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Reexamining the Effect of Refugees on Civil Conflict: A Global Subnational Analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2021

YANG-YANG ZHOU*
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Canada
ANDREW SHAVER*
Affiliation:
University of California, Merced, United States
*
Yang-Yang Zhou, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia, Canada, and CIFAR Azrieli Global Scholar, yangyang.zhou@ubc.ca.
Andrew Shaver, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of California, Merced, United States, ashaver@ucmerced.edu.
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Abstract

A large literature suggests that the presence of refugees is associated with greater risk of conflict. We argue that the positive effects of hosting refugees on local conditions have been overlooked. Using global data from 1990 to 2018 on locations of refugee communities and civil conflict at the subnational level, we find no evidence that hosting refugees increases the likelihood of new conflict, prolongs existing conflict, or raises the number of violent events or casualties. Furthermore, we explore conditions where provinces are likely to experience substantively large decreases in conflict risk due to increased development. Analysis examining nighttime lights as a measure of development, coupled with expert interviews, support our claim. To address the possibility of selection bias, we use placebo tests and matching. Our research challenges assertions that refugees are security risks. Instead, we show that in many cases, hosting refugees can encourage local development and even conflict reduction.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the same Creative Commons licence is included and the original work is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association

Does the presence of refugees affect the likelihood of domestic conflict in hosting areas? Understanding the potential security threat of refugees is a major concern to conflict and migration scholars. Given the growing scale of the contemporary refugee crisis and increasing public backlash toward refugee communities around the world, this research question is also of political and policy relevance (UNHCR 2020; Whitaker Reference Whitaker2017). Existing research largely contends that hosting refugees is associated with increased risk of conflict. As Fisk (Reference Fisk2020, 1) notes in a review piece on this subject: “much of the discussion in the security studies context continues to center on forced migration flows as a conduit for civil war, international terrorism, and refugees…as perpetrators.” These studies point to possible tensions with local citizens that are exacerbated through resource competition or ethnic rivalry, or how refugees may themselves be combatants and perpetrators of violence (e.g., Lischer Reference Lischer2006; Rüegger Reference Rüegger, Backer, Bhavnani and Huth2017; Salehyan and Gleditsch Reference Salehyan and Gleditsch2006; Zolberg, Suhrke, and Aguayo Reference Zolberg, Suhrke and Aguayo1989). Others argue that in these conflicts, refugees are typically victims (e.g., Böhmelt, Bove, and Gleditsch Reference Böhmelt, Bove and Gleditsch2019; Fisk Reference Fisk2018; Onoma Reference Onoma2013; Savun and Gineste Reference Savun and Gineste2019). Regardless, perceptions of refugees as destabilizing forces are pervasive in the literature and political rhetoric. In this paper, we theorize that the positive effects of hosting refugee communities on local economic activity and development can offset and even outweigh the potentially destabilizing effects. We argue and empirically substantiate that hosting refugees generally has no effect on civil conflict at the local level. Furthermore, we find that under certain conditions where investments in local development are more likely, refugee settlement has negative effects on conflict likelihood. Thus, while there are certainly cases of refugee-related conflict, we contend that these are exceptional, not the norm.

As a prominent example of regional civil conflict diffusion coinciding with large refugee populations, scholars and policy makers alike have pointed to Central Africa and the Great Lakes Region from the early 1990s. This period saw instances of refugees actively involved in new conflicts as “refugee-warrior communities,” such as the 1994 Rwandan refugees who went into the eastern regions of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), which led to the outbreak of civil conflict there in 1996 and 1998 (Braithwaite Reference Braithwaite2010; Whitaker Reference Whitaker2003; Zolberg, Suhrke, and Aguayo Reference Zolberg, Suhrke and Aguayo1989). On the other hand, refugees from Burundi, the DRC, and Rwanda fled to western Tanzania at the same time, drastically increasing the overall population of this region by over 50%. Yet Tanzania did not experience conflict onset, and in some cases local host communities even benefited through increased development and economic activity (Alix-Garcia and Saah Reference Alix-Garcia and Saah2009; Maystadt and Duranton Reference Maystadt and Duranton2018; Whitaker Reference Whitaker2002; Reference Whitaker2003). Similarly, refugee-hosting communities in Uganda and northwest Kenya have experienced not only peaceful coexistence with refugees but also improvements in transport infrastructure, access to health care, and state security presence (Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen2002b; Sanghi, Onder, and Vemuru, Reference Sanghi, Onder and Vemuru2016).

Consider the Syrian refugee crisis, which remains the largest displacement crisis. As of 2020, Turkey and Jordan are hosting the vast majority of Syrian refugees at over 4.2 million. Even after receiving massive numbers of refugees, subsequent levels of conflict in these countries have been surprisingly low. These refugees are not recruited into fighting, and humanitarian aid to refugees, rather than fueling violent mobilization as some have theorized, has instead bolstered local economies and decreased tensions from local hosts toward refugees (Akgündüz, van den Berg, and Hassink Reference Akgündüz, Berg and Hassink2018; Altindag, Bakis, and Rozo Reference Altindag, Bakis and Rozo2020; Lehmann and Masterson Reference Lehmann and Daniel2020; Masterson and Lehmann Reference Masterson and Christian2019). These examples question whether cases of refugee presence contributing to conflict are the norm or exceptional. They also highlight certain factors associated with hosting refugees, particularly opportunities for development, which could contribute to reducing the risk of conflict.

We argue that hosting refugees does not increase the risk of domestic conflict, measured in a variety of ways. Drawing on previous studies that find positive or mixed economic and development effects of refugee communities on host areas, we theorize that gains in local development can offset, and even outweigh, factors that would negatively affect security. These gains come from increased economic activity, state presence, and humanitarian aid efforts, which can have a notable impact on the often peripheral, poor areas that host refugees. In cases where these resources and efforts can be most efficiently allocated, for example when refugee communities are geographically concentrated in relatively large numbers within a country, these areas may even experience decreased risk of conflict.

Empirically, this paper provides quantitative evidence at a global, subnational scale of the effect of refugee communities on conflict likelihood where they settle. We provide new data, gathered by and verified in collaboration with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Field Information and Coordination Support Section (FICSS), on all geocoded sites of refugee communities around the world (formal camps and informal settlements), which we pair with geocoded conflict outcomes and other development-related data at the subnational level spanning 1990 to 2018. We complement our quantitative analysis and inform our theory building through expert interviews conducted with a dozen current or former UNHCR senior staff to help further contextualize refugee-hosting dynamics.

We find no evidence that the presence of refugees leads to new conflict, prolongs ongoing conflict, or increases the intensity of conflict. This null effect is persistent across a variety of specifications and robustness checks. In a secondary analysis, we find that when refugee communities are geographically concentrated—meaning they are only present within one province in a given country-year—in comparison to similar provinces in nonhosting countries, these hosting provinces see their likelihood of conflict onset halved and other outcomes substantially decreased. We call this the conditional risk reduction effect. To further unpack these effects, we conduct additional heterogeneous and subgroup effects analyses by comparing provinces that host new versus older refugee sites, formal refugee camps versus settlements, large versus small refugee populations, those located near the border versus in the country’s interior, and by region. We find that if refugee sites are geographically concentrated within a country, have had more time to be established, and contain relatively large numbers of refugees, then hosting provinces experience substantively large decreases in conflict risk and intensity. Under these conditions, there is generally a greater presence of UNHCR and other aid organizations; thus, local development spurred by refugee settlement should be more likely. Indeed, using nighttime lights data to proxy for development, we find supportive evidence of increased development under these conditions. To preclude the possibility that refugees select into more developed and secure areas, which may bias our results, we use placebo tests to show that there are no effects of future refugee-hosting on present outcomes as well as matching methods for causal inference with panel data.

Our research makes several important contributions to scholarship, policy, and current political debates about refugees. We respond to the security studies literature, which links refugees to increased conflict, directly challenging conventional views on the subject. Additionally, by engaging with a growing literature in political science, migration studies, and development economics on the potential positive effects of refugee hosting on local development, we not only bridge academic literatures but also contribute to the latter through our global analysis of the localized effects of refugee presence on development. For policy makers, our results showing that refugee hosting generally has no effect on conflict risk, and in some cases, a substantial negative effect, strongly refutes political arguments for putting up physical and legal barriers to restrict the acceptance of refugees due to security concerns. Instead, our findings suggest that policy makers and humanitarian actors involved in refugee settlement should focus on opportunities to increase state capacity and develop infrastructure in hosting areas.

Theorizing Refugees as Security Risks or Development Opportunities

First, we define recurring concepts for clarity. Our study focuses on the effects of the presence of refugee communities, which are visible groups of refugees, as opposed to individuals or households who settle dispersed within host communities or urban contexts.Footnote 1 , Footnote 2 The term refugee sites in this article refers to the precise geographic locations where refugee communities settle; it encompasses both formal camps as well as informal settlements (even those in which the UNHCR is not actively working or has no mandate); and unless there is a visible community within a city, it does not include major cities where scattered individual refugees may have settled. According to our discussions with UNHCR officials, whether a refugee site is recognized as a “camp” or “settlement” is usually designated by the host state rather than the UNHCR.Footnote 3 Camps are generally associated with more state control and international recognition while settlements are typically informal areas of refugee communities. Between the two, there is no clear delineation based on demographic information such as population sizes or levels of aid.Footnote 4 By conflict, we examine several outcomes related to armed civil conflicts—onset (new conflict), incidence (continued conflict), number of violent events, and number of battle deaths.Footnote 5 Finally, our geographic units of interest are provinces, the first-order administrative units within each country (also referred to as states, governorates, regions, etc.). We use “province” for simplicity.

