Items where department is "Economic History"

University Structure (106206) LSE (106206) Academic Departments (62869) Economic History (2002) Narrative Science (7)
Number of items: 51.
2000
  • Wallis, Patrick, Webb, Cliff (Eds.) (2000). Apothecaries' company, 1617-1669. Society of Genealogists (Great Britain).
  • den Butter, Frank A. G., Morgan, Mary S. (Eds.) (2000). Empirical models and policy making: interaction and institutions. Routledge.
  • Austin, Gareth (2000). Markets, democracy and African economic growth: liberalism and Afro-pessimism reconsidered. Round Table: the Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, 89(357), 543-555. https://doi.org/10.1080/003585300225179
  • Backhouse, Roger E., Morgan, Mary S. (2000). Introduction is data mining a methodological problem? Journal of Economic Methodology, 7(2), 171-181. https://doi.org/10.1080/13501780050045065
  • Bakker, Gerben (2000). America's master: the decline and fall of the European film industry in the United States. In Passerini, L (Ed.), Across the Atlantic (pp. 213-240). Presses Interuniversitaires Europeennes.
  • Bakker, Gerben (2000). American dreams: the European film industry from dominance to decline. EUI Review, (Summer), 28-36.
  • Bakker, Gerben (2000). Book review: Vom Flügeltelegraphen zum Internet. Geschichte der modernen Telekommunikation. Business History, 42(3), 172-174. https://doi.org/10.1080/00076790000000286
  • Bakker, Gerben (2000). Book review: an international history of the recording industry. Business History, 42(4), 222-223. https://doi.org/10.1080/00076790000000338
  • Broadberry, Stephen, Crafts, Nicholas (2000). Competition and innovation in 1950’s Britain. (Economic History Working Papers 57/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (2000). Development history. (Economic History Working Papers 54/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (2000). Does Britain have a productivity problem? Economic Review, 17(3), 16-20.
  • Day, William R. (2000). The early development of the Florentine economy, c.1100-1275. [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Deng, Kent (2000). Great leaps backward: poverty under Mao. London School of Economics and Political Science & Columbia University.
  • Deng, Kent (2000). A critical survey of recent research in Chinese economic history. Economic History Review, 53(1), 1-28. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0289.00150
  • Epstein, Philip, Howlett, Peter, Schulze, Max-Stephan (2000). Distribution dynamics: stratification, polarisation and convergence among OECD economies, 1870-1992. (Economic History Working Papers 58/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2000). Constitutions, liberties, and growth in pre-modern Europe. In Casson, Mark, Godley, Andrew (Eds.), Cultural Factors and Economic Growth (pp. 152-181). Springer Berlin / Heidelberg.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2000). Freedom and growth: the rise of states and markets in Europe 1300-1750. Routledge.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2000). Late medieval and early modern towns as focal points of market power. An interview with S. R. Epstein. Itinerario, 24, 87-104.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2000). Market structures. In Connell, William, Zorzi, Andrea (Eds.), Florentine Tuscany: Structures and Practices of Power (pp. 90-121). Cambridge University Press.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2000). The late medieval crisis as an "integration crisis". In Prak, Maarten (Ed.), Early Modern Capitalism (pp. 25-50). Routledge.
  • Harley, C. Knick, Crafts, Nicholas (2000). Simulating the two views of the industrial revolution. Journal of Economic History, 60(3), 819-841. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050700000346
  • Howlett, William P. (2000). Evidence of the existence of an internal labour market in the Great Eastern Railway Company, 1875-1905. Business History, 42(1), 21-40. https://doi.org/10.1080/00076790000000173
  • Hunter, Janet (2000). Japanese economic history, 1930-1960. Routledge.
  • Hunter, Janet (2000). The roots of divergence? Some comments on Japan in the "axial age", 1750-1850. Itinerario, XXIV(3/4), 75-88. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0165115300014509
  • Hunter, Janet E. (2000). All change for Japanese women? Euro-Japanese Journal, 7(1).
  • Irigoin, Alejandra (2000). Inconvertible paper money, inflation and economic performance in early nineteenth century Argentina. Journal of Latin American Studies, 32(2), 333-359.
  • Jacks, David (2000). Market integration in the North and Baltic Seas, 1500-1800. (Economic History Working Papers 55/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Johnson, Paul (2000). Civilising mammon: laws, morals and the city in nineteenth-century England. In Slack, Paul, Harrison, Brian, Burke, Peter (Eds.), Civil Histories (pp. 301-320). Oxford University Press.
