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Title: Building Tribes: How Administrative Units Shaped Ethnic Groups in Africa

Citation Type: Working Paper

Publication Year: 2021

Abstract: Ethnic identities around the world are deeply linked to the modern territorial state, yet the extent to which states have shapes and still shape ethnic groups is empirically unclear. I argue that governments at the national and subnational level have incentives to bias governance in favor of the largest ethnic groups in their territory. The resulting disadvantages for ethnic minorities can motivate minority assimilation and emigration. Both gradually align ethnic with administrative boundaries. I examine this process at the subnational level across Sub-Saharan Africa. Exploiting credibly exogenous, straight borders allows for causal identification. I find substantive increases in local population shares of administrative units' predominant ethnic groups at the border, showing that administrative geographies shaped ethnic groups. Additional analyses demonstrate that ethnic assimilation and emigration of local minorities drive the phenomenon. These results highlight important effects of the territorial organization of modern governance on ethnic groups.

Url: http://www.carlmueller-crepon.org/publication/admin_identities/CMC_BuildingTribes.pdf

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Authors: Muller-Crepon, Carl

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Pages: 1-56

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Data Collections: IPUMS Global Health - DHS

Topics: Race and Ethnicity

Countries: Burkina Faso, Ghana, Liberia, Malawi, Mali, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Uganda, Zambia

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