Next, we briefly review research and proposed mechanisms that link refugees to increased risk of conflict. We consider how refugee communities may affect conflict either directly or indirectly. Recognizing that instances in which refugees contributed to conflict exist and are therefore notable, we contend that these cases are rare. Instead, we theorize that the modal outcome is when refugee communities and their hosts simply coexist in a manner that leaves the status quo on conflict unchanged. Under such circumstances, tensions may emerge, for instance, over resources. Yet, rather than devolving into civil conflict, as our expert interviews highlight, other means of dispute resolution often prevail. Additionally, refugees can revitalize local economies as both producers and consumers as well as attract development aid from humanitarian and state actors. These gains can lead to reductions in conflict risk. Drawing from a broad body of evidence, we claim that the potential stabilizing effects of refugee communities are both underappreciated and potentially more important than the destabilizing ones. In some cases, they serve to offset potentially destabilizing ones. In others, they may serve to decrease conflict risk overall. Throughout this section, we incorporate expert interviews, which we conducted with a dozen senior officials who have held or currently hold leadership positions at the UNHCR to give additional context.Footnote 6

Literature Linking Refugees to Conflict

Scholars of international security have identified how countries whose neighbors experience civil conflict are themselves significantly more likely to experience civil conflict. Such regional conflict diffusion suggests that incidents of substate conflict are not independent events with purely domestic causes (Braithwaite Reference Braithwaite2006; Gleditsch Reference Gleditsch2002; Reference Gleditsch2007; Hegre and Sambanis Reference Hegre and Sambanis2006). Forsberg (Reference Forsberg2014; Reference Forsberg, David Mason and Sara2016) lays out transnational dimensions of civil conflict, one of which is “contagion,” characterized by direct spillovers of arms, polarized ethnic groups with kinship ties, and refugee populations. Many related studies find that the likelihood of civil conflict or other forms of violence, such as terrorism or nonstate actor violence, increases in countries that host more migrants, and specifically refugees, from nearby countries at war (Böhmelt, Bove, and Gleditsch Reference Böhmelt, Bove and Gleditsch2019; Bove and Böhmelt Reference Bove and Böhmelt2016; Choi and Salehyan Reference Choi and Salehyan2013; Milton, Spencer, and Findley Reference Milton, Spencer and Findley2013; Salehyan and Gleditsch Reference Salehyan and Gleditsch2006; Salehyan Reference Salehyan2007; Reference Salehyan2009). Notably, Salehyan and Gleditsch (Reference Salehyan and Gleditsch2006) show that larger populations of refugees from neighboring counties are positively associated with greater likelihood of civil war onset in the host country.

At first glance, our subnational province-year panel data, which we describe in detail in the following section, exhibit a similar association. Figure 1 overlays refugees sites (points) and the yearly average number of violent events (shading) by province across the time span of our study, 1990–2018. Refugee sites are clearly geographically concentrated in regions in which conflict is endemic. This is unsurprising insofar as refugees are most frequently displaced due to conflict and tend to settle in neighboring countries that may also be affected by regional instability. Thus, causal inferences about the effects of refugees on conflict must address issues of potential simultaneity.Footnote 7

Figure 1. Refugees Sites and the Annual Average Number of Violent Events by Province

Note: Data sources: UNHCR data on displacement locations and the UCDP Georeferenced Event Dataset (GED). The top global map shows the yearly average number of violent events (shading) during our panel 1990—2018 along with the 1,460 refugee sites (points) in our data that were open at any point during this time. The map below zooms in on the area outlined by the black box in the global map. This area covers West, Central, and the Horn of Africa, where many refugee and conflict sites are concentrated.

Although much of this literature focuses on the outbreak of conflict, it builds upon a rich body of case studies, which associate refugees with patterns of conflict such as increased likelihood of new conflict onset or greater intensity of existing conflict. This qualitative body of work also helps to identify possible mechanisms driving relationships between refugees and conflict.Footnote 8 In some instances, refugee sites have served as potential recruitment areas and bases of operation for active rebel groups. For instance, Haer and Hecker (Reference Haer and Hecker2019) find that recruiters for combatant groups often target refugees who feel economically deprived. Refugees who are not themselves combatants can still be members of auxiliary forces, assisting with the transfer of munitions and other mobilization resources to domestic opposition groups with whom they share an ethnic or ideological affinity (Lischer Reference Lischer2006; Zolberg, Suhrke, and Aguayo Reference Zolberg, Suhrke and Aguayo1989).

Nevertheless, others have argued that refugee populations consist overwhelmingly of civilian noncombatants who, because they are fleeing conflict, actively try to avoid conflict-related activities (Fabbe, Hazlett, and Smmazdemir Reference Fabbe, Hazlett and Snmazdemir2019; Matthews Reference Matthews1972; Onoma Reference Onoma2013; Whitaker Reference Whitaker2002). Yet even when refugees are not perpetrators of violence, their presence alone may incite conflict if the local population or state-sanctioned forces attack refugees. Refugee populations may also alter demographic and social balances within host countries. In societies with preexisting rivalries and social tensions, these changes in demographic makeup can provoke conflict (Loescher Reference Loescher1992; Rüegger Reference Rüegger, Backer, Bhavnani and Huth2017). Refugees may impose (or appear to impose) an economic burden by straining local social services and infrastructure (Weiner Reference Weiner1992). Host citizens may view them as competition for land, jobs, housing, marriage partners, etc., leading to violence against refugees (Dancygier et al. Reference Dancygier, Egami, Jamal and Rischke2021; Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen2005). In some cases, the provision of humanitarian assistance to refugees by international organizations can provoke resentment and increase the likelihood of conflict (Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen2005). Comparing cases from Guinea, Uganda, and the DRC, Onoma (Reference Onoma2013) finds that even in rare cases where refugees are associated with new conflicts, refugees are the ones attacked by hosting communities at the instigation of host governments for politically motivated reasons. Similarly, Savun and Gineste (Reference Savun and Gineste2019) argue that host governments use refugees as scapegoats in the wake of terrorist attacks or other security crises. Using global panel data at the country level, they show that during these times, refugees are likely to be attacked. Böhmelt, Bove, and Gleditsch (Reference Böhmelt, Bove and Gleditsch2019) find an association between refugees and nonstate actor violence, again pointing to tensions with local communities.

Across various contexts, there is growing public backlash against refugees by host citizens, as detailed in the recent literature on antirefugee attitudes by host citizens (e.g., Adida, Lo, and Platas Reference Adida, Lo and Melina2018; Alrababa’h et al. Reference Alrababa’h, Dillon, Williamson, Hainmueller, Hangartner and Weinstein2021; Dancygier and Laitin Reference Dancygier and Laitin2014; Ferwerda, Flynn, and Horiuchi Reference Ferwerda, Flynn and Horiuchi2017; Whitaker and Giersch Reference Whitaker and Giersch2015; Zhou Reference Zhou2019). However, as we describe below, humanitarian organizations are often cognizant of these dynamics and intentionally adjust their policies to generate positive externalities for local host communities, thereby minimizing or preempting tensions between arriving refugee communities and local citizens. Finally, the presence of refugees can pose challenges to state capacity and political legitimacy, especially given that areas where refugees tend to settle are border, peripheral areas (Onoma Reference Onoma2013; Whitaker Reference Whitaker2002).

While many of the officials we interviewed recalled individual cases of refugee-related conflict, such as in 1980s Pakistan and in 1990s DRC, they consistently pointed out that these cases are “the exception, [which] becomes the focus of all the studies, rather than the norm.”Footnote 9 They recognized that tensions can still flare between refugees and host communities: “Certainly there are instances where the presence of refugees creates [nonviolent] conflict with the local community like competition for resources, access to fire wood collection, environmental impact.”Footnote 10 However, by anticipating these tensions, “UNHCR and aid agencies try to put in place prevention mechanisms … creating informal structures, committees, where the local people like elders and chiefs would meet regularly… . Every community has structures. Even the refugee community is not just some amorphous group of people but they have spokespeople, traditional leaders… . We will find these people pretty fast and easily because they are our interlopers. On the side of the host communities, we also have existing institutional structures.”Footnote 11 Several officials expressed frustration that rising fears of refugees as security threats are overblown: “Despite all the hysteria of refugees and conflict, refugees account for a small part of the population. This is an eminently manageable problem… . [Large refugee populations in places like] Uganda and in Bangladesh, they have been managed without disastrous consequences by governments with much fewer resources.”Footnote 12 , Footnote 13

Accounting for the Positive Effects of Hosting Refugees

Prompted by these cases of well-managed refugee hosting situations, we draw on recent research that examines the local economic and infrastructural effects of refugees to highlight several ways in which the presence of refugees can positively contribute to host areas. We think of such “positive externalities” of refugee presence as acting on conflict likelihood in two general ways. First, some externalities do not reduce the likelihood of conflict that existed prior to refugees’ arrival but serve to mitigate potential increases in that likelihood following their arrival. These effectively help preserve the status quo. An example of such an externality is the provision of health services, as we describe in more detail below, to both refugees and local nationals (particularly in cases where preexisting health services were limited). In such cases, potential tensions among refugees and locals may be reduced (or, in the case of tensions over existing resources, prevented) by the provision of such services.

The second set of positive externalities potentially serves to reduce the likelihood of conflict (or reduce the intensity of ongoing conflict). Perhaps the clearest example of this is the development of critical infrastructure (e.g., electrification, roads) in areas of countries where state capacity had previously been significantly limited. In their study of the determinants of civil war, Fearon and Laitin (Reference Fearon and Laitin2003) find that state capacity bears significantly on a country’s likelihood of experiencing conflict, and we accordingly theorize that those externalities that promote state capacity are likely to increase the state’s ability to prevent conflict from breaking out or to suppress ongoing violence. We theorize that taken together, these positive externalities of refugee presence largely counterbalance their negative effects, resulting in a general status quo outcome for risk of conflict. Below, we describe these dynamics in greater detail.

