Adam Lichtenheld is Executive Director of the Immigration Policy Lab at Stanford University. He has previously worked as a senior researcher at Mercy Corps and a consultant for the UN Refugee Agency, the World Bank, and the US. Agency for International Development. He has designed and evaluated policies and programs on migration and displacement, violence prevention, and conflict resolution with governments, donor agencies, and NGOs around the world. His articles have appeared in a number of academic and policy journals, along with the Washington Post and Foreign Policy.
'When and why are people displaced during war? Guilt by Location offers us entirely new insight into this question, highlighting how states and insurgent groups repeatedly force civilians into gut-wrenching decisions to stay or leave their homes in order to gain insight into their political loyalties. It is the most theoretically sophisticated account of wartime displacement to date and is a remarkable achievement.' Lachlan McNamee, Author of Settling for Less: Why States Colonize and Why They Stop 'In this gripping book, Adam Lichtenheld gives us new tools to understand forced migration. Armed groups displace civilians not only to remove rival sympathizers, but also to identify them to begin with. This insight, and the rich empirics anchored by in-depth fieldwork and an original, cross-national dataset on all forms of strategic displacement, shows why displacement is such a prevalent form of wartime violence. All scholars of forced migration or wartime violence should read it.' Abbey Steele, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Amsterdam 'Population displacement during conflict is increasingly well documented but remains poorly understood. No longer. Distinguishing between different types of displacement and focusing on the strategies of the state, Lichtenheld finds that the most prevalent type, forced relocation, serves a key political goal: to sort friends from foes. Combining analytical clarity with empathy and brimming with implications, Guilt by Location is essential reading for better understanding conflict.' Stathis N. Kalyvas, University of Oxford