The economics of exogamous marriage in small‐scale societies
Economic Inquiry • Vol/Iss. 54(4) • Wiley Periodicals, Inc. • • Published In • Pages: 1805-1823 •
By Dow, Gregory K., Reed, Clyde G., Woodcock, Simon
Hypothesis
Rate of exogamy will be positively associated with disparities in productivity between the two residence sites. (1807)
Note
Site productivity is measured by coefficient of variation of annual rainfall (high variation indicating low productivity). All other variables listed below were controlled for.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Two-stage Least Squares (2SLS) regression | Supported | p < 0.001 | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Community Size | Independent | Settlement Patterns |
Exogamy | Dependent | Regulation Of Marriage |
Fixity Of Settlement | Independent | Settlement Patterns |
Food Storage | Independent | Preservation And Storage Of Food |
Mean Annual Rainfall | Independent | Climate |
Mean Annual Temperature (mat) | Independent | Climate |
Population Growth | Independent | Population |
Region | Independent | Topography And Geology |
Social Stratification | Independent | Classes |
Subsistence Activity | Independent | Diet |
Variation in Annual Rainfall | Independent | Climate |
Territory Growth | Independent | Settlement Patterns |