First, refugee sites often “become repositories of such resources as relief supplies and food aid, vehicles, communication equipment, employment and transport contracts with relief agencies, and other locally valued and scarce materials” (Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen2002a, 577). Humanitarian assistance and infrastructural development, although primarily intended for refugees, can lead to positive externalities for local host communities. Empirically, these have included greater electrification; expanded access to health care facilities; new water wells and improvements to sanitation infrastructure; and expansions in roads and bridges, which decreases transport costs for local communities (Bariagaber Reference Bariagaber2006; Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen2002a; Maystadt and Duranton Reference Maystadt and Duranton2018; Tatah et al. Reference Tatah, Delbiso, Rodriguez-Llanes, Cuesta and Guha-Sapir2016; Van Damme et al. Reference Damme, Wim, Boelaert and Lerberghe1998). To preempt tensions, some agencies make assistance directly available to local citizens given that refugee sites are often located in already marginalized locations where local host communities are themselves impoverished (Sanghi, Onder, and Vemuru Reference Sanghi, Onder and Vemuru2016). In fact, this approach is explicitly outlined in UNHCR’s Handbook for Emergencies (1999) and was described to us in interviews. As one official noted, “Increasingly over the years, there was a real push to set things up in such a way that the local community was also benefiting from them like health clinics for example, the nearby villages [also benefits] from that facility. More recently, the shift has been to how you boost services more generally to areas where refugees are located, enhancing existing services.”Footnote 14

Second, refugees themselves often contribute physical, social, and human capital to local host economies (Alix-Garcia and Saah Reference Alix-Garcia and Saah2009; Alix-Garcia et al. Reference Alix-Garcia, Walker, Bartlett, Onder and Sanghi2018; Maystadt and Duranton Reference Maystadt and Duranton2018; Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Filipski, Alloush, Gupta, Valdes and Gonzalez-Estrada2016). For example, the region of Turkana, northern Kenya which hosts the Kakuma refugee camp, saw such substantial increased economic activity that Alix-Garcia et al. (Reference Alix-Garcia, Walker, Bartlett, Onder and Sanghi2018) were able to detect increases in nighttime lights from satellite data. Sanghi, Onder, and Vemuru (Reference Sanghi, Onder and Vemuru2016) describe how these positive effects on the economy, attributable to refugee-owned businesses, motivated local host citizens to not just tolerate the refugees but welcome their presence, as the following case exemplifies: “According to UNHCR, when there was talk about closing Kakuma in the early 2000s, there was an uproar among the host community, who saw the camp as their main source of employment, business opportunities, and commercial goods” (3). Refugees can also bring foreign remittances and cash transfers, which inject foreign capital into local markets (Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen2002a). Similarly, Akgündüz, van den Berg, and Hassink (Reference Akgündüz, Berg and Hassink2018) and Altindag, Bakis, and Rozo (Reference Altindag, Bakis and Rozo2020) document meaningful positive changes in both the productivity and number of businesses operating in Turkey in those areas that received large numbers of Syrian refugees. And contrary to some of the literature cited above linking humanitarian aid to refugees with joining armed groups (e.g., Lischer Reference Lischer2006; Salehyan Reference Salehyan2009), Lehmann and Masterson (Reference Lehmann and Daniel2020) examined the effects of cash transfers to Syrian refugees in Lebanon, finding that aid reduced violence involving refugees by concurrently benefiting host citizens through refugee expenditure on local goods and services supplied by local businesses.Footnote 15

Third, the presence of refugees can present opportunities for the state to develop capacity in more marginalized areas (Herbst Reference Herbst2000). Since refugee movements are often highly visible phenomena with international attention, “they therefore represent political leverage for savvy actors, including the state itself” to channel resources for state building (Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen2002a, 578). International donor agencies can contribute training and equipment to state security forces and local police. For example, when western Tanzania hosted large refugee populations in the mid-1990s, the state increased its bureaucratic presence in this border region (Landau Reference Landau2008). In some cases, the UNHCR will also directly assist state governments with the costs associated with enhancing security in areas that receive refugees.Footnote 16

The officials we interviewed described numerous instances in which the presence of refugee communities improved local state capacity, access to electricity, roads, health care, and education. “Very often these populations have accumulated in border areas which are often the least developed parts of the country. So while the arrival of refugees evokes a security reflex, those in charge of refugees in the government … tend to attract financing even through humanitarian channels into areas that generally did not have that interest in that part of the country. You have external financing that leverages government fiscal expenditures.”Footnote 17 Others cited cases in Sri Lanka, Colombia, and Eastern Chad where they observed increased roads networks as a response to the settlement of refugees. They also discussed how refugees themselves help revitalize local economies. Referencing again our motivating example of Kakuma camp in Kenya, “There is a vibrant economy here, not only with humanitarian agencies. The refugees contribute to 3% economic growth every year in Kakuma… . They have driving schools, hardware stores, cinemas, restaurants, hotels… . [The refugees] are an economic engine.”Footnote 18

Taken together, we recognize that there is often a mix of negative and positive effects of refugee presence on host communities, which themselves are not homogeneous. For example, scholars find that host citizens in urban areas, informal laborers, consumers, and the poorest are at a greater disadvantage, due to higher market prices, higher rents, and wage competition (Alix-Garcia and Saah Reference Alix-Garcia and Saah2009; Chambers Reference Chambers1986; Cortes Reference Cortes2004; Maystadt and Verwimp Reference Maystadt and Verwimp2014; Tumen Reference Tumen2016). Refugee-hosting policies, such as whether they have the right to move and work, could also attenuate positive economic effects. Ultimately, we argue that on average, these positive and negative effects balance out, and refugees and host communities simply coexist. Even when relations are strained and refugees are viewed as a threat, da Costa (Reference da Costa2018) and Getmansky, Sinmazdemir, and Zeitzoff (Reference Getmansky, Sinmazdemir and Zeitzoff2018) find that host citizens are still wary of violence and do not change their attitudes for peace.

Hypotheses

We first test the following main hypothesis that is prevalent in the literature:

Hypothesis 1 (H1): Areas hosting refugee communities experience more conflict compared to areas without refugees.

We do not find empirical support for this hypothesis. Next, we unpack this null effect by examining when beneficial effects of hosting can not only offset but outweigh the potentially destabilizing effects. We argue that when state actors and humanitarian aid agencies efficiently allocate resources and services, such as when refugee communities are geographically concentrated to one region, these cases have the greatest chance to experience the positive effects on local development, and consequently, conflict risk reduction. One senior official reflected, “On the distribution of humanitarian resources, I suppose the main observation that in terms of when people are concentrated, the tendency is to invest in services and facilities that directly serve that population. The way that things were traditionally done, … the aid would be much more focused on the refugee population.”Footnote 19 In line with this expectation, we predict that,

Hypothesis 2 (H2): Areas hosting refugee sites, conditional on there being no other refugee hosting provinces in the same country-year (i.e., geographically concentrated), experience reductions in conflict.

To directly test the mechanism of increased local development that we detailed in the previous section,

Hypothesis 3 (H3): Provinces hosting refugee sites, conditional on there being no other refugee hosting provinces in the same country-year (i.e., geographically concentrated), experience greater development.

Following our expectation that returns to development and stability will be greatest in cases where refugee communities are concentrated, we consider a set of more specific hypotheses whose results should offer specific evidence as to the set of conditions under which refugee communities are more or less likely to be associated with increased conflict risk.

First, the benefits of local development and stability should require time to manifest. As one UNHCR official described, with the arrival of refugees, “you have a sudden surge in demand for services. It could be a real challenge for local government. But [over time] … you do have people with capital and skills that can contribute positively to the economy. And employers can find a ready supply of laborers at lower wages. The first 6 months a new equilibrium imposes itself… . So it’s not altogether surprising that you go through the trajectory of at first shock, but then a period of stabilization, and even a changed environment.”Footnote 20 Thus, we expect positive benefits of refugee concentration to emerge only after such initial transitional period. In contrast, conflict likelihood during the initial months of refugee arrival may be elevated.

Second, when refugee communities are not only concentrated but also very large (relative to local communities), there may be more opportunity for increases in local economic activity and greater incentives for infrastructural development and other focused investments by the UNHCR and state governments. Yet, in large numbers, refugee communities may be more likely to alter ethnic balances and more drastically affect local economies (again, with potential winners and losers within the host communities) (e.g., Johnson Reference Johnson2011; Tumen Reference Tumen2016). Examining refugee populations at the subnational level in Africa, Fisk (Reference Fisk2014) finds no relationship between large camp-based refugee populations and conflict. Thus, our expectations are mixed. If we find that large numbers of refugees are associated with reduced conflict risk, this would support our claim that the stabilizing effects under such conditions can outweigh possible negative externalities.

Third, we predict that refugee communities that are concentrated and located in remote, underdeveloped areas of countries will experience decreased conflict risk by attracting investments in infrastructure in the areas where the marginal benefits are likely to be the greatest. Finally, we expect humanitarian aid agencies and state actors to be more likely to operate in formal camps as opposed to informal settlements, given that they generally have more control over movement and programming in camps. We conduct a series of additional heterogeneous effects analyses to further explore under which conditions refugee-hosting areas would be more likely to see additional gains in development and reductions in conflict:

Hypothesis 4 (H4): For these geographically concentrated cases, the negative effects on conflict and positive effects on development are greater for areas hosting (a) older and (b) larger refugee sites, (c) formal refugee camps, (d) and areas near the border.

Data and Methods

Our unit of analysis is the province-year from 1990 to 2018. We construct a global panel dataset of 2,536 provinces, formally, first-order administrative units, using the ESRI map of global provinces in 1998.Footnote 21 , Footnote 22 , Footnote 23 To do this, for each year of the study period, we match the centroid of every province to a time-varying country boundary dataset constructed by Weidmann, Kuse, and Gleditsch (Reference Weidmann, Kuse and Gleditsch2010).Footnote 24 While this comprehensive province-panel (Full Data) spans every country, we recognize that not all non-refugee-hosting provinces may be appropriate counterfactuals. Because we intend to compare provinces that host refugee sites (treatment group) with provinces that could plausibly host refugee sites (control group), it may not be appropriate to include provinces in countries like Japan or Luxembourg that are unlikely to ever host refugee sites, given that they have never done so.Footnote 25 Thus, the data we use for the main analysis in this paper we call the Main Data, which only includes provinces in the 70 countries that have at some point in our panel hosted a refugee site, subsetting out the provinces in 120 never-hosting countries.Footnote 26 We are left with 999 provinces and 28,971 province-year observations. Section S1 in the SI provides summary and descriptive statistics of our data, and Section S2 describes the data sources (Zhou and Shaver Reference Zhou and Shaver2021).

Explanatory Variables: Presence of Refugee Sites (Camps and Settlements)

We use new displacement locations data from the UNHCR Field Information and Coordination Section (FICSS). These data encompass the universe of 2,511 refugee and IDP sites open during our study period. To construct these data, UNHCR country teams and field staff report the location of any known displaced communities to FICSS. Thus, we are able to indicate within any province in a given year whether a community of refugees or IDPs had settled there. These data include latitude/longitude coordinates, creation date, closing date (if closed), displacement type—refugee or internally displaced—and whether the site is a formal camp or informal settlement.Footnote 27 According to FICSS, the distinction in these data between camp and settlement is largely determined by the host country. In general, camps receive humanitarian assistance, UNHCR presence, and host-country oversight, whereas settlements are typically informal communities.

