Publication: Droughts, Conflict, and the Importance of Democratic Legitimacy: Evidence from Pre-Industrial Europe
Loading...
Date
2022-02-15
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type
Preprint
Abstract
This research shows that droughts are robustly associated with city-level unrest in Europe over the years 900 to 1800 CE. This relationship is non-linear, with disproportionately greater increases in the probability of a conflict among droughts in the upper tail of the severity distribution. Elected city governments are relatively immune to drought-induced conflict, while those based on representation by burghers or guilds are not. These results suggest that local governments are key to maintaining social stability during economic shocks, and are most successful when they have a greater degree of democratic legitimacy.
Description
This is a preprint version of the article and has not been peer-reviewed. Click the DOI to find the published version of the article.
Keywords
Citation
Wigton-Jones, E. (2025). Droughts, conflicts, and the importance of democratic legitimacy: Evidence from pre-industrial Europe. The Journal of Economic History, 1-37. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050725100922
