<resource xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4.1/metadata.xsd"><identifier identifierType="DOI">10.7910/DVN/R0Z3ND</identifier><creators><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Tuki, Daniel</creatorName><givenName>Daniel</givenName><familyName>Tuki</familyName></creator></creators><titles><title>Replication data for: Pastoral conflicts and (dis)trust: Evidence from Nigeria using an instrumental variable approach.</title></titles><publisher>Harvard Dataverse</publisher><publicationYear>2026</publicationYear><subjects><subject>Social Sciences</subject><subject>Conflict</subject></subjects><contributors><contributor contributorType="ContactPerson"><contributorName nameType="Personal">Tuki, Daniel</contributorName><givenName>Daniel</givenName><familyName>Tuki</familyName></contributor></contributors><dates><date dateType="Submitted">2025-09-16</date><date dateType="Updated">2026-02-12</date></dates><resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset"/><relatedIdentifiers/><sizes><size>22297887</size><size>2223</size><size>1951</size><size>60088</size><size>85850</size><size>13969</size></sizes><formats><format>application/x-stata-14</format><format>text/x-stata-syntax</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>application/pdf</format><format>text/x-stata-syntax</format></formats><version>1.0</version><rightsList><rights rightsURI="info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess"/><rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0">CC0 1.0</rights></rightsList><descriptions><description descriptionType="Abstract">The data and do-files underlying the regression results have been provided.</description><description descriptionType="TechnicalInfo">STATA, 17</description><description descriptionType="Other">Even though the incidence of conflicts between Fulani nomadic pastoralists and sedentary communities in Nigeria has risen significantly in the last decade, there is a notable lack of research examining how these conflicts influence distrust towards members of the Fulani ethnic group and Muslims. Using novel survey data from Kaduna, the state with the third-highest incidence of pastoral conflict in Nigeria, this study addresses that gap. Regression analyses show that exposure to pastoral conflict increases distrust towards the Fulani and Muslims. This suggests a contagion effect whereby the Fulani are conflated with the broader Muslim population, due to the Muslim identity of nomadic Fulani pastoralists. Disaggregating the data by religious affiliation reveals a pattern: conflict exposure raises distrust only among Muslim respondents, while effects are statistically insignificant among Christians. Among Muslims, the positive effect suggests that pastoral conflict erodes in-group cohesion. The null effect among Christians may reflect the way in which pastoral conflicts align with pre-existing religious fault lines.</description></descriptions><geoLocations/></resource>