Food price increase and urban unrest: The role of societal organizations
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Rudolfsen, Ida (2021) Food price increase and urban unrest: The role of societal organizations, Journal of Peace Research 58(2): 215–230.
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Under what conditions do increasing food prices lead to urban unrest?
Existing literature suggests a positive correlation between food prices
and social unrest. Meanwhile, there is a large variation in the
consequences of increasing food prices, indicating that this phenomenon
has a heterogeneous effect across different contexts. The theoretical
focus on grievances in the existing literature appears to be
insufficient for explaining the variations in outcome. This study asks
whether specific features in the domestic institutional setting can
explain why food-price induced grievances sometimes lead to unrest and
at other times do not. Specifically, the article argues that the
manifestation of unrest when food prices increase is moderated by the
degree to which the state represses societal organizations. Civil and
political society have the potential to channel collective dissent
around food-related grievances, as these organizations provide existing
mobilization structures that people can draw on to engage in collective
action. Further, they can translate an individual-level grievance into a
group phenomenon by politicizing the cost of food through the
formulation of grievance frames. If the state represses existing
societal organizations that can help aggrieved individuals engage in
collective action to voice discontent – or introduces barriers to
initial mobilization – this will likely reduce the possibility of unrest
when food prices go up. Using institutional data from the Varieties of
Democracy (V-Dem) project combined with the Social Conflict Analysis
Database (SCAD), the findings suggest that repression of societal
organizations decreases the likelihood of unrest when food prices rise.
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