How do Major, Violent and Nonviolent Opposition Campaigns, Impact Predicted Life Expectancy at birth?

Authors

  • Judith Stoddard Rutgers University, Division of Global Affairs

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5334/sta.bx

Keywords:

Nonviolent social movements, opposition campaigns, Life Expectancy, Developmental Indicators

Abstract

This study compared the effects of major violent and nonviolent opposition campaigns for regime change, on predicted life expectancy at birth. The study measured life expectancy five and ten years after the campaign ended, so that deaths which occurred during the campaign would not be included in the metric, and thus enabling the study of changes made in the state on the social determinants affecting longevity, after the campaign was over. Life expectancy is one of the best reported World Development Indicators and is considered to be a good indication of the overall health and general living conditions of the state and therefore is an ideal indicator to reflect the changes made in the state following a major campaign. The results of this analysis showed that states have a hard time recovering from a major opposition campaign and initially drop behind the growth trend in the world average for predicted life expectancy at birth. But, the type of campaign that was waged and whether it was successful, greatly affects the state’s ability to recover. Encouragingly by a decade after the campaign ends, states that experienced a nonviolent campaign that was successful had caught up to the world average and inched ahead of it. This shows that on this important development indicator, new governments that were ushered into power by nonviolent social movements, had made positive changes in the state that enabled it to surpass world averages.

Author Biography

Judith Stoddard, Rutgers University, Division of Global Affairs

The author of this work is Dr. Judith Stoddard of Rutgers University, Division of Global Affairs. Dr. Stoddard performs comparative research on violent and nonviolent opposition campaigns and their effects on post-campaign development indicators. In the transition period which inherently follows a nonviolent campaign for regime change, we often hear the speculation in the international media that the state may have been better off had the campaign not occurred. Her analysis seeks to answer this question and quell the surrounding fear.

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Published

2013-08-01

Issue

Section

Research Article