“Mtwara will be the New Dubai”: dashed expectations, grievances, and civil unrest in Tanzania
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Must, Elise & Siri Aas Rustad (2019) “Mtwara will be the New Dubai”: dashed expectations, grievances, and civil unrest in Tanzania, International Interactions. DOI: 10.1080/03050629.2019.1554569.
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When does inequality lead to conflict? Despite recent studies
highlighting the effects of group exclusion, this question has
not been fully answered. We argue that objective group
inequality is not sufficient to fuel unrest. Structural inequalities
need to be perceived as unfair, and become grievances, in
order to spark mobilization. While most conflict scholars recognize this on a theoretical level, statistical tests of the effect of
inequality on conflict almost exclusively rely on objective data.
This limits their ability to distinguish when inequality is politically relevant and when it is not. Southern Tanzania is a case in
point. Despite decades of marginalization, the population
remained peaceful until natural gas was discovered, and the
government was perceived to break their promises of local
development. Demonstrating that objective regional inequalities have remained relatively constant, while group grievances
seems to have increased, we argue that direct measures of
grievances are needed to pinpoint when inequality becomes
politically salient. Using novel survey data, we find that people
who think that the region is treated unfairly have the highest
likelihood of supporting and participating in civil unrest.
Read the article here