We construct a binary indicator Refugee Presence for whether a province-year was hosting at least one refugee site. Again, we operationalize refugee sites as encompassing all formal refugee camps as well as informal refugee settlements. Footnote 28 Table S3 in the SI shows, by region, the number of refugee sites broken down by camps and settlements. Most refugee-hosting provinces only have one site in any given year (1,421 province-year observations), while 1,313 province-years host more than one. However, because we do not have information on the population sizes of these sites, we do not believe using number of sites is preferable to an indicator of presence of at least one site. Table S2 in the SI shows the number of refugee sites by number of province-year observations. There are several outlier province-years with over 100 sites listed. Because UNHCR country offices classify sites differently for their own logistical purposes, the number of listed sites is not readily comparable across countries. Although the UNHCR displacement location dataset includes scattered cases of individual refugees, we do not include them in our analyses precisely because these are small numbers of individuals or households, often living in urban areas. To be clear, if there are refugee camps or settlements within a city, we count these locations.Footnote 29 But we exclude cities where dispersed individual refugees are reported.Footnote 30

It is important to note that the majority of our analyses can only speak to the presence versus absence of refugee communities and not the sizes of these locations. Unfortunately, for our study period at the global level, the UNHCR did not collect information on population, demographic or ethnic composition, reason for displacement, nationality of displaced persons, levels of aid, or involvement by UNHCR or other humanitarian organizations. Nevertheless, for a subset of our data covering African countries from 2010 to 2015, we have information on the total number of refugees in each site, which we aggregate to the province-year level. We discuss this population subset data and associated analyses below in greater detail.

To account for the influence of refugee sites outside a given province but still within the same country, we also construct Refugee Presence in Other Provinces, which indicates whether there exists at least another province in the same country-year hosting refugee sites. For our main analysis with respect to H1 on the effect of refugee sites on its province, we include this variable as a control variable because having refugee sites in other areas of the country may affect both the likelihood of conflict and refugee settlement in our province of concern. For our secondary analysis with respect to H2 on how concentrated or dispersed geographic distribution of refugee sites within a country might affect conflict in a given province, our treatment variable is the interaction between Refugee Presence and Refugee Presence in Other Provinces. Here, we are interested in the conditional effect of refugee sites on its host province depending on whether there are other refugee site hosting provinces in the same country-year (i.e., dispersed refugee presence) or not (i.e., concentrated refugee presence). Finally, for the heterogeneous effects analysis in which we differentiate between type of refugee site and formal camp versus informal settlement, we use the binary variables Refugee Camp and Refugee Settlement.

Main Outcome Variables of Conflict

We generate four separate measures of conflict—onset, incidence (that is, the continuation of civil war across years), violent events (attacks), and battle deaths. We adopt these separate measures because scholarship linking refugees to political violence has not focused exclusively on any one of these outcomes. Collectively, they describe ways in which refugees can destabilize the countries within which they settle with implications for the onset, continuation, and intensity of conflict.

First, Conflict Onset and Conflict Incidence are binary indicators of whether a province-year experiences new conflict or the continuation of conflict. To construct these measures, we use PRIO’s conflict site dataset which covers the period 1990–2008. That dataset provides the estimated center points (in latitude and longitude coordinates) of the “area directly affected by conflict” (Dittrich Hallberg Reference Dittrich2012, 2) for each year the conflicts are running as well as the radius for each conflict-year.Footnote 31 , Footnote 32 The radius for each conflict-year represents the estimated distance to the boundary of fighting further from the center. We use these measures to construct individual conflict-year circle shapefiles.Footnote 33

For each year of the study period, we then intersect these conflict circles with all provinces of the conflict affected country, identifying those that experienced conflict on their soil and those that did not to generate a province-year binary civil war indicator. Under this approach, provinces that only partially intersect with a conflict circle are considered as having experienced civil conflict. We are careful to ensure that conflict circles are matched only with affected countries so that neighboring country provinces are not erroneously assigned positive conflict values.Footnote 34 This variable captures the Conflict Incidence of civil war. To construct a measure of Conflict Onset, we assign a value of 1 to province-year observations in which civil war occurs when it had not in the previous year. For observations where civil war continued from a previous year, we assign a value of NA (rather than 0) so that years in which civil war is ongoing is not treated as the comparison for civil war onset. Figure S1 in the SI plots the proportion of these two variables by year, showing that neither measures of conflict are rare events requiring models that correct for small-sample bias. As an alternative method of constructing these two outcome measures, we also use wzoneData Conflict Polygons, which cover the full study period from 1990 through 2018 (Kikuta Reference Kikuta2020).Footnote 35

Next, to construct measures of conflict intensity, we use the UCDP Georeferenced Event Dataset (GED) 19.1 with supplemental data for the Syrian Civil War (Sundberg and Melander Reference Sundberg and Melander2013; Pettersson and Öberg Reference Pettersson and Öberg2020), which provides geographic points for each violent event and associated count of battle deaths. Using the longitude and latitude coordinates associated with each event in this dataset, we match these events to the province within which they take place.Footnote 36 We then create two measures of intensity: a count of the number of Violent Events and the number of logged Battle DeathsFootnote 37 that occurred in a given province-year. Figure S1 in the SI also plots these two outcomes over time. Lastly, as a robustness check, we analyze violent events and battle deaths broken down by event type as defined by Sundberg and Melander (Reference Sundberg and Melander2013): state based, nonstate, and one-sided (see SI Section S3 for more details).

Auxiliary Outcome Variable: Nighttime Lights

We use global satellite data of nighttime lights to test our proposed mechanism of increased development in cases of geographically concentrated refugee presence. We believe this is the best measure to capture local economic activity and development globally, but still at a subnational level. Various research efforts have validated nighttime lights as a “good proxy for human development at the local level” in precisely the type of less developed areas of the world that we are most focused on in our project (Bruederle and Hodler Reference Bruederle and Hodler2018, 1). Three separate research projects focused on light emissions, comparing them with the results of local survey data, independently arrive at this same finding (Bruederle and Hodler Reference Bruederle and Hodler2018; Michalopoulos and Papaioannou Reference Michalopoulos and Papaioannou2013b; Weidmann and Schutte Reference Weidmann and Schutte2017).Footnote 38 Thus, nighttime lights, unlike other public goods like number or quality of health centers and public schools for example, can measure highly localized changes in human activity, for all regions of the world (in an immediately comparable way), and for every year of our study period. Our analysis is also similar to Alix-Garcia et al. (Reference Alix-Garcia, Walker, Bartlett, Onder and Sanghi2018), who use nighttime lights to study changes in economic activity around refugee camps in northern Kenya.

Our measure of Average Nighttime Lights comes from PRIO-GRID (Tollefsen, Strand, and Buhaug Reference Tollefsen, Strand and Buhaug2012), and it covers the years 1992–2012.Footnote 39 It is calibrated to account for intersatellite differences and interannual sensor decay using calibration values from Elvidge et al. (Reference Elvidge, Hsu, Baugh and Ghosh2014). Values are standardized to be between 0 and 100, where 100 is the highest observed value in the global time series, and 0 is the lowest.

Confounders

We control for the following confounders. We include a one-year lagged dependent variable to account for past outcomes. Next, following the conflict diffusion literature, we construct Neighboring Violent Events, a count of all violent events in neighboring provinces regardless of whether these provinces are domestic or foreign. We also take into account demographic and economic data. Specifically, we include logged PopulationFootnote 40 that is lagged by one year. We also include GDP in US dollars at purchasing power parity (Nordhaus Reference Nordhaus2006).Footnote 41 We construct this by summing over the cells inside each province, also lagged by one year. Both variables are extracted from PRIO-GRID (Tollefsen, Strand, and Buhaug Reference Tollefsen, Strand and Buhaug2012). Not all years have data for these two indicators; for missing observations, we linearly impute values between the years in a given province for which we do have data.Footnote 42

Scholars have also linked conflict to Terrain Ruggedness (e.g., Fearon and Laitin Reference Fearon and Laitin2003), and considerations of terrain also affect refugee settlement (Bariagaber Reference Bariagaber2006; Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen1996; Jacobson Reference Jacobson1996). This variable denotes the standard deviation in the absolute elevation change of every one-kilometer grid relative to all contiguous one-kilometer grids within each province (Shaver, Carter, and Shawa Reference Shaver, Carter and Shawa2016). We also include Province Size (square km) to control for the size of the province. When constructing these data, Shaver, Carter, and Shawa (Reference Shaver, Carter and Shawa2016) use province shapefiles from 1998; therefore, terrain ruggedness and province size vary by province but do not change over time in our data. Next, we include Border Distance, the logged distance (km) between the province’s centroid to the international border. We do so because refugees tend to settle near international borders and such areas are often lacking in state capacity and could be more susceptible to conflict diffusion from neighboring countries. We also include Capital Distance, the logged distance (km) between the province’s centroid to the country’s capital, because capitals are typically centers of state capacity, which also can affect refugee settlement and conflict propensity (Braithwaite Reference Braithwaite2010). These variables are also time invariant.

The UNHCR data of displacement sites also indicate where internally displaced persons (IDPs) settle. Bohnet, Cottier, and Hug (Reference Bohnet, Cottier and Hug2018) find that internal displacement is associated with domestic conflict diffusion, and the locations of refugee and IDP sites might also correlate. We thus include as an additional control a binary indicator of whether a province-year hosts one or more IDP Presence, which includes both formal IDP camps and IDPs living outside of camps in informal settlements. Finally, we include Country and Year fixed effects. Unfortunately, we are not able to include control variables for relations between sending and host countries because the UNHCR data does not include demographic information on the refugees such as their origin countries.Footnote 43

Subset with Refugee Population Data: African Countries 2010–2015

Finally, for a subset of the data, we have information from the UNHCR on refugee populations, specifically the total number of refugees per site, which we aggregate to the province-year level. We have these data for African countries from 2010 to 2015. Thus, for the heterogeneous effects analysis based on population size, we only examine the violent events and logged battle death outcomes as they span this period. We conduct two analyses using this subset refugee population data. First, for H1, we regress conflict outcomes, violent events, and logged battle deaths on logged refugee population and separately, the ratio of refugee population to local province population to examine the effect of (relative) population on conflict. Second, we create a binary variable for heterogeneous effects analysis based on the size of refugee presence in a province-year in order to test H4. We designate refugee-hosting provinces that have a 5% ratio or greater of refugee population compared with local population as “large” and hosting provinces under 5% as “small.”

