Understanding ethnolinguistic differences: The roles of geography and trade

The Economic Journal Vol/Iss. 132(643) Oxford University Press Published In Pages: 1-28
By Dickens, Andrew

Abstract

This paper examines the relationship of productive variation in land between ethnic groups to determine if an increased range of producible goods will increase trade, thus decreasing language diversity between neighboring groups. The author initially found that high-variation in land production lessened the diversity of language between ethnic groups in that area. To further test this correlation, the author found that high-productive variation increased trade and exogamous marriage and decreased inter-ethnic conflict. Based on these findings, the author suggests that neighboring ethnic languages co-evolved through the economic benefit of inter-ethnic trade and social interaction.

Samples

Sample Used Coded Data Comment
Standard Cross Cultural Sample (SCCS)Other researchers
EthnologueResearcher's own
Ancestral characteristics of modern populations (Guiliano and Nunn 2018)Other researchers

Documents and Hypotheses Filed By:danielle.russell seb.wanggaouette