Most preindustrial states experienced recurrent waves of political collapse and internal warfare. One possible explanation of this pattern, the demographic-structural theory, suggests that population growth leads to state instability and breakdown, which in turn causes population decline. Mathematical models incorporating this mechanism predict sustained oscillations in demographic and political dynamics. Here I test these theoretical predictions with time-series data on population dynamics and sociopolitical instability in early modern England, the Han and Tang China, and the Roman Empire. Results suggest that population and instability are dynamically interrelated as predicted by the theory
Population dynamics result from the interplay of density-independent and density-dependent processes...
Population increase, stability, or decrease are expressions of social forces and human interaction w...
We propose a model with some of the main demographic, economic and insti-tutional factors usually co...
I investigate the geographical consequences of demographic-structural dynamics using a spatially res...
One particularly interesting dynamic pattern in history is the oscillation of centralization and dec...
<div><p>An explanation for the political processes leading to the sudden collapse of empires and sta...
We consider what effects could be produced by the long-term interaction of millennial macrotrends of...
A theory of demographic cycles is developed by the author out of the contributions of many sciences....
An explanation for the political processes leading to the sudden collapse of empires and states woul...
An explanation for the political processes leading to the sudden collapse of empires and states woul...
Time-series analysis of parish register series can be used to study human population dynamics at thr...
This paper presents a simulation of world-systems theory’s iteration model of early human societies....
Population dynamics, economy, and human demography started with Malthus, the idea that population gr...
Secular cycles are 2-3 century oscillations in population associated with periodic state breakdown. ...
A new mathematical theory is proposed to explain the population size oscillations described in the p...
Population dynamics result from the interplay of density-independent and density-dependent processes...
Population increase, stability, or decrease are expressions of social forces and human interaction w...
We propose a model with some of the main demographic, economic and insti-tutional factors usually co...
I investigate the geographical consequences of demographic-structural dynamics using a spatially res...
One particularly interesting dynamic pattern in history is the oscillation of centralization and dec...
<div><p>An explanation for the political processes leading to the sudden collapse of empires and sta...
We consider what effects could be produced by the long-term interaction of millennial macrotrends of...
A theory of demographic cycles is developed by the author out of the contributions of many sciences....
An explanation for the political processes leading to the sudden collapse of empires and states woul...
An explanation for the political processes leading to the sudden collapse of empires and states woul...
Time-series analysis of parish register series can be used to study human population dynamics at thr...
This paper presents a simulation of world-systems theory’s iteration model of early human societies....
Population dynamics, economy, and human demography started with Malthus, the idea that population gr...
Secular cycles are 2-3 century oscillations in population associated with periodic state breakdown. ...
A new mathematical theory is proposed to explain the population size oscillations described in the p...
Population dynamics result from the interplay of density-independent and density-dependent processes...
Population increase, stability, or decrease are expressions of social forces and human interaction w...
We propose a model with some of the main demographic, economic and insti-tutional factors usually co...