How the international slave trade underdeveloped Africa
The Journal of Economic History • Vol/Iss. 82(2) • Cambridge University Press • • Published In • Pages: 403-441 •
By Whatley, Warren
Hypothesis
In West Africa, proximity to an international slave port predicts a greater probability that a society will be organized around preservation of slave wealth in nuclear polygynous families under inherited local political aristocracies.
Note
Column 8; table 6
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Probit regression | Supported | p< .05 | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Hereditary Political Succession | Dependent | Community Heads, Inheritance, Social Stratification |
Polygyny | Dependent | Extended Families, Localized Kin Groups, Polygamy |
Slavery | Dependent | Slavery |
Proximity to international slave port | Independent | Location, Slavery, Travel |
Political centralization beyond local level | Dependent | Territorial Hierarchy |
Wealth inheritance | Dependent | Inheritance, Serfdom And Peonage |