2021
DOI: 10.1177/01979183211025492
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The Legacy of Conflict: Reconstruction and Migration in the Aftermath of Civil War in Tajikistan

Abstract: How do civil war and subsequent reconstruction efforts affect international migration? Although a wealth of evidence points to violent conflict’s effects on contemporaneous migration and although a rich body of literature examines development’s effects on migration, we know less about the intersection of conflict, development, and migration. This article examines the intersection of these factors nearly a decade after the 1992–1997 civil war in Tajikistan, combining data from the 2007 Tajikistan Living Standar… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…For Azerbaijan, I employed this information to specifically identify non‐IDP/refugee women never moving from Karabakh territories. This check was also important give the time‐lag and migratory moves between conflict and survey data collection which, for instance, were considerable in Tajikistan (note that respondents from Tajikistan 2012 DHS are excluded from these analyses as not asked about years lived in current residence) (O'Brien, 2022). The direction and significance of the relationships remained generally stable (Table S5): conflict exposure in childhood was positively associated with IPV and the increase was comparable to that observed in the full sample (the coefficient of 0.09 in Column 1 represents 38% increase in the likelihood of IPV for never‐migrant women exposed to conflict in childhood relative to the sample mean).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For Azerbaijan, I employed this information to specifically identify non‐IDP/refugee women never moving from Karabakh territories. This check was also important give the time‐lag and migratory moves between conflict and survey data collection which, for instance, were considerable in Tajikistan (note that respondents from Tajikistan 2012 DHS are excluded from these analyses as not asked about years lived in current residence) (O'Brien, 2022). The direction and significance of the relationships remained generally stable (Table S5): conflict exposure in childhood was positively associated with IPV and the increase was comparable to that observed in the full sample (the coefficient of 0.09 in Column 1 represents 38% increase in the likelihood of IPV for never‐migrant women exposed to conflict in childhood relative to the sample mean).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%