Estimation

Formally, we estimate the following model using logistic regression for the binary Conflict Onset and Conflict Incidence outcomes, and OLS for Violent Events, logged Battle Deaths and Average Nighttime Lights:

$$ {\displaystyle \begin{array}{l}\hskip-7pc {Y}_{i,t}\mid {X}_{i,t}=f({\beta}_0+{\beta}_1{RefugeePresence}_{i,t}\hskip0.5pc +\hskip0.1em {\beta}_2{ RefugeePresence inOtherProvinces}_{i,t}\hskip1.6pc +\hskip0.1em {\beta}_3{Y}_{i,t-1}\hskip-0pc +{\beta}_4{NeighboringViolentEvents}_{i,t}\hskip3.9pc +\hskip0.1em {\beta}_5{Population}_{i,t-1}+{\beta}_6{GDP}_{i,t-1}\\ {}\hskip1.6pc +\hskip0.1em {\beta}_7{TerrainRuggedness}_i+{\beta}_8{ProvinceSize}_i\hskip1.9pc +\hskip0.1em {\beta}_9{BorderDistance}_i+{\beta}_{10}{CapitalDistance}_i\hskip3.85pc +\hskip0.1em {\beta}_{11}{IDPPresence}_{i,t}+{\gamma}_c+{\lambda}_t+{\varepsilon}_{i,t}\Big)\end{array}} $$

in which i denotes provinces, t denotes year, and c denotes countries. Yi,t is the binary outcome for conflict onset or incidence or continuous outcome for violent events or logged battle deaths; Refugee Presencei,t is the binary treatment indicator for whether the province-year is hosting refugee sites, controlling for all confounder variables described above; γ c denotes country fixed effects; λt denotes year fixed effects; and εi,t the province-year error term.

For our secondary analysis of concentrated or dispersed refugee settlement patterns in which we examine the conditional effect of having refugee sites in other provinces in the same country-year, we run the same models as above except that we use the interaction term $ {RefugeePresence}_{i,t}\ast {RefugeePresence inOtherProvinces}_{i,t} $ as our treatment variable. For additional heterogeneous effects, we further interact this term with our heterogeneous binary variable of interest.

Refugee Location Selection, Placebo Tests, and Matching

A major obstacle inherent to research on migrant–host relations is possible selection bias introduced by where migrants are located vis–à–vis host citizens. Voluntary migrants can choose to live in neighborhoods that are more accepting of them and/or whose residents share cultural and ethnic ties (Massey and Denton Reference Massey and Denton1987; Reference Massey and Denton1988). Unlike voluntary migrants, however, refugees often have considerably less agency and time to choose where they settle since they are “forcibly displaced.” Nevertheless, we use a placebo test strategy to directly address selection bias concerns with the location of refugee sites.

How are locations for refugee sites chosen? First, no standard international procedure exists to regulate how refugees are distributed within a host country or where refugee sites should be located. Migration research and qualitative interviews with refugee officials identify the key factors that determine where refugee sites are located, all of which we control for in our analyses. Patterns of refugee movements and settlements are foremost determined by the exogenous shocks of conflict and other exigent crises in neighboring countries. Within the host country, refugee sites are generally situated in areas where a quorum of refugees congregate based on terrain and proximity to the border (Bariagaber Reference Bariagaber2006; Jacobsen Reference Jacobsen1996; Jacobson Reference Jacobson1996). Once settled, host governments are bound by international humanitarian law to the principle of nonrefoulement—the obligation to not send refugees away (Article 33, The 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees).

Interviews with UNHCR officials confirm that while there are certainly some refugee camps, such as those in Turkey, that are planned and controlled by the state, generally “refugee sites are almost always established ad hoc or unplanned.”Footnote 44 “Refugee locations are more by default than by design. When you have large numbers of people arriving in border areas where the government has limited resources, they settle where they can find a piece or land or water.”Footnote 45 Thus, we consider it highly unlikely that refugees are typically aware of local social and political dynamics or have the resources to carefully determine optimal settlement locations. Instead, refugees tend to settle on an ad hoc basis. Humanitarian organizations like the UNHCR and state security forces then often respond by deploying resources to these sites as they are being established or sometime thereafter.

We control for the variables that researchers and experts believe affect refugee settlement and conflict likelihood. Nevertheless, there may still be unobserved factors inherent to the location of the refugee sites that also affect conflict. To preclude the possibility of unobserved confounders, we use placebo tests to show that there is no relationship between past conflict and whether a province-year will host refugee sites in the future. In short, the objective behind placebo tests is to confirm that an effect does not exist when it should not exist, because if it does then factors other than the proposed independent variable are driving the effect, revealing selection bias. Similar to how, among many others, Lee (Reference Lee2001) shows that future electoral outcomes do not affect past elections and Rothstein (Reference Rothstein2010) shows that future teachers cannot affect students’ past performance, this same logic applies with our placebo strategy; our tests seek to show that the presence of future refugee sites has no effect on past conflict outcomes. And since these areas eventually do host refugee sites in the future, they are good candidates for counterfactual refugee-hosting areas in the present; they embody the selection characteristics (e.g., geographic, sociological, legal, etc.) that would determine where a potential site could be located.

To run our placebo tests, we construct indicators for Placebo Refugee Presence, which is coded as a 1 for province-years for which the province will eventually host at least one refugee site, 0 for province-years of provinces that will never host a refugee site (even though they may belong to countries that host refugee sites), and NA for the year before a province begins to host refugee sites (to be conservative in case the exact date of the refugee site creation is an estimate, especially for informal refugee settlements) and then all the subsequent province-years once a province starts to host a refugee site, thus dropping true treated observations.Footnote 46 Since these placebo observations do not yet host refugees, there should be no effect of these sites on the outcomes, which is what we find. This suggests that our analysis controls for the correct confounders.

As an alternative causal identification strategy, we use a matching method for causal identification with time-series cross-section data by Imai, Kim, and Wang (Reference Imai, Kim and Wang2018a). In this method, each treated observation is matched with a set of control observations that share identical treatment history up to three years (default). Then this set of matched controls is further refined by adjusting for covariates. Finally, we simply calculate the difference-in-differences estimator in order to account for an underlying time trend. To do this, we use the R package PanelMatch (Imai, Kim, and Wang, Reference Imai, Kim and Wang2018b).

Results

H1: Effect of Refugee Presence on Conflict

How does the presence of refugee sites affect conflict? Table 1 shows that across the model specifications, there are no effects of refugee presence on any conflict outcomes—onset and incidence (1990–2008), violent events and battle deaths (1990–2018), confirming our expectations for H1. There even seems to be a negative effect for conflict onset, a finding we explore in greater detail in H2. The effects of placebo refugee presence are also null, as expected, which allows us to rule out the possibility that a negative correlation is driven by refugee selection into areas that ex ante were less conflict prone. We briefly discuss the effects associated with the control variables, holding all other variables constant. First, the relationship between conflict outcomes and the presence of refugee sites in another province is consistently negative and statistically significant. This binary variable takes on the same value for all or almost all the provinces in a country-year. For a country-year with no refugee sites, all provinces have a value of 0; for a country-year with multiple provinces hosting refugee sites, all provinces have a value of 1; and for a country-year with only one province hosting refugee sites, every other province has a value of 1 except for that province, which has a value of 0.

Table 1. Regression Table for H1: Effects of Refugee Presence on Conflict Outcomes and Their Respective Placebo Models (p)

Note: For outcomes Onset and Incidence, the data is from 1990 to 2008; Violent Events and Battle Deaths (logged) is from 1990 to 2018. All models include control variables and Country and Year fixed effects. ***p < 0.001, **p < 0.01, *p < 0.05.

The effects for the lagged dependent variables confirm that new conflict (onset) is less likely if there was an onset of conflict the previous year, while the likelihood of continued conflict (incidence), number of violent events, and battle deaths are greater if the province experienced greater conflict in the previous year. All conflict outcomes are positively affected by greater neighboring violent events (spatial conflict diffusion). Higher population is also associated with greater conflict risk. Moving farther away from the international border and from the capital are weakly associated with less risk of conflict. These findings are partially consistent with previous work in the area. In particular, Buhaug and Rød (Reference Buhaug and Rød2006) find that conflict is more likely near international borders and further away from capitals. The presence of IDPs does not seem to alter conflict outcomes, but additional research examining the direct effects of IDPs is necessary. Lastly, GDP from the previous year is negatively associated with conflict onset and incidence, which speaks to how increased development might mitigate the risk of conflict. We are cautious of interpreting the coefficients on our control variables, however, for methodological reasons outlined in Hünermund and Louw (Reference Keele, Stevenson and Elwert2020) and Keele, Stevenson, and Elwert (Reference Hünermund and Beyers2020).Footnote 47

To further confirm this null result, we turn to our subset data for which we have information on population numbers which covers Africa from 2010 to 2015 as described in the Data and Methods section. We replace our main independent variable of refugee presence (binary) with population, and we also observe no effect of greater numbers of refugees on conflict. The regression table in SI Section S8.3 shows no effects of logged refugee population on violent events or battle deaths. Nonetheless, the absolute number of refugees may matter less than the relative number of refugees compared with the local population; a larger ratio may tip the scales demographically and incite conflict. When we replace logged population with the ratio of refugee population to local population, the effects on conflict are negative but not statistically significant. In a subsequent section, we explore the heterogeneous effects of refugee population size.

Turning back to the results for refugee presence, Figure 2 plots the effect sizes for Table 1. We calculate the change in predicted values of the conflict outcomes given refugee presence (black) and placebo future presence (gray), keeping the control variables at their observed values with 95% confidence intervals.Footnote 48 The baseline probability of conflict onset (i.e., no refugee presence) is 7.22% (95% CI $ =\left[6.62\%,\mathrm{7.82}\%\right] $ ). The effect of hosting refugees is −1.36 percentage points (95% CI $ =\left[-2.66,-0.06\right] $ ), a statistically and substantively significant effect. The other three conflict outcomes are null, and our placebo tests perform well, confirming that there is no effect of future refugee presence which would point to possible selection bias. When we implement the panel matching analysis in SI Section S4, we confirm the overall null effect of refugee presence on conflict outcomes.

