.
.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.
Rulers Ruled by Women: An Economic Analysis of the Rise and Fall of Women's Rights in Sparta
.
|
Click Pic for "Rulers Ruled by Women" |
ABSTRACT: Throughout most of history, women as a class have possessed
relatively few formal rights. The women of ancient Sparta were a
striking exception. Although they could not vote, Spartan women
reportedly owned 40 percent of Sparta’s agricultural land and enjoyed
other rights that were equally extraordinary. We offer a simple economic
explanation for the Spartan anomaly. The defining moment for Sparta was
its conquest of a neighboring land and people, which fundamentally
changed the marginal products of Spartan men’s and Spartan women’s
labor. To exploit the potential gains from a reallocation of labor –
specifically, to provide the appropriate incentives and the proper human
capital formation – men granted women property (and other) rights.
Consistent with our explanation for the rise of women’s rights, when
Sparta lost the conquered land several centuries later, the rights for
women disappeared. Two conclusions emerge that may help explain why
women’s rights have been so rare for most of history. First, in contrast
to the rest of the world, the optimal (from the men’s perspective)
division of labor among Spartans involved women in work that was not
easily monitored by men. Second, the rights held by Spartan women may
have been part of an unstable equilibrium, which contained the seeds of
its own destruction.
.
Related:
"The Spartan Women -- The Politics of Aristotle" and
"The Man-Woman" -- by Hic Mulier (1620)
.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.
No comments:
Post a Comment