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Dimensions of social inequality in the Third World

A cross-national analysis of income inequality and mortality decline

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Abstract

This cross-national assessment of the empirical determinants of income inequality and infant mortality employs policy-relevant variables suggested by the major macrosocial theories of development and stratification. Findings based on sample sizes ranging from 34 to 61 LDCs indicate that modernization and ecological-evolutionary theories provide more consistent explanations of social inequalities than either dependency/world-systems theory or urban bias theory. Our analyses point to economic growth and the development of rural infrastructure and social complexity as the most expedient methods for facilitating mortality reduction and income equalization. We conclude that simplistic policy-orientations stressing such phenomena as urban bias or population growth should be replaced by more complex perspectives that include an emphasis on rural social organization.

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Crenshaw, E., Ameen, A. Dimensions of social inequality in the Third World. Popul Res Policy Rev 12, 297–313 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01074390

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