Abstract
Archaeological evidence provides the only basis for comparative research charting wealth inequality over vast stretches of the human past. But researchers are confronted by a number of problems: small sample sizes; variable indicators of wealth (including individual grave goods, the area of household dwellings or storage spaces); overrepresentation of the wealthy, or invisibility of those without wealth; and vastly different population sizes. Here, the authors develop methods for estimating the Gini coefficient—a measure of wealth inequality—that address these challenges, allowing them to provide a set of 150 comparable estimates of ancient wealth inequality.
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CITATION STYLE
Fochesato, M., Bogaard, A., & Bowles, S. (2019). Comparing ancient inequalities: the challenges of comparability, bias and precision. Antiquity, 93(370), 853–869. https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2019.106
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