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63 J. Conflict Resol. 3 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/jcfltr63 and id is 1 raw text is: 





Article


                                                             Journal of Conflict Resolution
                                                                  2019, Vol. 63(l) 3-30
                     Ei D                                          The Author(s) 2017
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                                                          sagepub.com/journals-permissions
Education             and       M   ass                   DOI: 10.177/00220027,721394
                                                            journals.sagepub.com/home/icr
Protest in Africa                                                      OSAGE


Sirianne DahlumI and Tore Wig2





Abstract
Does a more educated population spur regime-challenging mass protest? It is com-
monly argued that educated individuals are more likely to collectively challenge gov-
ernments through protests and that this may explain why education is associated with
democratization. While many studies have investigated education's effect on con-
ventional political participation (voting, petitioning, etc.), it is not known whether
education levels affect contentious mass protest. This article argues that education
increases the frequency of mass protest, by alleviating collective-action problems and
motivating mass opposition, particularly in autocracies. These links are investigated
at the subnational level in Africa, by mapping over 600,000 survey respondents to
spatialized protest-event data. We present evidence that areas with more educated
populations have higher levels of protest activity, and we find mixed evidence con-
sistent with both opportunity- and grievance-related mechanisms driving this rela-
tionship. We proceed to identify the causal effect of education by using the location of
colonial-era Christian missions to instrument for local education levels.


Keywords
rebellion, democratization, civil wars, internal armed conflict


The notion that education increases a population's tendency to initiate mass upris-
ings against existing institutions is popular. University campuses have often served


iDepartment of Political Science, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
2Peace Research Institute Oslo, PRIO, Oslo, Norway

Corresponding Author:
Sirianne Dahlum, Department of Political Science, University of Oslo, Oslo 085 1, Norway.
Email: s.a.dahlum@stv.uio.no

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