This article hypothesizes and empirically establishes that statehood experience, accumulated over a period of up to six millennia, lies at the deep roots of the spatial distribution of political instability across non-European countries. Using the state history index measured between 3,500 BCE and 2000 CE, I consistently obtain precise estimates that long-standing states outside Europe, relative to their newly established counterparts, are characterized by greater political uncertainty. I postulate that a very long duration of state experience impeded the transplantation of inclusive political institutions by European colonizers, which would eventually become central to shaping countries' ability to establish politically stable regimes outs...
Defence date: 26 September 2019Examining Board: Professor Stefano Bartolini, European University Ins...
The question of the state remains central in social sciences. Theda Skocpol’s famous ‘Bringing the s...
This research theoretically and empirically advances the hypothesis that in early stages of developm...
This article hypothesizes and empirically establishes that statehood experience, accumulated over a ...
This article assesses the relative merits of the “reversal of fortune” thesis, according to which th...
The presence of a state is one of the most reliable historical predictors of social and economic dev...
The way the sovereign state is taken for granted in political theory prevents an explanation of hist...
The importance of the length of state history for understanding variations in income levels, growth ...
In this paper, we show that state stability exhibits a persistent and robust non-monotonic relations...
This paper explores the effect of state history, measured from 3500 BCE to 2000 CE, on control of co...
The modern state is often discussed within the context of its domestic institutions and structures o...
All since the rise of the first civilizations, economic development has been closely intertwined wit...
The article explores scientific discourse on the phenomenon of state fragility and reviews contempor...
This paper examines the association between the length of experience with statehood, or state histor...
Why did the nation-state proliferate across the world over the past 200 years, replacing empires, ki...
Defence date: 26 September 2019Examining Board: Professor Stefano Bartolini, European University Ins...
The question of the state remains central in social sciences. Theda Skocpol’s famous ‘Bringing the s...
This research theoretically and empirically advances the hypothesis that in early stages of developm...
This article hypothesizes and empirically establishes that statehood experience, accumulated over a ...
This article assesses the relative merits of the “reversal of fortune” thesis, according to which th...
The presence of a state is one of the most reliable historical predictors of social and economic dev...
The way the sovereign state is taken for granted in political theory prevents an explanation of hist...
The importance of the length of state history for understanding variations in income levels, growth ...
In this paper, we show that state stability exhibits a persistent and robust non-monotonic relations...
This paper explores the effect of state history, measured from 3500 BCE to 2000 CE, on control of co...
The modern state is often discussed within the context of its domestic institutions and structures o...
All since the rise of the first civilizations, economic development has been closely intertwined wit...
The article explores scientific discourse on the phenomenon of state fragility and reviews contempor...
This paper examines the association between the length of experience with statehood, or state histor...
Why did the nation-state proliferate across the world over the past 200 years, replacing empires, ki...
Defence date: 26 September 2019Examining Board: Professor Stefano Bartolini, European University Ins...
The question of the state remains central in social sciences. Theda Skocpol’s famous ‘Bringing the s...
This research theoretically and empirically advances the hypothesis that in early stages of developm...