Taking it personally: the effect of ethnic attachment on preferences for regionalism

Ricart-Huguet, J. & Green, E. D.ORCID logo (2018). Taking it personally: the effect of ethnic attachment on preferences for regionalism. Studies in Comparative International Development, 53(1), 67-89. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12116-017-9240-3
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This article presents three related findings on regional decentralization. We use an original dataset collected in Uganda to establish, for the first time in a developing country context, that individuals have meaningful preferences over the degree of regional decentralization they desire, ranging from centralism to secessionism. Second, multilevel models suggest that a small share of this variation is explained at the district and ethnic group levels. The preference for regional decentralization monotonically increases with an ethnic group or a district’s average ethnic attachment. However, the relationship with an ethnic group or district’s income is U-shaped: both the richest and the poorest groups desire more regionalism, reconciling interest-based and identity-based explanations for regionalism. Finally, we show that higher individual ethnic attachment increases preferences for regionalism using fixed effects and a new matching method.

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