CIDCM Researchers Receive $2.5m Grant to Study Link Between Aid and Conflict
Over the past 30 years, conflict between countries has become relatively rare; however intrastate conflict – civil wars, territorial disputes, and insurgencies - remains a persistent global phenomenon. In places such as Afghanistan, Colombia, Iraq, Mali, and Syria, the atrocities that often accompany armed conflict create crises that spill over national borders and fuel regional and international instability. Economic, social, and/or political underdevelopment of the involved countries exacerbates the risk of major instability. As a result, development aid and the dynamics of armed conflict are inexorably linked.
International donors have distributed more than $6 trillion in aid around the world since 1950, including more than $2 trillion since 2000. The United States alone distributed more than $200 billion in development assistance between 2001-2010, with the vast majority disbursed to conflict-affected states. Recent studies have begun providing evidence that the scale and protection of aid has substantial impacts on the conflicts. The findings are limited in terms of scope, however, due to inadequate data on aid and a narrow range of analyses focused on only a few specific conflicts. This circumstance, combined with other mixed findings, leaves large gaps in the understanding of development aid’s impact on conflict.
New research at the University of Maryland seeks to address those limitations and leverage major advances in information, technology and methodology to study the relationship between aid and conflict. The project 'Aiding Resilience? The Impact of Foreign Assistance on the Dynamics of Intrastate Armed Conflict’ has just received a $2.5 million grant from the Minerva Initiative of the U.S. Department of Defense to study the association between development aid and the likelihood, escalation, severity, spread, duration, and recurrence of violence, spanning the phases before, during, and after armed conflict.
The Minerva Initiative is a program to support university-based social science research that was launched by the Secretary of Defense in 2008. The goal of the Initiative is to bring together universities, research organizations, and individual scholars to improve the DoD's basic understanding of the social, cultural, behavioral, and political forces that shape various regions of the world. Because two of the initiative’s key objectives are to develop foundational knowledge about sources of present and future conflict, and to understand the economic contributors to stability, the ‘Aiding Resilience?’ study is of particular interest.
“The overarching goal of our project is to establish when and why aid contributes to reduced violence, and when and why it doesn’t,” says Professor Paul Huth, Director of the UMD Center for International Development and Conflict Management (CIDCM), Professor of Government & Politics and principal investigator for the study. “Besides the relevance that the findings will have to aid and conflict-related policy decisions, the data resources created through our study will provide information essential to the successful planning and deployment of assistance around the globe.”
Typically, researchers have approached the topic at the country level, studying aid in general terms and narrowly examining specific aspects of conflict. By contrast, Dr. Huth and the other members of the project team are focused on disaggregating existing data and collecting new information to develop a far more comprehensive and holistic view of aid’s impact on conflict. “We are combining expansive aid data with diverse sets of other information, including geospatial data, demographics, history, and so on.”
To support this undertaking, Dr. Huth is supported by a number of researchers at UMD and beyond. “We have intentionally built an interdisciplinary, international team,” says Dr. David Backer, Assistant Director of CIDCM and co-principal investigator on the Minerva grant. “Collaborators in multiple countries will be collecting and analyzing data and building tools to help visualize our findings. Our partners include other universities, but also organizations with proven infrastructure and credibility in their respective fields.” Each of the partners – the College of William & Mary, the Institute of Development Studies (UK), the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (Switzerland), and Development Gateway – brings vital, distinctive expertise to the project. The work based at UMD will be concentrated in CIDCM and the Center for International Security Studies at Maryland (CISSM). Dr. Kevin Jones, a Research Associate at CISSM and also a co-principal investigator on the Minerva grant, highlights the appeal of linking units to work together. “This project capitalizes on two significant research clusters within the university that have world-class expertise on analyzing the underlying dynamics of localized conflict. The combination of the UMD resources with the external partners provides a unique opportunity to move the data-collection and analysis process forward much farther than our respective individual efforts might.”
Many questions remain regarding the impact of aid on armed conflicts.
“Different types of aid, from different sources, are distributed to different locations with different characteristics under different situations,” explains Dr. Huth. “Given this variety, and other significant factors, aid could potentially have a positive, negative, or no consistent impact on the onset, escalation, severity, duration, and recurrence of conflict.” Since the three-year study had just commenced, the results await an extended and intensive process of data development and analysis, From the outset of the project, however, the members of the team are confident about the utility of the insights that can be expected to emerge and the multifaceted learning that will be experienced in the process.
“These studies are of broad value to conflict and aid researchers, who are limited by the information that is currently available. Beyond its contribution to policy, science and public resources, the grant will support student learning at all levels,” says Dr. Backer. “More than 100 undergraduates and graduate students will contribute to this study, from data collection to analysis, to the creation of new tools.”
For more information or inquiries, please contact:
Andrew Roberts
Associate Director, Communications & Marketing
College of Behavioral and Social Sciences
andrewr@umd.edu
P: 301.405.2171
Published on Thu, Nov 13, 2014 - 12:58PM