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친환경·반환경 대외원조의 분배: 국내정치제도의 역할을 중심으로Allocating Environmentally Beneficial and Harmful Foreign Aid: The Role of Domestic Political Institutions

Other Titles
Allocating Environmentally Beneficial and Harmful Foreign Aid: The Role of Domestic Political Institutions
Authors
김성은Johannes Urpelainen
Issue Date
2019
Publisher
고려대학교 평화와 민주주의연구소
Keywords
Environmental policy; Environmental assistance; Foreign aid; Democracy; Credible commitment; 환경정책; 환경원조; 대외원조; 민주주의; 신뢰성있는 확약
Citation
평화연구, v.27, no.1, pp.353 - 402
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
평화연구
Volume
27
Number
1
Start Page
353
End Page
402
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/69483
DOI
10.21051/PS.2019.04.27.1.353
ISSN
1229-4543
Abstract
While environmental aid flows have increased over time, they pale in comparison to those forms of foreign aid that cause environmental degradation. Understanding the relationship between foreign aid and environmental protection requires paying attention to “dirty” aid, but the allocation of such aid has been neglected in the literature. This article contributes to the literature by showing that in the 1980-2008 period, democratic recipients have received more of both environmental and dirty aid than autocracies. The substantive effects are large, with democratization resulting in more than a twofold increase in environmental and dirty aid. This finding contradicts the “demand side” hypothesis that democratic developing countries are intrinsically opposed to environmentally harmful projects. However, it is consistent with a “supply side” logic: donors trust democracies with dirty aid projects because the latter may be expected to consider environmental problems in their implementation. We also show that the allocation of dirty or environmental aid does not decrease with corruption, indicating that the allocation of such aid depends on political incentives, instead of capacity for good governance.
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