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Do UN Interventions Cause Peace? Using Matching to Improve Causal Inference
Author(s):
Source: Journal:Quarterly Journal of Political Science ISSN Print:1554-0626, ISSN Online:1554-0634 Publisher:Now Publishers Volume 3 Number 2, Pages: 34 (89-122) DOI: 10.1561/100.00007051
Abstract: Previous statistical studies of the effects of UN peacekeeping have generally
suggested that UN interventions have a positive effect on building a sustainable
peace after civil war. Recent methodological developments have questioned this
result because the cases in which the United Nations intervened were quite different
from those in which they did not. Therefore the estimated causal effect may be due to
the assumptions of the model that the researchers chose rather than to peacekeeping
itself. The root of the problem is that UN missions are not randomly assigned. We
argue that standard approaches for dealing with this problem (Heckman regression
and instrumental variables) are invalid and impracticable in the context of UN
peacekeeping and would lead to estimates of the effects of UN operations that are
largely a result of the assumptions of the statistical model rather than the data.
We correct for the effects of nonrandom assignment with matching techniques on a
sample of UN interventions in post-Cold-War conflicts and find that UN interventions
are indeed effective in the sample of post-civil-conflict interventions, but that UN
interventions while civil wars are still ongoing have no causal effect.
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