Can the wounds of war be healed? Experimental evidence on reconciliation in Sierra Leone (June 2015)

30th June 2015

Can the wounds of war be healed? Experimental evidence on reconciliation in Sierra Leone (June 2015)

Wars destroy not just physical capital but also social capital and psychological wellbeing. Post-conflict recovery seems contingent on healing individuals and restoring their social ties. Can social renewal only occur alongside psychological renewal? We experimentally evaluate community-level reconciliation in Sierra Leone. As a part of the intervention, victims detail war atrocities, and perpetrators confess to war crimes. We find that reconciliation led to greater forgiveness of former perpetrators. It also forged social capital: social networks were stronger and people displayed more community-oriented behavior including higher contributions to public goods. Yet, the process also worsened psychological health, increasing depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. These impacts, positive and negative, persisted for nearly three years after the intervention. Our results suggest that individual healing is not a pre-condition for reconciliation to renew social ties; rather social capital grew at the expense of psychological wellbeing.

Written by Jacobus Cilliers, Oeindrila Dube, and Bilal Siddiqi, Center for Global Development