Abstract: A large body of scholarship finds that there is a relationship between economic dependence on oil or minerals and authoritarianism. This finding is based, however, on pooled, time-series cross-sectional regressions without country fixed effects run on datasets that are longitudinally truncated. This is not an effective strategy to uncover causal associations. We therefore develop unique historical datasets, and employ time-series centric techniques, that allow us test for long-run relationships between resource reliance and regime type within countries over time. Our results indicate that increases in resource dependence are not associated with the undermining of democracy or less complete transitions from authoritarianism to dem...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
The relationship between natural resources and economic growth has been widely analyzed in the recen...
This thesis examines the theory of the “oil resource curse” and how structural, demographic, and eco...
Abstract: Is there a relationship between “point source ” natural resource dependence and authorita...
Both the theory and empirical work linking natural resource wealth to authoritarianism and underdeve...
Abstract Why do African and Middle Eastern countries seem cursed by an abundance of natural resource...
The political resource curse – the detrimental effect of natural resource dependence on democracy – ...
The political resource curse – the detrimental effect of natural resource dependence on democracy – ...
How does natural resource abundance influence state and society? Since the late 1980s, a number of s...
This paper examines the effect of natural resource dependence on growth in a cross-country setting d...
Middle East scholars often suggest that the region's absence of democracy is in part due to its...
A puzzling piece of empirical evidence suggests that resource-abundant countries tend to grow slower...
Extant theoretical work on the political resource curse implies that dependence on resource revenues...
Since 2001, hundreds of academic studies have examined the “resource curse, ” meaning the claim that...
We propose a theoretical model to explain empirical regularities related to the curse of natural re...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
The relationship between natural resources and economic growth has been widely analyzed in the recen...
This thesis examines the theory of the “oil resource curse” and how structural, demographic, and eco...
Abstract: Is there a relationship between “point source ” natural resource dependence and authorita...
Both the theory and empirical work linking natural resource wealth to authoritarianism and underdeve...
Abstract Why do African and Middle Eastern countries seem cursed by an abundance of natural resource...
The political resource curse – the detrimental effect of natural resource dependence on democracy – ...
The political resource curse – the detrimental effect of natural resource dependence on democracy – ...
How does natural resource abundance influence state and society? Since the late 1980s, a number of s...
This paper examines the effect of natural resource dependence on growth in a cross-country setting d...
Middle East scholars often suggest that the region's absence of democracy is in part due to its...
A puzzling piece of empirical evidence suggests that resource-abundant countries tend to grow slower...
Extant theoretical work on the political resource curse implies that dependence on resource revenues...
Since 2001, hundreds of academic studies have examined the “resource curse, ” meaning the claim that...
We propose a theoretical model to explain empirical regularities related to the curse of natural re...
The ‘resource curse’ hypothesis claims that abundance in natural resources, particularly oil, encour...
The relationship between natural resources and economic growth has been widely analyzed in the recen...
This thesis examines the theory of the “oil resource curse” and how structural, demographic, and eco...