We investigate the relationship between mortality decline and urbanization, which has hitherto been proposed by demographers but has yet to be tested rigorously in a global context. Using cross-national panel data, we find evidence of a robust negative correlation between crude death rates and urbanization. The use of instrumental variables suggest that this relationship is causal, while historical data from the early 20th century suggest that this relationship holds in earlier periods as well. Finally, we find robust evidence that mortality decline is correlated with urbanization through the creation of new cities rather than promoting urban growth in already-extant cities
Since at least the early 1900s almost all affluent nations in the world have continually experienced...
Estimation of a panel model during the period 1960–2013 shows that there is no significant negative ...
This chapter of Beginning Population Studies (3rd edition) discusses mortality from a demographic pe...
We investigate the relationship between mortality decline and urbanization, which has hitherto been ...
We investigate the relationship between mortality decline and urbanization, which has hith-erto been...
Abstract: Developing countries have rapidly urbanized since 1950. To explain urbanization, standard ...
This paper presents a new analysis of the contribution of particular causes of death to the decline ...
The stylized facts of Africa’s urban transition highlight the limitations of traditional economic mo...
A key debate in demographic history revolves around whether mortality declined during the late ninet...
In 1977, Michael Lipton introduced the Urban Bias Thesis as a framework for understanding how most m...
This paper examines whether sprawl, featured by low development density, segregated land uses, lack ...
The conventional wisdom is that mortality falls when the economy temporarily improves and increases ...
Following a reduction in the number of deaths from infectious diseases during the past 100 years, m...
In 1977, Michael Lipton introduced the Urban Bias Thesis as a framework for understanding how most m...
BACKGROUND: Seventy-five percent of the population in Europe live in urban areas and analysing the e...
Since at least the early 1900s almost all affluent nations in the world have continually experienced...
Estimation of a panel model during the period 1960–2013 shows that there is no significant negative ...
This chapter of Beginning Population Studies (3rd edition) discusses mortality from a demographic pe...
We investigate the relationship between mortality decline and urbanization, which has hitherto been ...
We investigate the relationship between mortality decline and urbanization, which has hith-erto been...
Abstract: Developing countries have rapidly urbanized since 1950. To explain urbanization, standard ...
This paper presents a new analysis of the contribution of particular causes of death to the decline ...
The stylized facts of Africa’s urban transition highlight the limitations of traditional economic mo...
A key debate in demographic history revolves around whether mortality declined during the late ninet...
In 1977, Michael Lipton introduced the Urban Bias Thesis as a framework for understanding how most m...
This paper examines whether sprawl, featured by low development density, segregated land uses, lack ...
The conventional wisdom is that mortality falls when the economy temporarily improves and increases ...
Following a reduction in the number of deaths from infectious diseases during the past 100 years, m...
In 1977, Michael Lipton introduced the Urban Bias Thesis as a framework for understanding how most m...
BACKGROUND: Seventy-five percent of the population in Europe live in urban areas and analysing the e...
Since at least the early 1900s almost all affluent nations in the world have continually experienced...
Estimation of a panel model during the period 1960–2013 shows that there is no significant negative ...
This chapter of Beginning Population Studies (3rd edition) discusses mortality from a demographic pe...