History and Ethnic Conflict: Does Precolonial Centralization Matter?
International Studies Quarterly • Vol/Iss. 0 • Oxford University Press • • Published In • Pages: 1-15 •
By Ray, Subhasish
Hypothesis
Centralized precolonial state formation will be positively associated with contemporary ethnic conflict.
Note
This is predicted to be non-causal, but rather mediated by British colonial state building strategies.
| Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Causal Mediation Analysis | Supported | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
| Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Group Size | Control | Composition Of Population, Population |
| Postcolonial Intrastate Onset | Dependent | Ingroup Antagonisms, External Relations, Instigation Of War |
| Initial Postcolonial Inclusion | Dependent | Composition Of Population, Ethnic Stratification, Local Officials, Government Institutions |
| Police Ethnic Share | Dependent | Composition Of Population, Ethnic Stratification, Local Officials, Police |
| Jurisdictional Heirarchy | Independent | Territorial Organization |
| Regional Base | Control | Geography, Location |
| Density | Control | Population, Composition Of Population |
| Capital Ethnic Share | Control | Composition Of Population, Ethnic Stratification |
| Settlement Patterns | Control | Settlement Patterns |
| Colonial Extrastate Onset | Control | Ingroup Antagonisms, War |
| Total Population | Control | Population |
| Per Capita Income | Control | Income And Demand |