  • Johnson, Paul (2000). Creditors, debtors, and the law in Victorian and Edwardian England. In Steinmetz, Willibald (Ed.), Private Law and Social Inequality in the Industrial Age: Comparing Legal Cultures in Britain, France, Germany and the United Sta (pp. 485-504). Oxford University Press.
  • Kennedy, William, Delargy, Robert (2000). Explaining Victorian entrepreneurship: a cultural problem? A market problem? No problem? (Economic History Working Papers 61/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Kramper, Peter (2000). From economic convergence to convergence in affluence? Income growth, household expenditure and the rise of mass consumption in Britain and West Germany, 1950-1974. (Economic History Working Papers 56/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Lamounier, Lucia (2000). The ‘labour question’ in nineteenth century Brazil: railways, export agriculture and labour scarcity. (Economic History Working Papers 59/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Leunig, Tim (2000). New answers to old questions: explaining the slow adoption of ring spinning in Lancashire, 1880-1913. (Economic History Working Papers 60/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Lewis, Colin M. (2000). Business cultures: Latin America. In Warner, Malcolm (Ed.), Management in the Americas (pp. 108-115). International Thomson Business Press.
  • Ma, Debin (2000). Europe, China and Japan: transfer of silk reeling technology in 1860-95. In Latham, A.J.H, Kawakatsu, Heita (Eds.), Asia-Pacific Dynamism, 1550-2000 (pp. 70-85). Routledge.
  • Ma, Debin (2000). Patterns of silk reeling technology transfer in China and Japan: 1860-1895. In Latham, A. J. H., Kawakatsu, Heita (Eds.), Asia Pacific Dynamism 1550-2000 (pp. 70-85). Routledge.
  • Mills, Terence C., Crafts, Nicholas (2000). After the golden age: a long run perspective on growth rates that speeded up, slowed down and still differ. Manchester School, 68(1), 68-91. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9957.00182
  • Minns, Chris (2000). Income, cohort effects, and occupational mobility: a new look at immigration to the United States at the turn of the 20th century. Explorations in Economic History, 37(4), 326-350. https://doi.org/10.1006/exeh.2000.0746
  • Morgan, Mary S. (2000). Explanatory strategies for monetary policy analysis. In Backhouse, Roger E., Salanti, Andrea (Eds.), Macroeconomics and the Real World: Models, Evidence and Techniques (pp. 141-154). Oxford University Press.
  • Morgan, Mary S., den Butter, Frank A. G. (2000). What makes the models-policy interaction successful? In Morgan, Mary S., den Butter, Frank A. G. (Eds.), Empirical Models and Policy Making: Interaction and Institutions (pp. 279-312). Routledge.
  • Nicholas, Tom (2000). Businessmen and land ownership in the late nineteenth century revisited. Economic History Review, 53(4), 777-782. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0289.00178
  • Nicholas, Tom (2000). Wealth making in the nineteenth and early twentieth century: the Rubinstein hypothesis revisited. Business History, 42(2), 155-168. https://doi.org/10.1080/00076790000000225
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2000). Mercantilism and imperialism in the rise and decline of the Dutch and British economies 1585-1815. De Economist, 148(4), 469-501. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1004130032200
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2000). Merchants and bankers as patriots or speculators? Foreign commerce and monetary policy in wartime, 1793-1815. In McCusker, John J, Morgan, Kenneth (Eds.), The Early Modern Atlantic Economy (pp. 250-277). Cambridge University Press.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2000). Philips world history encyclopaedia. Octopus Publishing Group Limited.
  • Pegler, Lee J. (2000). Workers, unions and the 'politics of modernisation' Labour process change in the Brazilian white goods industry. [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2000). De-industrialisation: alternative view. Economic and Political Weekly, 35(17), 1442-1447.
  • Schulze, Max-Stephan (2000). Patterns of growth and stagnation in the late nineteenth century Habsburg economy. European Review of Economic History, 4(3), 311-340.
  • Volckart, Oliver (2000). The open constitution and its enemies: competition, rent seeking, and the rise of the modern state. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 42(1), 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0167-2681(00)00072-X
  • Wallis, Patrick (2000). The first English histories of pharmacy - their origins and influences. Pharmacy in History, 42(1), 36-46.
  • Wallis, Patrick, Lewis, Jane (2000). Fault, breakdown, and the Church of England's involvement in the 1969 divorce reform. Twentieth Century British History, 11(3), 308-332. https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/11.3.308