Does land quality increase the power of traditional leaders in contemporary Africa?
The Journal of Politics • Vol/Iss. 85(1) • The University of Chicago Press • • Published In • Pages: 334-339 •
By Baldwin, Kate, Ricart-Huguet, Joan
Hypothesis
Higher land quality will predict more power for pre-colonial non-African political leaders, but will not predict any relationship in sub-Saharan Africa.
Note
All three African models have p values greater than 0.1, but one of the three non-African models has a p value lower than 0.05 (but the two additional models, with different controls, do not support this relationship).
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ordinary Least Square Regression | Support Claimed | p<.05 | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Land quality | Independent | Soil, Land Use |
Traditional leader's role | Dependent | Status, Role, And Prestige, Community Heads |