Figure 2. Effect of Refugee Presence on Conflict Outcomes

Note: This figure shows the effect of refugee presence on conflict outcomes (black)—onset and incidence (1990–2008), violent events, and battle deaths (1990–2018)—compared with their respective placebo estimates—that is, the effect of future refugee presence (gray). All point estimates include 95% CIs.

H2: Effect of Concentrated or Dispersed Refugee Presence on Conflict

Do the effects on conflict outcomes change depending on how widely dispersed refugee sites are within a country? This section explores the interaction between the main independent variable, Refugee Presence in a given province-year, and Refugee Presence in Other Provinces, whether there are refugee sites in any other province in the same country-year. Substantively, this secondary analysis examines the difference between having refugee sites geographically concentrated or dispersed within a country. We argue that this difference has implications for resource distribution and development, which we explore further in the following section.

Table S4 in the SI confirms our expectations for H2. First, the marginal effect of refugee presence (i.e., cases in which a province hosting refugees is the only one in that country-year) is negative and statistically significant across all four conflict outcomes. This suggests that for geographically concentrated cases of refugee presence—that is, conditional on being the only refugee-hosting province in a given country-year—there is a conditional risk reduction effect. Footnote 49 The interaction term is positive and statistically significant, meaning when other refugee sites are dispersed in other provinces, this risk reduction is effectively canceled out. There are no effects for the placebo tests, and the other control variables retain the same substantive interpretations as from H1, holding all else equal.

Can we quantify this conditional risk reduction effect? The baseline (no refugee sites) predicted probabilities of conflict onset and incidence are 8.86% and 28.6%, respectively. From Figure 3, the effect of refugee presence conditional on no presence elsewhere in country is −4.96 percentage points (95% CI = [−7.13, −2.79]) for onset and -6.31 percentage points (95% CI = [−9.56, −3.07]) for incidence. These are substantively large negative effects; given the baseline probabilities, the likelihood of conflict onset is more than halved in cases of geographically concentrated refugee presence. Furthermore, violent attacks are reduced by -1.41 (95% CI = [−2.47, −0.35]) and logged battle deaths by −0.14 (95% CI = [−0.25, −0.03]).

Figure 3. Effect of Concentrated and Dispersed Refugee Presence

Note: This figure shows the effect of refugee presence on conflict outcomes (black)—onset and incidence (1990–2008), violent events and battle deaths (1990–2018)—compared with their respective placebo estimates—that is, the effect of future refugee presence (gray), conditional on refugee presence in other provinces of the same country-year. All point estimates include 95% CIs.

If refugee sites are dispersed throughout the country, Figure 3 shows there is still no effect on conflict. Finally, the null effects from the placebo tests (gray) suggest that the conditional risk reduction effect is not attributable to unobservable confounders because we do not observe any effects on provinces with future refugee presence, which we assume embody similar characteristics to where refugees tend to settle.

H3: Conditional Risk Reduction through Development

What explains this conditional risk reduction effect? We theorize that if refugee sites are geographically concentrated, the state and/or other humanitarian actors can focus their resources and attention to that particular area, as opposed to meting out their efforts to multiple refugee-hosting areas. From our expert interviews, “When there is a reasonable number of refugees, it attracts resources of international community. There is a net economic gain in that area… . The physical pretense of a large number of internationals might have some sort of calming effect, that might change the social and political dynamics.”Footnote 50 To test this proposed mechanism, we examine the effect of concentrated versus dispersed refugee presence on nighttime lights (1992–2012) as an indicator of development.

Table S5 in the SI shows a small but positive effect of refugee presence in the geographically concentrated case, confirming our expectations. From Figure 4, the effect size is 0.1 (95% CI = [0.01, 0.18]). To give a sense of scale, for Kenya in 2012, the average nighttime lights measure in Nairobi (pop. 44.3 million) was 22.7, while for the least populated Northeastern province (pop. 3.2 million), this measure was 6.1. As predicted, if refugee sites are dispersed throughout the country, there are no effects on development. Again, the placebo tests (gray) show no effects of future presence.

Figure 4. Effect of Refugee Presence on Nighttime Lights

Note: This figure shows the effect of refugee presence (black) on average nighttime lights (1992–2012), compared with their respective placebo estimates—that is, effect of future refugee presence (gray), conditional on refugee presence in other provinces of the same country-year. All point estimates include 95% CIs.

Heterogeneous Effects by Duration, Relative Size, Formality, Border Proximity, and Region

In H4, we posit additional conditions under which we would expect greater gains in local development and stability for geographically concentrated refugee-hosting areas. We conduct the following heterogeneous effects analysis: we compare provinces with new versus older refugee sites (duration), large versus small number of refugees relative to the local population (relative size), refugee camps versus settlements (formality), and provinces near versus far from the border. Last, we examine subgroup effects by region. Due to space constraints, we only show the results for duration here with the remaining results presented in SI Section S5.

First, among hosting provinces, we compare whether there is a new refugee site created within the past year versus not (established refugee presence).Footnote 51 The plots in Figure 5 confirm that there is no effect of new refugee presence on any of the outcomes. However, when refugee communities have time to become established and they are geographically concentrated, we observe in the second set of plots negative effects on conflict outcomes and a positive, but not statistically significant, effect on development.Footnote 52 After experiencing substantial demographic shifts of incoming refugees, it takes time for an area to reach a new equilibrium and to see gains in local development. This finding is in line with our expectations, based on what UNHCR officials reported in our interviews.

Figure 5. Effect of New versus Established Refugee Presence

Note: This figure shows the effect of new (within 1 year) versus established refugee presence (heterogeneous effects analysis) on conflict outcomes and nighttime lights (black), compared with their respective placebo estimates (gray). All point estimates include 95% CIs.

Second, although we do not have refugee population data for our entire panel, for African countries from 2010 to 2015, we have total population numbers across provinces. Here, we designate between large and small refugee presence by coding refugee-hosting provinces that have a 5% ratio or greater of refugee population compared with the local population as “large” and hosting provinces under 5% as “small.” In SI Section S5.1, we find that there is no effect of large relative populations on conflict. However, there is a positive effect of small populations on conflict. This may be due to small populations not bringing developmental benefits and being easier targets for victimization. Future research should further interrogate this finding.

Third, we predict that the negative effects on conflict onset and incidence and the positive effects on infrastructure in geographically concentrated cases of refugee site presence should be stronger when those sites are camps. In SI Section S5.2, we descriptively show of the 2,734 province-years that host refugee sites, the number of province-years with only formal refugee camps (57.94%), only informal refugee settlements (33.5%), or both (8.56%) across time. Confirming our expectations in H4, SI Figures S12 and S13 show that the conditional risk reduction effect on conflict outcomes are moderately driven by camps.

With respect to the policy implications of these findings—that formal camps (as opposed to settlements) are more secure—the UNHCR does not advocate for the camp-based model of hosting. In camps, refugees are effectively institutionalized. Multiple officials acknowledged that host governments generally prefer camps for security and development reasons: “We would like no big concentrations of refugee populations in a place and yet, still the countries prefer a camp style arrangement for various reasons. Some of them might say that ‘I want more efficiency of programs, I want to make sure that there is no burden on my budgets, I want for security reasons to control the movements.”’Footnote 53 And “In camps, more money is spent per capita on refugees, and there is increased ability to deliver assistance. Camps are more cost effective and provide physical security and services, but they are not meant for people to stay there forever.”Footnote 54

Next, SI Section S5.3 examines heterogeneous effects by whether provinces are near (within 100 km) or far (outside 100 km) from the nearest international border. We find negative effects for provinces in the interior of countries (far from border) on onset and incidence. Likewise, in the cases of concentrated refugee presence for provinces in the interior, the negative effects on conflict and positive effects on nighttime lights are prominent. Although refugees in traditionally peripheral, border areas may present more opportunities for development, it may be the case that the state and organizations like UNHCR are able to more effectively respond to communities in the country’s interior, where there are likely more established urban centers.

Last, SI Section S5.4 shows subgroup effects of refugee presence on conflict by region of the world. For most regions, we observe a null effect. However, we observe a statistically significant positive effect of refugee presence on battle deaths in Southern Asia—Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Iran, Nepal, and Pakistan. In contrast, we observe a statistically significant negative effect of refugee presence on battle deaths in Western Asia, which includes countries that host Syrian refugees—Turkey, Jordan, and Iraq. These findings prompt additional micro-level research that is outside the scope of this paper. Nevertheless, they are useful for us to further probe the overall null effect; most regions observe a null effect, while in other areas, namely Southern Asia and Western Asia, the global null results mask positive and negative effects.

Robustness Checks

We perform the following robustness checks, in addition to those previously mentioned. First, in SI Section S3, we examine subtypes of conflict intensity measures: state-based, nonstate, and one-sided violent events and logged battle deaths. We show that there is no effect of refugee presence on the various subtypes of conflict (H1), and that there are negative effects of concentrated refugee presence on several of the conflict types—state-based and one-sided violent events, and state-based battle deaths, and null effects for dispersed refugee presence (H2). These are all consistent with our theoretical expectations.

Second, we rerun our analyses dropping one country at a time and dropping one region at a time. We confirm that our results are not driven by any outlier countries or regions (SI Sections S6.1 and S6.2). Third, we repeat the analyses using the full dataset that encompasses all countries, as opposed to subsetting down to only countries who have ever hosted refugees during the study period, and results do not substantively change (SI Section S6.3).

Fourth, we use a modified Dynamic Subset Data to address concerns over possible collider bias, which can occur in analyses that condition on variables causally determined by both the treatment and the outcome (Morgan and Winship Reference Morgan and Winship2014). With this modified dataset, at time t, we only include the subset of countries that have already hosted refugees in the past; again, results do not substantively change (SI Section S6.4). Fifth, we lead the outcome variables by five years to show that there are no delayed positive effects of the presence of refugee sites on conflict (SI Section S6.5). Finally, when we use wzoneData (Kikuta Reference Kikuta2020) to generate conflict onset and incidence variables, SI Section S6.6 show that the main results do not meaningfully change.

