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Data and Code for: Leadership in Social Movements. The Forty-Eighters in the Civil War

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ICPSR2021-01-01 更新2026-04-16 收录
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https://www.openicpsr.org/openicpsr/project/120404/version/V1/view?path=/openicpsr/120404/fcr:versions/V1/REPLICATION/data_in&type=folder
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资源简介:
This paper studies the role of leaders in the social movement against slavery that culminated in the U.S. Civil War. Our analysis is organized around a natural experiment: leaders of the failed German revolution of 1848--49 were expelled to the U.S. and became anti-slavery campaigners who helped mobilize Union Army volunteers. Towns where Forty-Eighters settled show two-thirds higher Union Army enlistments. <br>Their influence worked through local newspapers and social clubs. Going beyond enlistment decisions, Forty-Eighters reduced their companies' desertion rate during the war. In the long run, Forty-Eighter towns were more likely to form a local chapter of the NAACP.<br><br>
提供机构:
UCLA; University of Toronto
创建时间:
2021-01-01
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