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Geographic Boundary as a Discontinuity in the Mita Study

In Melissa Dell's study of the Mita system, the discontinuity used to establish causality was the geographic boundary of the area where forced labor was enforced. Communities just inside this boundary, which were subject to the Mita, served as the treatment group. Adjacent communities just outside the boundary, which were exempt, acted as the control group. This setup allowed for a comparison of outcomes between two otherwise similar populations, thereby isolating the effect of the Mita.

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Updated 2025-07-23

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