Likely Electromagnetic Foundations of Gender Inequality
Cross-Cultural Research • Vol/Iss. 57(2-3) • Sage Journals • • Published In • Pages: 239-263 •
By León, Federico R.
Abstract
| Sample Used | Coded Data | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Human Development Report (UNDP, 2011) | Other researchers | Gender inequality data, per capita income, |
| Peel et al. (2007) | Researchers' own | Climate classification |
| Andersen et al. (2016) | Other researchers | UV radiation data |
| World Health Organization | Other researchers | Pathogen prevalence |
| United Nations Fund for Population Activities | Other researchers | Total fertility rate |
| Becker (2019) | Other researchers | Cognitive performance data |
| Klitgaard et al. (2019) | Other researchers | ACP1*B allele data |
| Freedom House (2020) | Other researchers | Democracy data |
| Putterman (2021) | Other researchers | Post-1500 European ancestry |
| Hypothesis | Supported |
|---|---|
| Wet and hot climates are associated with greater gender inequality. | Partially Supported |
| Higher UV radiation is associated with more gender inequality. | Support Claimed |
Documents and Hypotheses Filed By: jacob.kalodner