Conclusion

This study challenges and extends existing research on conflict and conflict-affected migration. We provide quantitative global analysis at a subnational level using georeferenced data on displacement sites covering the past three decades. This period has been marked by unprecedented levels of displacement. Our findings strongly and consistently point to the lack of any conflict risk attributable to the presence of refugee communities. By bringing into this debate recent studies on the positive effects of refugees on host communities, an additional analysis examining nighttime lights, and knowledge from experts who have worked in this field around the world for decades, this research contends that the mix of positive and negative effects of refugee settlement will generally leave security conditions unaffected and in some cases improve them. We show that under certain conditions—when refugee sites are geographically concentrated in a country, when their presence has had time to generate a new equilibrium, or when refugees are relatively large in number—the risk of conflict decreases substantially. Moreover, we find suggestive evidence that this conditional risk reduction effect is due to increased development resulting from economic activity, aid, and infrastructure within these areas. We discuss possible selection bias and address it using placebo tests and matching. Our findings stand in stark opposition to much of the existing literature. Crucially, we provide an empirical bulwark against growing, often politically driven, efforts to turn refugees away, discriminate against them, or oppress them for fear of jeopardizing domestic security.

We propose several avenues for future research. First, a notable limitation to this study is the lack of data on displacement site characteristics, particularly with respect to population numbers that span all refugee-hosting countries, nationalities of origin, ethnic breakdown, and levels of aid and state involvement. Such data would help specify how the size of refugee communities affects conflict risk and other development outcomes. Furthermore, this would allow researchers to test the micro-level mechanisms discussed in the literature. Second, while this paper examines civil conflict outcomes, future research can expand to lower level contentious events, such as protests and smaller-scale communal violence. Third, other iterations of this research can explicitly model diffusion effects; how far do infrastructural improvements and risk reduction extend? We encourage more exploration of this potential risk reduction effect through case studies and, for aid organizations that are implementing programs directed at improving refugee–host relations, through experimental work.

Our study has critical implications for current migration debates. As the global refugee crisis grows each year, it is imperative for scholars, policy makers, and the public to resist alarmist calls that associate hosting refugees with conflict, especially in order to justify restrictions on refugee settlement and other antimigrant policies. Our findings also provide insights to humanitarian agencies working with refugee populations. Although we empirically show that geographically concentrated sites experience lower conflict risk and greater infrastructure, this does not imply that host governments relocate refugees in their country into geographically clustered camps. As we discussed, there may be little ability to do so given how quickly exigent crises lead people to quickly migrate. More importantly, the UNHCR and other humanitarian organizations do not recommend hosting refugees in camps; camps are adequate as temporary solutions, but they become dehumanizing when individuals remain in them for years or even decades. Instead, the policy-relevant lessons that we can draw from our findings are for humanitarian agencies and donors to prioritize local development of infrastructure and state capacity and to ensure that host communities can also benefit from aid. We recognize that host states face many challenges, especially since refugees often settle in the most remote and underdeveloped regions of the country. By showing how local host communities can benefit from hosting, our research ultimately hopes to encourage greater accommodation and integration of refugees.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0003055421000502.

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

Replication files, including R code and data, are openly available at the American Political Science Review Dataverse: https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/1CNMHF. Limitations on certain data availability are discussed in the SI and replication files.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are indebted to experts from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR): Jason Hepps, Ewen Macleod, Raouf Mazou, Brett Moore, Petra Nahmias, Htun Zaw Oo, Yvon Orand, Kimberly Roberson, Karl Steinacker, Tayyar Sukru Cansizoglu, Vicky Tennant, Alex Tyler, and staff members of the Field Information and Coordination Support Section (FICSS) for providing data and guidance. We are also grateful to Idean Salehyan and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch for sharing their data and code; to Tsering Wangyal Shawa for GIS expertise; and to Zachary Durkee, Nia Gooding, Amy Hu, Caterina Hyneman, Jack Jacobs, Karina Martinez, Michael Nachman, Nicholas Nobles, Amanda Ostrom, Meghna Ray, Alexander Rounaghi, Jared Solomon, Zach Stevens, and Nicholas Woo for excellent research assistance. We owe a special debt of gratitude to Joshua Angelo and Lesley Chavez for their assistance with expanding and validating the UNHCR dataset. We thank Lamis Abdelaaty, Alexander Betts, Mietek Boduszynski, Alex Braithwaite, David Carter, Miguel Centeno, Arjun Chowdhury, Rafaela Dancygier, Benjamin Fifield, Oscar Gil-Garcia, Guy Grossman, Kosuke Imai, Robert Keohane, Kabir Khanna, Matthew Kocher, Evan Lieberman, Daniel Masterson, Jean-François Maystadt, Julia Morse, Jacob Shapiro, Beth Elise Whitaker, the Imai Research Group, and participants from ISA 2014, APSA 2015, 2017 Harvard-MIT-Yale Political Violence Conference, the Empirical Studies of Conflict 2019 Annual Meeting, and Pomona College’s International Relations Program for helpful comments. We also thank the APSR editorial team and our anonymous reviewers.

The authors contributed equally. Author order was randomized using https://randomizeauthor.shinyapps.io/shiny.

FUNDING STATEMENT

Zhou acknowledges funding support from the National Science Foundation (SES–1148900). Shaver acknowledges funding support from Princeton University’s Institute for International and Regional Studies

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

The authors declare no ethical issues or conflicts of interest in this research.

ETHICAL STANDARDS

The authors declare the human subjects research in this article was deemed exempt from review by the Princeton University Institutional Review Board.

Footnotes

1 A refugee is someone who “owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of her or his nationality and is unable, or due to such fear, unwilling to avail him- or herself of the protection of that country” (Article 1, The 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees).

2 We do not have a size threshold in our primary analysis, as we will describe further later in this paper; however, we carry out additional analyses using direct measures of population size in robustness checks.

3 UNHCR operational protocols refer to camps and settlements together without explicitly differentiating the two: www.unhcr.org/uk/448d6c122.pdf.

4 Interview conducted with the Field Information and Coordination Support Section (FICSS) of UNHCR on December 30, 2013.

5 These are defined further in our description of the variables. The body of research connecting refugees to civil conflict is rather large. In some cases, refugees are associated with the outbreak of conflict. In others, they are associated with the continuation of conflict or changes in its intensity. Rather than limit our focus to a particular outcome (e.g., onset), we consider the relationship between refugee communities and various conflict outcomes. When referring to conflict in this research, except where explicitly stated, we are referring to civil conflict generally.

6 These officials have extensive experience working with refugee communities across 15 different countries, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East. More than half of these officials worked on refugee issues in multiple countries. Specifically, we asked them to describe how the UNHCR and other actors typically operate in refugee-hosting areas, the formal or informal policies pertaining to refugee-host relations, and what they have observed in the field in terms of effects on local development and conflict. Please find additional discussion, including adherence with the Principles and Guidance for Human Subjects Research, and interview quotes in Section S7 in the Supplementary Information (SI). For privacy, we refer to them not by their names but by their position titles at the time of the interview.

7 Relatedly, we note that there is a substantial body of work that considers the effects of conflict on displacement. See, for instance, Schmeidl (Reference Schmeidl1997), Balcells and Steele (Reference Balcells and Steele2016), and Steele (Reference Steele2017).

8 Several cases feature prominently: militarized refugees such as the Banyarwanda refugees in Eastern Congo in the 1960s; refugee movements from Liberia’s two civil wars from 1989 through 2003 contributing to the insecurity of neighboring countries of Sierra Leone, Guinea, and the Ivory Coast; the 1994 Rwandan refugees in the DRC as mentioned in the introduction; and members of Al-Shabaab operating within the Somali refugee camps in Kenya (Lischer Reference Lischer2006; Loescher Reference Loescher1992; Matthews Reference Matthews1972; Muggah Reference Muggah2006; Whitaker Reference Whitaker2002; Zolberg, Suhrke, and Aguayo Reference Zolberg, Suhrke and Aguayo1989).

9 Senior Official 1 at FICSS, interview conducted on June 25, 2018.

10 Senior Policy Officer, interview conducted on July 23, 2018.

11 Senior Official at Division of Programme Support and Management, interview conducted on September 12, 2018.

12 Senior Official at Policy Development and Evaluation, interview conducted on July 6, 2018.

13 For context, Uganda and Bangladesh are each hosting about 1.2 million refugees as of early 2019.

14 Senior Policy Officer, interview conducted on July 23, 2018.

15 Nevertheless, we do not mean to suggest that the effects of refugee presence on local economic activity are uniformly positive. As with many factors that influence economic activity, there are winners and losers. For instance, Braun and Mahmoud (Reference Braun and Mahmoud2014) and Calderón-Mejía and Ibáñez (Reference Calderón-Meja and Ibáñez2016) highlight negative effects of refugee presence on employment opportunities and wage levels of native citizens. Other scholars including Alix-Garcia, Barrlett, and Saah (Reference Alix-Garcia, Bartlett and Saah2012) find heterogeneous effects of refugee presence on local economies, effecting positive changes (for instance, for property owners and certain suppliers) and negative changes for others (consumers). For more detailed reviews of such effects, see Maystadt et al. (Reference Maystadt, Hirvonen, Mabiso and Vandercasteelen2019) and Ruiz and Vargas-Silva (Reference Ruiz and Vargas-Silva2013).

16 Senior Official 1 at FICSS, interview conducted on June 25, 2018.

17 Senior Official at Policy Development and Evaluation, interview conducted on July 6, 2018.

18 Senior Official at Kakuma Refugee Camp, interview conducted on July 23, 2018.

19 Senior Official at Policy Development and Evaluation, interview conducted on July 6, 2018.

20 Senior Official at Policy Development and Evaluation, interview conducted on July 6, 2018.

21 Neither ESRI nor any other source we are familiar with has constructed first-level administrative boundary maps on a yearly basis that we might otherwise use for this study.

22 We use provinces instead of grid squares, such as PRIO-GRID, as our unit of analyses for two reasons. The first issue concerns the distribution of grids across countries. In many cases, grid squares are intersected by country borders. For our purposes, this is particularly problematic given the spatial distribution of refugee sites; roughly 27% of refugee sites are within 100 km of the border. Grid squares are, therefore, susceptible to capturing refugee communities on one side of an international boundary and conflict events on the other side. In such cases, the presence of refugee communities and incidence of conflict would be incorrectly positively associated. Second, some of our refugee site location data lack exact latitude/longitude coordinates. In these cases, our team of research assistants was able to identify their location in provinces based on UNHCR reports. This would not be possible for grid squares.

23 We also exclude nonrelevant provinces (e.g., Antarctica, Greenland, United States Minor Outlying Islands) and small island states not included in cShapes country boundaries, described in more detail later, or attached to larger relevant countries (e.g., the United States).

