
Intergenerational Transmission of Nationalism: What's in a Name in a War
This paper estimates intergenerational transmission of nationalism between fathers and sons using a novel empirical strategy. We first show that having been given a first name that is synonymous with the fascist Croatian independent state during World War II predicts volunteering for army service in the 1991-1995 Croatian war of independence and dying during the conflict. Next, we use the universe of Croatian birth certificates and the information about nationalism conveyed by first names to contrast the intergenerational transmission of nationalism across locations with the aim to identify factors that support its spread or curtail nationalism from spreading.
a dále
Zkušenosti s hodnocením vědeckých výstupů v SHV oborech