Katrin Paula's research while affiliated with Technische Universität München and other places

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Publications (4)


Beyond economic development? Foreign direct investment and pre-election violence
  • Article

January 2024

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15 Reads

Journal of Peace Research

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Katrin Paula

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Tobias Rommel

Incumbents who resort to violence in efforts to secure their hold on power have been a major challenge for sub-Saharan Africa. At the same time, opening up domestic markets to international capital in the form of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) has provided governments with more resources to garner the support of their citizens. How are these developments related? We argue that FDI reduces the likelihood that incumbents use violence in competitive regions. FDI has direct economic benefits for the population. Especially in competitive regions, where violence might reduce turnout even among their potential supporters, incumbents thus adapt their re-election strategies and use fewer violent means. We draw on geo-referenced data on election violence, FDI, and previous election results and match these within subnational regions. Investigating subnational variation in 15 sub-Saharan African countries, we find empirical support for our argument. FDI lowers pre-election violence in competitive regions, but has no effect in both incumbent and opposition strongholds. These findings are robust to using 10×10 km and 25×25 km grid cells and have important implications for democratic countries’ foreign policies: allowing multinational companies to invest in developing countries reduces violence, but might simultaneously bolster incumbent regimes.

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Figure 1. Number of PGMs over time.
Figure 2. Distribution of PGMs across countries and time.
Figure 3. Primary characteristic of PGM membership, by government formation.
Figure 4. Types of violence committed, three most common combinations.
Figure 5. Reported violence committed by PGMs with or without forced membership.

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The life, death and diversity of pro-government militias: The fully revised pro-government militias database version 2.0
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2022

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146 Reads

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4 Citations

Research & Politics

This article presents version 2.0 of the Pro-Government Militias Database (PGMD). It is increasingly clear that it is untenable to assume a unified security sector, as states often rely on militias to carry out security tasks. The PGMD 2.0 provides new opportunities for studying questions such as when states rely on militias, how they chose among different types and the consequences for stability and peace. We detail how the PGMD 2.0 provides new information on the characteristics, behaviour, life cycle and organization of 504 pro-government militias across the globe between 1981 and 2014.

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FIGURE 5 Effect of Tagesschau Reports on Approval Rates for GDR State News
Effect of Tagesschau Reports on the Approval of GDR State News
Sometimes Less Is More: Censorship, News Falsification, and Disapproval in 1989 East Germany

December 2019

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249 Reads

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38 Citations

American Journal of Political Science

Does more media censorship imply more regime stability? We argue that censorship may cause mass disapproval for censoring regimes. In particular, we expect that censorship backfires when citizens can falsify media content through alternative sources of information. We empirically test our theoretical argument in an autocratic regime—the German Democratic Republic (GDR). Results demonstrate how exposed state censorship on the country’s emigration crisis fueled outrage in the weeks before the 1989 revolution. Combining original weekly approval surveys on GDR state television and daily content data of West German news programs with a quasi-experimental research design, we show that recipients disapproved of censorship if they were able to detect misinformation through conflicting reports on Western television. Our findings have important implications for the study of censoring systems in contemporary autocracies, external democracy promotion, and campaigns aimed at undermining trust in traditional journalism.


Intimidating voters with violence and mobilizing them with clientelism

September 2019

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39 Reads

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37 Citations

Journal of Peace Research

Recent research suggests that intimidating voters and electoral clientelism are two strategies on the menu of manipulation, often used in conjunction. We do not know much, however, about who is targeted with which of these illicit electoral strategies. This article devises and tests a theoretical argument on the targeting of clientelism and intimidation across different voters. We argue that in contexts where violence can be used to influence elections, parties may choose to demobilize swing and opposition voters, which frees up resources to mobilize their likely supporters with clientelism. While past research on this subject has either been purely theoretical or confined to single country studies, we offer a first systematic cross-national and multilevel analysis of clientelism and voter intimidation in seven African countries. We analyze which voters most fear being intimidated with violence and which get targeted with clientelistic benefits, combining new regional-level election data with Afrobarometer survey data. In a multilevel analysis, we model the likelihood of voters being targeted with either strategy as a function of both past election results of the region they live in and their partisan status. We find that voters living in incumbent strongholds are most likely to report having being bribed in elections, whereas those living in opposition strongholds are most fearful of violent intimidation. We further provide suggestive evidence of a difference between incumbent supporters and other voters. We find support that incumbent supporters are more likely to report being targeted with clientelism, and mixed support for the idea that they are less fearful of intimidation. Our findings allow us to define potential hot spots of intimidation. They also provide an explanation for why parties in young democracies concentrate more positive inducements on their own supporters than the swing voter model of campaigning would lead us to expect.

Citations (3)


... We also include uniformed armed organizations such as presidential and coast guards, police, border security forces, and government militias if they are official units that operate under the direct command of the ministry of defense. Excluded from this definition are nonstate armed groups such as pro-government militias that are [temporarily] aligned with the regime (Carey et al., 2022) as well as police forces and other paramilitary groups that do not operate under the control of the ministry of defense. ...

Reference:

“Multidimensional Measures of Militarization (M3) - A Global Dataset”. Armed Forces & Society, Armed Forces & Society, DOI: 10.1177/0095327X231215295/
The life, death and diversity of pro-government militias: The fully revised pro-government militias database version 2.0

Research & Politics

... Weak parties in a few African nations (e.g., Kenya, Zambia, and Nigeria), parties often use pre-electoral coercion on opposition voters to restrict voter turnout (Brosché et al., 2020;Rauschenbach & Paula, 2019). Apart from forced absenteeism, political intimidation has been used in Russia and other contemporary Eastern European nations to influence low-income voters' voting-decision (Mares et al., 2018). ...

Intimidating voters with violence and mobilizing them with clientelism
  • Citing Article
  • September 2019

Journal of Peace Research

... Firstly, Kuang (2018) conducted an investigation into the news most frequently censored in China. Secondly, Gläßel and Paula (2020) found evidence of censorship, news falsification, and denial in East Germany. Thirdly, Murat (2018) analyzed news media consolidation and censorship in Turkey. ...

Sometimes Less Is More: Censorship, News Falsification, and Disapproval in 1989 East Germany

American Journal of Political Science