@JustAFamilyMan_ There's also the Habshi dynasty in India/Bangladesh that was led by Bantu slaves; although it was very short lived, just from 1487 to 1493. https://t.co/iyddL51vv2
@lefineder@ASculler79958 We made a database of about 45,000 tribal deaths and 10,000 settler deaths in the American west in the 19th century geolocated at the county level and find about the same thing - most deaths were low level conflicts.
https://t.co/Guhqv2kE71
@VincentGeloso To put a plug in for Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, it took about 10 weeks from submission to the final version being posted online. Everyone likes to complain about how long it takes to publish, we should point out successes.
You can use the phone book to estimate economic activity. This is what Warren Anderson did in his recent paper at Structural Change and Economic Dynamics. He shows many highly important things (notably how much wartime growth was overstated in national accounts)
@brian_blase And they don't even accomplish what supporters say they should do: "the balance of evidence suggests that these regulations increase spending, reduce access to care, undermine quality, and fail to ensure care for underserved populations."
https://t.co/0xtjygDTeq
With Jordan Adamson and Lucas Rentschler we have a paper on crime concentration that combines empirical evidence from the 1967 Detroit Riot, a theoretical model and an experimental approach
https://t.co/VRXDhQux8k
Along with Doug Allen and Liang Diao, we have a new paper that uses a database of 55,000 deaths of Natives/settlers in the western US over the 20th century. We find that mining and state capacity determined much of the violence
https://t.co/Guhqv2kE71
The Mackinac Center for Public Policy is pleased to announce the addition of eight new members to its Board of Scholars: @WarrenAnderson9, @TomKrannawitter , @MegTuszynski, Dr. Timothy G. Nash, Dr. Alex Tokarev, Sutirtha Bagchi, Hannah Kling, and Tyler Watts.
https://t.co/xENYQMKcDg
@MarketPowerYT Here's a paper I wrote on tribal constitutions:
https://t.co/GVtda05R9J
Here's one by Thomas Stratmann who developed a freedom index on reservations
https://t.co/1ZsgZlbQ1S
Piano & Rouanet have a paper on tribal constitutions:
https://t.co/tmGMx1Vv5R
The economic & political logic of US Army violence against 19thC Native Americans is analyzed in a new OA paper in Asia-Pacific EcHR. Amed conflict was greater in recessionary election years & when land values increased due to gold mining or RR building.
https://t.co/Tu1mlmD3nf
@VincentGeloso I like the theory; but you should cite Kanazawa (2005). He used a San Francisco dummy since the Chinese there helped trade.
If the Chinese concentrated in gold mining areas, that could drive anti-Chinese sentiment, so maybe a gold county dummy
https://t.co/R1qaaztT68
When I said 'Flood Michigan with vaccine' many responded that the problem was demand not supply. This is not correct. Vaccinations have been rising in MI. Not zero! Moreover, it's not just vaccinating more people that counts--vaccinating the same people earlier is also a benefit.