We test between cooperative and extractive theories of the origins of government. We use river shifts in southern Iraq as a natural experiment, in a new archeological panel dataset. A shift away creates a local demand for a government to coordinate because private river irrigation needs to be replaced with public canals. It disincentivizes local extraction as land is no longer productive without irrigation. Consistent with a cooperative theory of government, a river shift away leads to state formation, canal construction, and the payment of tribute. We argue that the first governments coordinated between extended households which implemented public good provision
The early state came into existence as the necessary result of the innovation of metal tools under t...
This thesis comprises the first systematic application of the theory of public goods to the study of...
Neither economics nor political science can explain the process of modern social development. The fa...
Based on the recent historical and archaeological studies of the early states in irrigation societie...
Despite the overwhelming evidence on the relevance of the state's capacity to provide public goods a...
We develop a theory of state formation shedding light on the rise of the first stable state institut...
We study the possible cooperation between nonelites exerting an unobservable effort and elites unabl...
We propose and test the theory of endogenous change in societal institutions based on historical rec...
Political economies of early Mesopotamia are traditionally modeled upon text-oriented research and u...
Long-term excavations at Arslantepe, Malatya (Turkey), have revealed the development, in the fourth...
We propose and test the theory of endogenous change based on historical reconstructions of two ancie...
Ancient economic systems from Southern and Central Mesopotamia are quite well known when Northern Me...
We analyze development trajectories of early civilizations where population size and technology are ...
All since the rise of the first civilizations, economic development has been closely intertwined wit...
The paper analyzes in constitutional and institutional economic terms Joseph’s economic policies, su...
The early state came into existence as the necessary result of the innovation of metal tools under t...
This thesis comprises the first systematic application of the theory of public goods to the study of...
Neither economics nor political science can explain the process of modern social development. The fa...
Based on the recent historical and archaeological studies of the early states in irrigation societie...
Despite the overwhelming evidence on the relevance of the state's capacity to provide public goods a...
We develop a theory of state formation shedding light on the rise of the first stable state institut...
We study the possible cooperation between nonelites exerting an unobservable effort and elites unabl...
We propose and test the theory of endogenous change in societal institutions based on historical rec...
Political economies of early Mesopotamia are traditionally modeled upon text-oriented research and u...
Long-term excavations at Arslantepe, Malatya (Turkey), have revealed the development, in the fourth...
We propose and test the theory of endogenous change based on historical reconstructions of two ancie...
Ancient economic systems from Southern and Central Mesopotamia are quite well known when Northern Me...
We analyze development trajectories of early civilizations where population size and technology are ...
All since the rise of the first civilizations, economic development has been closely intertwined wit...
The paper analyzes in constitutional and institutional economic terms Joseph’s economic policies, su...
The early state came into existence as the necessary result of the innovation of metal tools under t...
This thesis comprises the first systematic application of the theory of public goods to the study of...
Neither economics nor political science can explain the process of modern social development. The fa...