Difference between revisions of "Shortly Colonized by Colombia"
m (Fbesche moved page Cult short colonizedCOL to Shortly Colonized by Colombia) |
|||
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
|datatype = Numeric | |datatype = Numeric | ||
|scale = Binary | |scale = Binary | ||
− | |valuelabels = 1 = Yes | + | |valuelabels = <ul><li>1 = Yes</li><li>0 = No</li></ul> |
|techname = cult_short_colonizedCOL | |techname = cult_short_colonizedCOL | ||
|category= [[Culture|Culture]] | |category= [[Culture|Culture]] | ||
|label = Shortly Colonized by Colombia | |label = Shortly Colonized by Colombia | ||
− | |relatedindicators = | + | |relatedindicators = <ul> |
− | |description = Country has | + | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedBRA| Shortly Colonized by Brazil ]] |
− | + | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedDEU|Shortly Colonized by Germany ]] | |
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedDNK|Shortly Colonized by Denmark ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedESP| Shortly Colonized by Spain ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedFRA| Shortly Colonized by France ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedGBR| Shortly Colonized by the United Kingdom ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedHUN| Shortly Colonized by Hungary ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedIND| Shortly Colonized by India ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedITA| Shortly Colonized by Italy ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedNLD| Shortly Colonized by the Netherlands ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedPOL| Shortly Colonized by Poland ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedRUS| Shortly Colonized by Russia ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedSWE| Shortly Colonized by Sweden ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedTUR| Shortly Colonized by Turkey (Ottoman Empire) ]] | ||
+ | <li>[[cult_short_colonizedUSA| Shortly Colonized by the United States of America]] | ||
+ | <ul> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |description = Country has been shortly colonized by Colombia. Sharing a common colonial history is considered to be a major driver of similarities in trade, migration, development aid etc. Furthermore, we suspect that major groups in states orientate politically, socially and/or culturally on the former colonial power, that could very well manifest itself as an outright rejection. Sharing a common past, i.e. being colonized by the same state, displays the possibility of common cultural features either by being formed in the colonization period or by a shared (understanding of the) past. | ||
+ | |codingrules = | ||
We take the CEPII GeoDist dataset and create binary variables for several colonial powers depicting whether a country was colonized by this state. “Colonization is here a fairly general term that we use to describe a relationship between two countries, independently of their level of development, in which one has governed the other over a long period of time and contributed to the current state of its institutions” (Mayer T. and Zignago 2011, 12). | We take the CEPII GeoDist dataset and create binary variables for several colonial powers depicting whether a country was colonized by this state. “Colonization is here a fairly general term that we use to describe a relationship between two countries, independently of their level of development, in which one has governed the other over a long period of time and contributed to the current state of its institutions” (Mayer T. and Zignago 2011, 12). | ||
For this version we compute that as a time-invariant variable. Furthermore, we take the information from CEPII that distinguishes between being colonized and being shortly colonized. | For this version we compute that as a time-invariant variable. Furthermore, we take the information from CEPII that distinguishes between being colonized and being shortly colonized. | ||
Line 18: | Line 35: | ||
Since there was no data available for some smaller states, that emerged very late, we filled the missing data for the following entities with the values of the entities in the parentheses: Macedonia (Greece), South-Sudan (Sudan), and Kosovo (Albania). | Since there was no data available for some smaller states, that emerged very late, we filled the missing data for the following entities with the values of the entities in the parentheses: Macedonia (Greece), South-Sudan (Sudan), and Kosovo (Albania). | ||
− | For further information see the Technical Paper: | + | For further information see the Technical Paper: [https://www.socialpolicydynamics.de/sfb-1342-publikationen/sfb-1342-technical-paper-series?publ=10072 Besche-Truthe, Fabian; Seitzer, Helen; Windzio, Michael. 2020 “Cultural Spheres – Creating a dyadic dataset of cultural proximity”. SFB 1342 Technical Paper Series, 5. Bremen, SFB 1342.] |
|citation = | |citation = | ||
|relatedpublications = NA (no information available) | |relatedpublications = NA (no information available) | ||
− | |projectmanagers = Besche-Truthe, | + | |projectmanagers = Fabian Besche-Truthe, Michael Windzio, Helen Seitzer |
− | |datarelease = | + | |datarelease = <ul><li>Version 0.001: Initial release</li></ul> |
− | |revisions = | + | |revisions = No revisions yet |
− | |sources = Mayer, | + | |sources = Mayer, Thierry, and Soledad Zignago. 2011. “Notes on CEPII’s distances measures: The GeoDist database.” CEPII Working Paper 2011-25. |
+ | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 15:54, 17 November 2021
Quick info | |
---|---|
Data type | Numeric |
Scale | Binary |
Value labels |
|
Technical name | cult_short_colonizedCOL |
Category | Culture |
Label | Shortly Colonized by Colombia |
Related indicators |
|
Country has been shortly colonized by Colombia. Sharing a common colonial history is considered to be a major driver of similarities in trade, migration, development aid etc. Furthermore, we suspect that major groups in states orientate politically, socially and/or culturally on the former colonial power, that could very well manifest itself as an outright rejection. Sharing a common past, i.e. being colonized by the same state, displays the possibility of common cultural features either by being formed in the colonization period or by a shared (understanding of the) past.
Coding rules
We take the CEPII GeoDist dataset and create binary variables for several colonial powers depicting whether a country was colonized by this state. “Colonization is here a fairly general term that we use to describe a relationship between two countries, independently of their level of development, in which one has governed the other over a long period of time and contributed to the current state of its institutions” (Mayer T. and Zignago 2011, 12). For this version we compute that as a time-invariant variable. Furthermore, we take the information from CEPII that distinguishes between being colonized and being shortly colonized. To make an example we can look at Zambia, which was colonized by the UK and compare that to Afghanistan which was only shortly colonized by the UK. In this example Zambia and Afghanistan have no common cultural history because the exposure to the colonizer was of a very different length. We have a total of 21 different colonizers and 16 short colonizers. Since there was no data available for some smaller states, that emerged very late, we filled the missing data for the following entities with the values of the entities in the parentheses: Macedonia (Greece), South-Sudan (Sudan), and Kosovo (Albania).
For further information see the Technical Paper: Besche-Truthe, Fabian; Seitzer, Helen; Windzio, Michael. 2020 “Cultural Spheres – Creating a dyadic dataset of cultural proximity”. SFB 1342 Technical Paper Series, 5. Bremen, SFB 1342.
Bibliographic info
Citation:
Related publications: NA (no information available)
Misc
Project manager(s): Fabian Besche-Truthe, Michael Windzio, Helen Seitzer
- Version 0.001: Initial release
Revisions: No revisions yet
Sources
Mayer, Thierry, and Soledad Zignago. 2011. “Notes on CEPII’s distances measures: The GeoDist database.” CEPII Working Paper 2011-25.