Do return migrants transfer political norms to their origin country? Evidence from Mali

Type Journal Article - Journal of Comparative Economics
Title Do return migrants transfer political norms to their origin country? Evidence from Mali
Author(s)
Volume 42
Issue 3
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
Page numbers 630-651
URL http://pagesperso.dial.prd.fr/dial_pagesperso/dial_chauvet/PagePerso/workinprogress/Elections in​Mali.pdf
Abstract
This paper explores the link between return migration and political outcomes in the origin
country, using the case study of Mali. We build a panel dataset combining the Malian
censuses of 1998 and 2009 and electoral results at the locality level for the municipal
elections of 1998/1999 and 2009. Using fixed effects estimations, we find a positive impact of
the stock of returnees from non-African countries on participation rates, confirmed by various
robustness checks, and we find evidence of a diffusion effect from those returnees to nonmigrants.
We also put forward a substitution effect between the presence of returnees from
both African and non-African countries and the level of education of the non-migrants: the
transfer of electoral norms by returnees is stronger when non-migrants are poorly educated.
Finally, we find a strong positive impact of migrants coming back from non-African countries
on three indicators of electoral competitiveness.

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