Civil conflict and displacement: village-level determinants of forced migration in Aceh

The purpose of this article is to identify the determinants of displacement behavior based on various push and pull factors at the village level. The study concentrates on changes in village population during three years of civil conflict (1999—2002) in Aceh, Indonesia. The empirical analysis is bas...

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Main Authors: Czaika, M, Kis-Katos, K
Format: Journal article
Published: SAGE Publications 2009
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author Czaika, M
Kis-Katos, K
author_facet Czaika, M
Kis-Katos, K
author_sort Czaika, M
collection OXFORD
description The purpose of this article is to identify the determinants of displacement behavior based on various push and pull factors at the village level. The study concentrates on changes in village population during three years of civil conflict (1999—2002) in Aceh, Indonesia. The empirical analysis is based on a unique dataset from two census rounds of the Indonesian Village Potential Census (PODES). It uses data on around 5,200 Acehnese villages and relates village-level population change to conflict variables, geographic patterns, and traditional socio-economic determinants of migration. By applying quantile regressions, the push (outflow) factors and the pull (inflow) determinants of migration can also be distinguished. The authors identify the following factors as the main determinants of the Aceh migration pattern in this period. First, conflict clashes induced large rearrangements of the population between villages in highly affected districts, as well as strong village emigration from the geographically remote regions in Central Aceh towards the less conflict-affected coastal industrial areas. Besides conflict factors, an (ongoing) rural—urban migration process, driven by socio-economic factors, has taken place during the conflict period. Second, there is also evidence that security considerations, such as the presence of police in a village or neighborhood, were either emigration-reducing or immigration-inducing. Third, although the presence of ethnic Javanese has not been a primary cause of conflict incidence, their intimidation by the rebel movement has led to a significant outflow, primarily from conflict-affected villages in Central Aceh. These results reveal that, beside a conflict-induced fear of violence, population movements in Aceh have also been an outcome of traditional migration determinants.
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spelling oxford-uuid:8a24e3b1-70ef-4836-9a6c-da9a5ed49f1f2022-03-26T22:29:25ZCivil conflict and displacement: village-level determinants of forced migration in AcehJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:8a24e3b1-70ef-4836-9a6c-da9a5ed49f1fSocial Sciences Division - DaisySAGE Publications2009Czaika, MKis-Katos, KThe purpose of this article is to identify the determinants of displacement behavior based on various push and pull factors at the village level. The study concentrates on changes in village population during three years of civil conflict (1999—2002) in Aceh, Indonesia. The empirical analysis is based on a unique dataset from two census rounds of the Indonesian Village Potential Census (PODES). It uses data on around 5,200 Acehnese villages and relates village-level population change to conflict variables, geographic patterns, and traditional socio-economic determinants of migration. By applying quantile regressions, the push (outflow) factors and the pull (inflow) determinants of migration can also be distinguished. The authors identify the following factors as the main determinants of the Aceh migration pattern in this period. First, conflict clashes induced large rearrangements of the population between villages in highly affected districts, as well as strong village emigration from the geographically remote regions in Central Aceh towards the less conflict-affected coastal industrial areas. Besides conflict factors, an (ongoing) rural—urban migration process, driven by socio-economic factors, has taken place during the conflict period. Second, there is also evidence that security considerations, such as the presence of police in a village or neighborhood, were either emigration-reducing or immigration-inducing. Third, although the presence of ethnic Javanese has not been a primary cause of conflict incidence, their intimidation by the rebel movement has led to a significant outflow, primarily from conflict-affected villages in Central Aceh. These results reveal that, beside a conflict-induced fear of violence, population movements in Aceh have also been an outcome of traditional migration determinants.
spellingShingle Czaika, M
Kis-Katos, K
Civil conflict and displacement: village-level determinants of forced migration in Aceh
title Civil conflict and displacement: village-level determinants of forced migration in Aceh
title_full Civil conflict and displacement: village-level determinants of forced migration in Aceh
title_fullStr Civil conflict and displacement: village-level determinants of forced migration in Aceh
title_full_unstemmed Civil conflict and displacement: village-level determinants of forced migration in Aceh
title_short Civil conflict and displacement: village-level determinants of forced migration in Aceh
title_sort civil conflict and displacement village level determinants of forced migration in aceh
work_keys_str_mv AT czaikam civilconflictanddisplacementvillageleveldeterminantsofforcedmigrationinaceh
AT kiskatosk civilconflictanddisplacementvillageleveldeterminantsofforcedmigrationinaceh