Litcius/Paper detail

Economic Prehistory

Gregory K. Dow, Clyde G. Reed

2023Cambridge University Press eBooks15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Around 15,000 years ago, almost all humans lived in small mobile foraging bands. By about 5,000 years ago, the first city-states had appeared. This radical transformation in human society laid the foundations for the modern world. We use economic logic and archaeological evidence to explain six key elements in this revolution: sedentism, agriculture, inequality, warfare, cities, and states. In our approach the ultimate cause of these events was climate change. We show how shifts in climate interacted with geography to drive technological innovation and population growth. The accumulation of population at especially rich locations led to creation of group property rights over land, stratification into elite and commoner classes, and warfare over land among rival elites. This set the stage for urbanization based on manufacturing or military defense and for elite-controlled states based on taxation. Our closing chapter shows how these developments eventually resulted in contemporary global civilization.

Topics & Concepts

EliteCivilizationGeographyUrbanizationPopulationPrehistoryEconomyPopulation growthEconomic geographyDevelopment economicsEconomic historyPolitical scienceHistoryEconomic growthSociologyArchaeologyPoliticsEconomicsDemographyLawArchaeology and ancient environmental studies