24 This process matches most provinces to countries; however, in some cases, centroids fall outside country boundaries. In these cases, we correct the mismatches by using a nearest distance function that maps the unmatched provinces to the country to which they belong. We also note that countries typically experience boundary changes on days other than the first day of the year (January 1). Given that our analysis is at the year level, we, therefore, assign provinces in the year of a change to one country or the other for that year (e.g., a province in Sudan that later becomes part of South Sudan). We note that such cases are rare. This process does not create a perfect time-varying province-level map of the world as, in some cases, the size and/or boundaries of individual provinces themselves may have changed. However, we are unfamiliar with any time varying global subnational dataset that is as detailed as the one we have constructed for this project.

25 Here, we also make the distinction between refugee sites, asylum areas where refugees are staying, and third-country refugee resettlement, where another state, such as Canada or the US, has agreed to grant permanent settlement to former refugees after a selection process based on government quotas and other criteria. To give a sense of scale, in 2017, less than 1% of all refugees were resettled. Please see the UNHCR page on resettlement for more details: https://www.unhcr.org/resettlement.html. Where these former refugees are resettled is also not included in our data of displacement locations.

26 As a robustness check, we rerun the analyses using the full data of all countries, see SI Section S6.3. Results do not substantively change.

27 In approximately 4% of locations, geographic coordinates were missing. Most of these cases are IDP settlements in Central African Republic and Nigeria. For the 11 cases of refugee camps with missing coordinates, working with research assistants, we manually added these coordinates to the dataset.

28 In 18 cases, the geographic coordinates provided to the refugee sites were matched to the wrong country, because such locations were in very close proximity to international borders. We manually correct these cases by using the country names included in the UNHCR dataset to determine the actual country of settlement. In a relatively small but substantial number of cases, observations were missing open and close dates. In most cases, with the help of research assistants, we manually corrected these dates for refugee camps and settlements. When we could not identify the exact open and close years, we instead identified the earliest date (going as far back as the first year of the study 1990) during which at least one site was open in the entire province. We also determined the last year on which at least one site was open (going as far forward as the last year of the study 2018). This way, for each affected province-year observation, we could construct the relevant variables without knowing the open and close dates of all relevant camps and settlements.

29 For example, in the mid-2000s approximately 102,000 refugees from Angola and the Great Lakes region resided in five camps in the capital of Zambia, Lusaka. Please see this UNHCR report for more details: https://www.unhcr.org/4371d1ae0.pdf.

30 For example, a few hundred refugees from Iraq, Liberia, Nigeria, and Somalia tracked by the UNHCR live dispersed across seven major Chinese cities, including Beijing and Shanghai. Please see this UNHCR report for more details: http://www.unhcr.org/5000187d9.pdf.

31 The dataset consists almost exclusively of substate conflicts but includes a very small number of cases of interstate war, which we include when assigning conflict values.

32 Two percent of cases in the conflict circles dataset do not contain center points, and these are dropped from our analysis.

33 In some cases, the dataset identifies multiple ongoing conflicts in a given country in a given year. In such cases, we construct conflict circles for each conflict and use those to identify affected provinces.

34 Finally, we note that Dittrich Hallberg (Reference Dittrich2012) includes a very small number of cases (four) of interstate war in their dataset. We include these conflicts when assigning conflict values.

35 The conflict polygons from wzoneData were created by Kikuta (Reference Kikuta2020) from UCDP Georeferenced Event Dataset (GED) 19.1 conflict events data (Sundberg and Melander Reference Sundberg and Melander2013; Pettersson and Öberg Reference Pettersson and Öberg2020), using a machine learning method. Note that this version of wzoneData excludes conflict events from the Syrian Civil War, activity by the Islamic State, and the US War in Afghanistan and Iraq.

36 As with the process of matching province centroids to individual country boundaries, a small number of latitude-longitude pairs do not match with a unique province. This almost invariably occurs where violent events took place in coastal regions so close to a given country’s border that this matching process places them outside of the country’s national boundaries. In these cases, we again use a nearest distance function to assign the unmatched conflict events to the relevant province.

37 Because of the spike in battle deaths in 1994 due to the Rwandan genocide, we log this outcome in our analyses.

38 There are, of course, inferential limitations with nighttime light emissions, which are reviewed in detail by Michalopoulos and Papaioannou (Reference Michalopoulos and Papaioannou2018).

39 Specifically, PRIO-GRID measures average nighttime light emission from the DMSP-OLS Nighttime Lights Time Series Version 4 (Average Visible, Stable Lights, and Cloud Free Coverages) (Lights Reference Lights2011). They use the data gathered from the newest satellites (F10 in 1992–93, F12 in 1994–1996, and so on).

40 Data on province-level population were similarly extracted from PRIO-GRID, which, derived grid-level population measures from CIESIN (2004), produced by U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center. These data cover the years 1990, 1995, 2000, and 2005. The CIESEN effort consists of combining these data with particular models to estimate population levels at a subnational grid level.

41 These data also include the years 1990, 1995, 2000, and 2005.

42 We begin with the grid-level measures produced by PRIO-GRID (Tollefsen, Strand, and Buhaug Reference Tollefsen, Strand and Buhaug2012). We then match each grid to the provinces used in our study and then sum the population and GDP measures for all grids associated with each province. In rare cases where only a single year of data is included for a given province, we use that value alone.

43 The ethnic makeup in an area may also affect both refugee settlement as well as conflict. Particularly within sub-Saharan Africa, where international borders were drawn up by colonial authorities with little consideration for existing groups (e.g., Asiwaju Reference Asiwaju1985; Davidson Reference Davidson1992; Englebert Reference Englebert2002; Young Reference Young, Montserrat and Hutchinson2001), it is likely that refugees settle in areas where they share ethnic ties with some citizen groups (Michalopoulos and Papaioannou Reference Michalopoulos and Papaioannou2013a). Refugees could shift the ethnic composition and balance of these host communities, possibly increasing the likelihood of conflict (Forsberg Reference Forsberg2014; Loescher Reference Loescher1992; Rüegger Reference Rüegger, Backer, Bhavnani and Huth2017). To account for ethnic diversity, we incorporate the number of Excluded ethnic groups from the GeoEthnic Power Relations (GeoEPR) data, which covers 1990 to 2013 (Vogt et al. Reference Vogt, Bormann, Rüegger, Cederman, Hunziker and Girardin2015; Wucherpfennig et al. Reference Wucherpfennig, Weidmann, Girardin, Cederman and Wimmer2011). However, given the years of coverage and missingness, including this variable cuts our data from 28,971 to 24,636 observations. Thus, our main analyses do not include this variable, but when we do, results do not substantively change.

44 Senior Official 1 at FICSS, interview conducted on December 30, 2013.

45 Senior Official at Policy Development and Evaluation, interview conducted on July 6, 2018.

46 We do the same for Placebo Refugee Camps and Placebo Refugee Settlements for heterogeneous effects analysis.

47 Thus, our argument and findings that areas hosting refugees are no more at risk of conflict, and in some cases, are less likely to experience conflict than nonhosting areas, appear to be more or less at odds with the findings represented by Salehyan and Gleditsch (Reference Salehyan and Gleditsch2006). However, as we detail in SI Section S9, when we extend Salehyan and Gleditsch’s (Reference Salehyan and Gleditsch2006) study to include more recent decades, their results no longer hold. It is likely, as we describe, that some factor or set of factors have changed such that refugees settlement in recent decades are no longer positively associated with increased civil conflict.

48 We use quasi-Bayesian Monte Carlo simulation to generate quantities of interest and uncertainty estimates for the models estimated with logistic regression, and we analytically calculate the quantities of interest and uncertainty estimates for the models estimated with OLS regression.

49 The marginal effect of the presence of refugee sites in another province is still negative and statistically significant. This could capture potential positive spillover effects of refugee sites on surrounding provinces. Another possible, nonexclusive explanation is that these coefficients reflect selection at the country level, as refugees go to less conflict-affected countries if given the option. We do not examine possible diffusion effects or country-level selection in this paper.

50 Senior Official of Shelter & Settlements Section, interview conducted on July 3, 2018.

51 The placebo test for this analysis is future refugee presence, plotted from the previous analyses because there is no placebo version for new site or established site.

52 We also repeat this analysis defining new presence with a two-year cutoff, and results do not substantively change.

53 Senior Official at Kakuma Refugee Camp, interview conducted on July 23, 2018.

54 Senior Regional Protection Officer, interview conducted on June 25, 2018.

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Refugees Sites and the Annual Average Number of Violent Events by ProvinceNote: Data sources: UNHCR data on displacement locations and the UCDP Georeferenced Event Dataset (GED). The top global map shows the yearly average number of violent events (shading) during our panel 1990—2018 along with the 1,460 refugee sites (points) in our data that were open at any point during this time. The map below zooms in on the area outlined by the black box in the global map. This area covers West, Central, and the Horn of Africa, where many refugee and conflict sites are concentrated.

Figure 1

Table 1. Regression Table for H1: Effects of Refugee Presence on Conflict Outcomes and Their Respective Placebo Models (p)

Figure 2

Figure 2. Effect of Refugee Presence on Conflict OutcomesNote: This figure shows the effect of refugee presence on conflict outcomes (black)—onset and incidence (1990–2008), violent events, and battle deaths (1990–2018)—compared with their respective placebo estimates—that is, the effect of future refugee presence (gray). All point estimates include 95% CIs.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Effect of Concentrated and Dispersed Refugee PresenceNote: This figure shows the effect of refugee presence on conflict outcomes (black)—onset and incidence (1990–2008), violent events and battle deaths (1990–2018)—compared with their respective placebo estimates—that is, the effect of future refugee presence (gray), conditional on refugee presence in other provinces of the same country-year. All point estimates include 95% CIs.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Effect of Refugee Presence on Nighttime LightsNote: This figure shows the effect of refugee presence (black) on average nighttime lights (1992–2012), compared with their respective placebo estimates—that is, effect of future refugee presence (gray), conditional on refugee presence in other provinces of the same country-year. All point estimates include 95% CIs.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Effect of New versus Established Refugee PresenceNote: This figure shows the effect of new (within 1 year) versus established refugee presence (heterogeneous effects analysis) on conflict outcomes and nighttime lights (black), compared with their respective placebo estimates (gray). All point estimates include 95% CIs.

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