“…In particular, using different identification strategies, several studies show evidence that war exposure leads to increased civic engagement, political participation, collective action, trustworthiness, interpersonal trust, and generosity and inequality aversion towards ingroup members (Bellows and Miguel, 2009;Blattman, 2009;Voors et al, 2012;Gilligan et al, 2014;Bauer et al, 2014, Bauer et al, 2016, Bauer et al, 2018Jha and Wilkinson, 2012). 1 On the other hand, there is the observed persistence of conflicts and their tendency to recur, and the argument that this pattern can be explained by parochial responses to war exposure, such as increased nationalism, polarization, loss of trust, and reduced prosociality towards out-group members, likely triggered by psychological reactions to war trauma and the associated grievances (Henrich, 2020;Collier et al, 2003;Rohner et al, 2013a, b;Grossman et al, 2015;Hager et al, 2019;Conzo and Salustri, 2019;De Juan et al, 2022;Vlachos, 2022). 2 This seeming contrast stems from the challenges in identifying and isolating the complex psychological, economic, and social mechanisms, linking war exposure to subsequent political and societal attitudes and behaviors and the effects they transmit (Blattman and Bauer, 2010;Bauer et al, 2016;Cederman and Vogt, 2017;Couttenier et al, 2019).…”