Institute for Research on Economics and Society – Faculty of Economics and Business – University of Indonesia

Volunteerism after the tsunami: democratization and aid

February 21, 2014

Abstract

Using three waves of survey data from fishing villages in Aceh, Indonesia for 2005-2009, we examine the determinants of local volunteer labor after the tsunami. Pre-existing social capital and the form of aid delivery (but not trauma) strongly affect village volunteerism initially, but these effects weaken with time. What persists is the effect of essentially a new institution, formal village elections. While recent work suggests democratization increases cooperation, the differentially timed introduction of elections negatively affects volunteerism, suggests a regime switch effect where traditional leaders chosen by elites want more volunteer labor projects than democratically elected leaders do.

For full article, click the following link:
http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Economics/Papers/2011/2011-8_paper.pdf

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