power in Argentina, he had to fire 20,000 noquis in Argentina who are basically ghost people working in the civil service who are members of the Peronist party. But then a few months later he had to fire a bunch of relatives of his own ministers because that's just how things are in Argentina. There's all these pressures which create enormous dysfunctionality in state institutions.
And I think everyone understands that, they understand the political and social pressures and the difficult thing is not the policy, but the politics and in fact, the story of the Macri government, which is fascinating, is actually they couldn't figure out feasibly a politics which would get them out of this Peronist situation. And the Peronists will be back. That’s not a problem of policy. It's a problem of politics. And so, I think that one thing about the Harris School, which distinguishes it from any other public policy school is there's a very deep commitment to trying to teach students politics and help them think about politics. And I don't think there's a magic wand for solving political problems, because all the details of interests and organization and power and parties suddenly become very important in figuring out what a feasible politics is. But also innovation.
There's a lot of very clever innovation to get around political problems. Here’s a generalization. If you look in detail at what Mockus and Fajardo did, one mayor is very successful in Bogota and Medellín in mundane and trying to move the societies towards much more peace, public good provision. One thing they both did was let kind of very venal, clientelistic politicians take credit for things that they didn't do. Your impulse is always to take credit for everything yourself, but they didn't do that. Like they were bigger than that. There's a famous scene where Mockus is doing something. I don't remember what it is now. And he's on stage with this extremely traditional conservative clientelistic politician. And then he gives the guy the credit for it. The guy looks like his false teeth are about to jump out. But what can he say? “No, I didn't do it.” You know? You have to create ownership in it. And that's a hard thing to do. You have to be very non-egotistical, and Fajardo did the same thing, you know? So, I think there are political strategies. And I think we don't think enough. Daron and I don't think enough and maybe collectively public policy schools, we don't think enough about how to draw robust conclusions like that. Perhaps that should be on the next book instead.
Sonnet Frisbie: Great. Well, professor, it has been wonderful talking to you today and reading The Narrow Corridor. Thank you so much for your time.
James Robinson: My pleasure.
Sonnet Frisbie: Root of Conflict is produced by UC3P in collaboration with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts, a research institute housed within the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago.