Democracy, hybrid regimes, and infant mortality: A cross‐national analysis of Sub‐Saharan African nations. Wullert, K. E. & Williamson, J. B. Social Science Quarterly, 97(5):1058–1069, November, 2016. Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.Paper doi abstract bibtex Objective: There is an extensive literature analyzing the relationship between democracy and infant mortality; however, findings are mixed. Some studies find a significant inverse relationship, while others conclude that no such relationship exists. We seek to take the debate in a new direction, overlooked in prior research, by providing a theoretical rational for and empirical evidence of a quadratic relationship, in which countries with components of both autocracy and democracy have higher infant mortality. Methods: We test lagged, cross‐sectional models on a sample of 47 Sub‐Saharan African nations. Results: We find that a quadratic model better explains cross‐national variation in infant mortality than the linear alternative. Infant mortality tends to be higher in hybrid regimes, relative to both autocracies and democracies. Hybrids appear to be politically unstable, which may in part account for their greater infant mortality. Conclusion: Hybrid regimes exist in precarious positions with detrimental consequences for population health. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)
@article{wullert_democracy_2016,
title = {Democracy, hybrid regimes, and infant mortality: {A} cross‐national analysis of {Sub}‐{Saharan} {African} nations},
volume = {97},
issn = {0038-4941},
url = {http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=psyh&AN=2016-58501-004&site=ehost-live},
doi = {10.1111/ssqu.12240},
abstract = {Objective: There is an extensive literature analyzing the relationship between democracy and infant mortality; however, findings are mixed. Some studies find a significant inverse relationship, while others conclude that no such relationship exists. We seek to take the debate in a new direction, overlooked in prior research, by providing a theoretical rational for and empirical evidence of a quadratic relationship, in which countries with components of both autocracy and democracy have higher infant mortality. Methods: We test lagged, cross‐sectional models on a sample of 47 Sub‐Saharan African nations. Results: We find that a quadratic model better explains cross‐national variation in infant mortality than the linear alternative. Infant mortality tends to be higher in hybrid regimes, relative to both autocracies and democracies. Hybrids appear to be politically unstable, which may in part account for their greater infant mortality. Conclusion: Hybrid regimes exist in precarious positions with detrimental consequences for population health. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)},
number = {5},
journal = {Social Science Quarterly},
author = {Wullert, Katherine E. and Williamson, John B.},
month = nov,
year = {2016},
note = {Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.},
keywords = {Democracy, Environmental Effects, Mortality Rate, Public Health, democracy, environmental effects, mortality, public health},
pages = {1058--1069},
}
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