« Back to Results
Hilton Atlanta, 403
Hosted By:
Peace Science Society International & American Economic Association
ages on adult political attitudes. We show that growing up during the 1930's
Jewish expulsions plays a signicant role in shaping the political and civic engagement
of individuals, and these eects are long lasting. Current adults who experienced the
expulsions at impressionable ages are less likely to show interest in politics, less likely to
nd political activity to be important, and have lower political participation. These results
are not found for individuals who were older at the time of the expulsions, and are
robust to xed region and birth-year characteristics, various denitions of impressionable
ages, and composition bias induced by dierential migration and mortality rates
across regions and cohorts. The estimates are also not driven by regional dierences in
1930's political participation, party support, Catholic share, exposure and destruction
during WWII, urbanization, and other regional characteristics. We provide evidence
that the adverse eects of social changes on political attitudes we nd are explained by
a model of political participation emphasizing the role of civic skills and socioeconomic
status acquired at younger ages. Exposure to the expulsions when young is associated
with lower adult volunteerism, trust, church attendance, and socioeconomic status.
Migrants, Terror, War and Well-Being
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM
- Chair: Solomon W. Polachek, State University of New York-Binghamton
Social Changes in Impressionable Years and The Formation of Political Attitudes
Abstract
This paper provides evidence on the legacies of social changes experienced in impressionableages on adult political attitudes. We show that growing up during the 1930's
Jewish expulsions plays a signicant role in shaping the political and civic engagement
of individuals, and these eects are long lasting. Current adults who experienced the
expulsions at impressionable ages are less likely to show interest in politics, less likely to
nd political activity to be important, and have lower political participation. These results
are not found for individuals who were older at the time of the expulsions, and are
robust to xed region and birth-year characteristics, various denitions of impressionable
ages, and composition bias induced by dierential migration and mortality rates
across regions and cohorts. The estimates are also not driven by regional dierences in
1930's political participation, party support, Catholic share, exposure and destruction
during WWII, urbanization, and other regional characteristics. We provide evidence
that the adverse eects of social changes on political attitudes we nd are explained by
a model of political participation emphasizing the role of civic skills and socioeconomic
status acquired at younger ages. Exposure to the expulsions when young is associated
with lower adult volunteerism, trust, church attendance, and socioeconomic status.
Armed Conflict and Child Labor: Evidence from Iraq
Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between armed conflict intensity and child labor using household level data from Iraq and taking advantage of a quasi-experiment setup. Armed conflict intensity is measured as the number of deaths related to conflict and child labor is separated by type of work: economic and household. Armed conflict intensity is associated with higher likelihood for economic child labor but not household work. We also control for individual and household characteristics which determine child labor. The results here are further evidence of the long-term costs of war on affect households.Military Expenditures and Income Inequality Evidence from a Panel of European Countries (1990-2015)
Abstract
This paper contributes to the literature on military spending by analyzing the relationship between military spending and income inequality in a panel of european economies over the period 1990-2015. In particular, we exploit two different measures of military expenditures: (i) the military spending in absolute terms; (ii) the military expenditures per capita. Findings highlight a positive relationship between military expenditures and income inequality. These results are robust in different specifications. Results are also confirmed after we performed a variety of robustness tests.Discussant(s)
Alfonso Flores-Lagunes
,
Syracuse University and IZA
Aig Unuigbe
,
State University of New York-Binghamton
Julia Schwenkenberg
,
Rutgers University
Carlos Seiglie
,
Rutgers University
JEL Classifications
- F5 - International Relations, National Security, and International Political Economy
- I1 - Health