The stability of many post-conflict societies rests on the successful reintegration of former soldiers. We use a set of behavioural experiments to study the effects of forced military service for a rebel group (the Lord's Resistance Army) on trust and trustworthiness in Northern Uganda. We present evidence that soldiers did not self-select nor were systematically screened by rebels. We find that the experience of soldiering increases individual trustworthiness and community engagement, especially among those who soldiered during early age. These results suggest that the impact of child soldiering on social behaviour is not necessarily detrimental
Unable to attract enough voluntary recruits, many rebel groups rely on force to fill their ranks. Gi...
In the aftermath of civil war or violent internal conflict, one of the key peacebuilding challenges ...
Why do armed groups recruit large numbers of children as fighters, often coercively? The internation...
We use a set of experiments to study the effects of forced military service for a rebel group on soc...
Civil wars have afflicted two-thirds of African nations, drawing up to a third of male youth into ar...
Long before “IS” and “Boko Haram”, the messianic “Lord’s Resistance Army” (LRA) in Uganda was consid...
A prominent feature of rebel insurgencies in Africa is the use of abduction to recruit fighters. Th...
This study aimed to evaluate the potential contribution of informal community initiatives and formal...
Copyright: © 2014, Benjamin A et al., This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of...
The existent work on child soldiering began only recently to systematically study its consequences,...
The presence and participation of children in war, as casualties and soldiers, is not a new phenomen...
The use of child soldiers to perform violent acts is one of the most condemned and emotionally distu...
The level of brutality and violence against children abducted and forcefully conscripted by the Lord...
Since the late 1980s, the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), a spiritualist rebel group in northern Ugand...
What is the political legacy of violent conflict? This paper presents evidence for a link between wa...
Unable to attract enough voluntary recruits, many rebel groups rely on force to fill their ranks. Gi...
In the aftermath of civil war or violent internal conflict, one of the key peacebuilding challenges ...
Why do armed groups recruit large numbers of children as fighters, often coercively? The internation...
We use a set of experiments to study the effects of forced military service for a rebel group on soc...
Civil wars have afflicted two-thirds of African nations, drawing up to a third of male youth into ar...
Long before “IS” and “Boko Haram”, the messianic “Lord’s Resistance Army” (LRA) in Uganda was consid...
A prominent feature of rebel insurgencies in Africa is the use of abduction to recruit fighters. Th...
This study aimed to evaluate the potential contribution of informal community initiatives and formal...
Copyright: © 2014, Benjamin A et al., This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of...
The existent work on child soldiering began only recently to systematically study its consequences,...
The presence and participation of children in war, as casualties and soldiers, is not a new phenomen...
The use of child soldiers to perform violent acts is one of the most condemned and emotionally distu...
The level of brutality and violence against children abducted and forcefully conscripted by the Lord...
Since the late 1980s, the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), a spiritualist rebel group in northern Ugand...
What is the political legacy of violent conflict? This paper presents evidence for a link between wa...
Unable to attract enough voluntary recruits, many rebel groups rely on force to fill their ranks. Gi...
In the aftermath of civil war or violent internal conflict, one of the key peacebuilding challenges ...
Why do armed groups recruit large numbers of children as fighters, often coercively? The internation...