| EBJ {stevedata} | R Documentation |
The Economic Benefits of Justice
Description
A data set on the apparent economic benefits of post-conflict justice
Usage
EBJ
Format
A data frame with 95 observations on the following 12 variables.
testnewid_lagan apparent identifier variable, of some description
ccodea Correlates of War(?) state code for the location of a conflict
idan apparent identifier variable, of some description
pcja dummy variable for whether there was some kind of post-conflict justice institution created after a conflict
fdia variable on net FDI inflows over a 10-year period after a conflict (in millions USD)
econ_sizeGDP, as an estimate of economic size
econ_develGDP per capita, as an estimate of economic development
econ_growthGDP per capita change, as an estimate of economic growth
kaopenKAOPEN index score, as an estimate of capital openness
xrexchange rate fluctuations, as an indicator of exchange rate instability
lflabor force size
lifeexpaverage life expectancy for women, in years
Details
Data are taken Appell and Loyle's (2012) replication data set. Users should read their article in Journal of Peace Research for more information about the topic, the stake, and how the data were collected. This is just a simple, reduced form of the data they make available that is minimally sufficient for reproducing the first model of their Table I.
References
Appell, Benjamin J. and Cyanne E. Loyle. 2012. "The Economic Benefits of Justice: Post-conflict Justice and Foreign Direct Investment" 49(5): 685–99.