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ON-LINE: Ana Tur Prats - Male Dominance and Cultural Extinction

Seminar

This event has now finished.

Event date
Wednesday 28 May 2025, 2.30pm to 3.30pm
Location
Online only
Audience
Open to staff, students
Admission
Free admission, booking not required

Event details

Zoom link to follow.

Author: Ana Tur Prats (UC merced)

Abstract:  Why do some cultures and their associated values go extinct while others prevail? In this paper, we uncover a relationship between a society’s deep-rooted gender norms and its risk of cultural extinction, proxied by language loss: languages from more gender-equal societies face a higher likelihood of extinction compared to those from male-dominant societies. We measure language status and male-dominance using the Ethnologue and the Male Dominance Index (Guarnieri and Tur-Prats, 2023), respectively, for a global sample of 4,750 languages. The negative relationship between male dominance and extinction holds after accounting for fundamental determinants of economic development and societal collapse at the language-group level such as geography, climate variability, conflict exposure, and historical factors, as well as after the inclusion of country fixed effects. We then leverage European colonization as a natural experiment to investigate how inter-group dynamics shape cultural extinction. In a dyadic framework, we find that Indigenous societies with more gender-equal norms than their colonizers are significantly more vulnerable to cultural extinction. Cultural distance in gender norms is a stronger predictor of extinction than linguistic distance, distance in pre-colonial institutions, or the characteristics of either the colonizer or the Indigenous group.

Co-author: Eleonora Guarnieri

Host: Tho Pham (York)