Publication | Open Access
Temperature, Cultural Masculinity, and Domestic Political Violence
105
Citations
47
References
1999
Year
Intergroup ConflictMasculinitySocial SciencesPaternal Investment TheoryViolence Against WomenGender StudiesPolitical ScienceAmbient TemperatureDomestic ViolenceLateral ViolenceGeopoliticsCivil ConflictGender-based ViolenceInternational RelationsComparative PoliticsFeminist TheoryPolitical ConflictInternal Political ViolenceConflict StudySociologyCultural MasculinityAggression
Cross-national data sets were used to examine the association between ambient temperature and internal political violence in 136 countries between 1948 and 1977. Political riots and armed attacks occur more frequently in warm countries than in both cold and hot countries, after controlling for effects of population size and density and levels of socioeconomic development and democracy. National differences on the cultural masculinity dimension, however, do account for this curvilinear temperature-violence association, in a subsample of 53 countries, suggesting that culture mediates the association. An explanation for this mediation in terms of Paternal Investment Theory is proposed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1