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DTSTART:19701025T020000
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DTSTAMP:20260315T002207Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20201103T111500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20201103T123000
TZID:Europe/London
SUMMARY:Identity, Media and Consumer Behavior
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Professor James Fenske, University of Warwick    Abstract: Event study and difference in difference analyses in a panel o fAsian grid cells over nine centuries demonstrate that greater agricultural potential due to New World crops increased violent conflict after 1500. Rising caloric potential in a typical grid cell increased conflict by roughly its mean. The result holds across several types of conflict and New World crops. It is largely driven by South Asia, a densely populated, diverse region with several competing historical states. The evidence supports increases in the gains from appropriation to the combatants as a mechanism. Population density, ur- banization, and British imperialism significantly mediate the impact of the Columbian Exchange. https://events.st-andrews.ac.uk/events/the-columbian-exchange-and-conflict-in-asia/
LOCATION:Online
URL:https://events.st-andrews.ac.uk/events/the-columbian-exchange-and-conflict-in-asia/
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