Transcript culturally

Culture, institutions, & explanation
Why do countries ratify the Kyoto
Protocol?
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Note on last class…
• Culture as VARIABLE
– E.g., hyper-inflation averse culture
• How do we define it?
• How do we test it?
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Which country is CULTURALLY
most similar to the US?
• United Kingdom
• Mexico
• Taiwan
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2 years ago…
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Last year
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Culture
• Often used as an INDEPENDENT VARIABLE
• Can also be the DEPENDENT VARIABLE
• Do institutions shape culture?
• Malapportionment, Gasoline Taxes, and the
United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change. Broz & Maliniak (PEIO 2010)
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A defining feature of
the United States of America:
Our Car Culture
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UK v. US
• Similar
– Cultural
– Foreign policy
– Legal traditions
– Car Culture???
• Opposite ends of the spectrum on
– gasoline tax policy
– addressing climate change
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Car culture: gasoline taxes and prices per liter in 31 countries (2004):
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Who needs the most gasoline per capita?
Urban v Rural
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Does “need” translate into policy preference?
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Policy outcome?
• We’ve got Interests & Incentives
• Now, to get the policy outcome,…
• We interact interests/incentives with a
domestic political institution:
Malapportionment!
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Malapportionment tends to weigh
RURAL preferences more than
URBAN
(i.e., Proportional representation tends to weigh
URBAN preferences more than RURAL)
Does this have an effect on NATIONAL policy?
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Test:
• Does malapportionment affect:
–Gasoline prices
–Kyoto ratification
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Kyoto Protocol
to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
• Stabilize atmospheric “greenhouse” gas
• 1997 (enter into force: 2005)
• 2009: 187 states ratified
• Commitment to reduce greenhouse gases:
– carbon dioxide
– methane
– nitrous oxide
– sulphur hexafluoride
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Ratifiers, signers, and non
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Which came first?
• Car culture?
• Malapportionment?
• Once created, however, car-culture may reinforce malapportionment
• Car-culture may have other effects:
– Crash
– 2006 Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Original Screenplay, and
Best Film Editing
– WRITING TIP: FIRST LINE is always important in great work!
– It's the sense of touch.... Any real city, you walk, you know? You brush
past people. People bump into you. In L.A., nobody touches you. We're
always behind this metal and glass. I think we miss that touch so much that
we crash into each other just so we can feel something.
• Hypothesis: car-culture exacerbates racial/ethnic tension
• Operationalized: automobiles/capita  inter-ethnic/racial violent crime
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Other great first lines:
• The Prince
• All states, all powers, that have held and hold rule over men have
been and are either republics or principalities.
– http://www.constitution.org/mac/prince01.htm
• Plato’s Republic
• I went down to the Piraeus yesterday with Glaucon, the son of
Ariston, to pray to the goddess; and, at the same time, I wanted to
observe how they would put on the festival, since they were now
holding it for the first time.
– http://www.amazon.com/The-Republic-Of-Plato-Edition/dp/0465069347
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Main take-home from last time:
• What is it to explain?
– to state the conditions under which it always
or usually takes place (perhaps
probabilistically)
• The BRIDGE
– The BRIDGE between historical observations
and general theory is the substitution of
variables for proper names and dates
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Take-homes
• Goal of this class:
– Substitute variables for proper nouns/dates
• Culture & institutions shape each other
• Malapportionment
– Weighs rural preferences more
– Rural voters have greater reliance on gasoline
– So, malapportionment 
• lower gas taxes
• less likely to ratify Kyoto Protocol
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Thank you
WE ARE GLOBAL GEORGETOWN!
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Religion vs. Science
(Faith vs. Skepticism)
• RELIGION & SCIENCE both respond to mystery
• Both deal with faith and doubt
• In the end, the answer in religion is faith
– in the religious hierarchy
– in the Bible
– in the Koran
– Clear your mind of questions; there is no “why”
• In the end, there is no answer in science – only
continued skepticism
– theories must be tested, and tested, and tested
– we never achieve “Truth” with a capital T
– we never “prove”
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