Abstract

Political borders profoundly influence outcomes central to international politics. Accordingly, a growing literature shows that historical boundaries affect important macro-outcomes such as patterns of interstate disputes and trade. To explain these findings, existing theories posit that borders have persistent effects on individual-level behavior, but the literature lacks empirical evidence of such effects. Combining spatial data on centuries of border changes in Europe with a wide range of contemporary survey evidence, we show that historical border changes have persistent effects on two of the most politically significant aspects of behavior: individuals’ political and social trust. We demonstrate that in areas where borders frequently changed, individuals are, on average, less trusting of others as well as their governments. We argue that this occurs because border changes disrupt historical state-building processes and limit the formation of interpersonal social networks, which leads to lower levels of trust.

Highlights

  • Institutional approaches to the study of political borders rely on the assumption that they constrain and shape individual behavior

  • The first section contains our main analysis, which establishes a statistical relationship between historical border changes and contemporary political and social trust

  • Given that NUTS 2 units are subnational units, this identification strategy rules out any inferential problems that derive from omitted cross-country differences and deals with intracountry differences that are regional

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Summary

Introduction

Institutional approaches to the study of political borders rely on the assumption that they constrain and shape individual behavior. We measure historical border changes at the nomenclature of territorial units for statistics level 3, or NUTS 3, and estimate models with NUTS level-2 fixed effects using survey responses from both ESS and LiTS.

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