Items where department is "Economic History"

University Structure (106206) LSE (106206) Academic Departments (62869) Economic History (2002) Narrative Science (7)
Number of items: 74.
2007
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) Agri-technologies and travelling facts: case study of extension education in India [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) Crowding pathology in rodens and humans [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) Fabulation or fact : recycling knowledge about distant land [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) 'False facts' and the facts of life [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Rabier, Christelle (Ed.) (2007). Fields of expertise: a comparative history of expert procedures in Paris and London, 1600 to present. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) How well did commercial facts travel across 18th century Atlantic [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) Life cycles of 'facts' - cross fertilisation of evidence in infectious disease models [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) Making small facts travel: Databases in model organism research [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Wallis, Patrick, Jenner, Mark S. R (Eds.) (2007). Medicine and the market in England and its colonies, c.1450-c.1850. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) Plague mythology re-writing the fact of Eyam [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History (2007-04-12 - 2007-04-13) Popular science or popular fiction [Poster]. Fact/fiction ratio in science writing, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) Poverty in numbers poverty measures in the political domain [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • van Ark, Bart, Crafts, Nicholas (Eds.) (2007). Quantitative aspects of post-war European economic growth. Cambridge University Press.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) Travelling knowledge : building techniques in Europe between the 16th and the 18th century [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History. British Academy (2007-12-13 - 2007-12-14) When facts travel free? [Poster]. Enquiry, Evidence, and Facts, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • London School of Economics and Political Science. Department of Economic History (2007). The nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? Annual report 2006-2007. Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Adams, Jon (2007). Contesting democracy: scientific popularisation and popular choice. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 20/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Adams, Jon (2007). Interference patterns: literary study, scientific knowledge, and disciplinary autonomy. Bucknell University Press.
  • Altorfer-Ong, Stefan (2007). State-building without taxation The political economy of government finance in the eighteenth-century republic of Bern. [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Austin, Gareth, Uche, Chibuike Ugochukwu (2007). Collusion and competition in colonial economies: banking in British West Africa, 1916-1960. Business History Review, 81(1), 1-26. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007680500036230
  • Austin, Gareth (2007). Labour and land in Ghana, 1874-1939: a shifting ratio and an institutional revolution. Australian Economic History Review, 47(1), 95-120. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8446.2006.00198.x
  • Austin, Gareth (2007). Reciprocal comparison and African history: tackling conceptual Eurocentrism in the study of Africa's economic past. African Studies Review, 50(3), 1-28. https://doi.org/10.1353/arw.2008.0009
  • Bakker, Gerben (2007). Book review: the entertainment industry. Eh.Net, Online,
  • Bakker, Gerben (2007). Structural change and the growth contribution of services: how motion pictures industrialized US spectator entertainment. (Economic History Working Papers 104/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Bakker, Gerben (2007). Trading facts: Arrow's fundamental paradox and the emergence of global news networks, 1750-1900. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 17/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Bakker, Gerben (2007). The evolution of entertainment consumption and the emergence of cinema 1890-1940. Advances in Austrian Economics, 10, 93-137. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1529-2134(07)10005-3
  • Bakker, Gerben (2007). The evolution of entertainment consumption and the emergence of cinema, 1890-1940. (Economic History Working Papers 102/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Bakker, Gerben, Iliopoulou, Stavroula (2007). Studying the past to plan for the future: a case study analysis of the unintended and indirect effects of regulation on productivity. (AIM Research Working Paper Series 062-December-2007). Advanced Institute of Management Research.
  • Boumans, Marcel (2007). Battle in the planning office: biased experts versus normative statisticians. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 16/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Colvin, Christopher Louis (2007). Universal banking failure?: an analysis of the contrasting responses of the Amsterdamsche Bank and the Rotterdamsche Bankvereeniging to the Dutch financial crisis of the 1920s. (Economic History Working Papers 98/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas, Leunig, Tim, Mulatu, Abay (2007). Were British railway companies well-managed in the early twentieth century? (Working papers in large-scale technological change 10/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Deng, Kent (2007). China: voyages of exploration. In Hattendorf, John B. (Ed.), The Oxford Encyclopedia of Maritime History (pp. 406-414). Oxford University Press.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2007). Rodney Hilton, Marxism and the transition from feudalism to capitalism. Past and Present, 195(Suppl.), 248-269. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtm034
  • Erickson, Paul, Mitman, Gregg (2007). When rabbits became humans (and humans, rabbits): stability, order, and history in the study of populations. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 19/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Felis Rota, Marta (2007). Is social capital persistent?: comparative measurement in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. (Economic History Working Papers 103/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Hochstrasser, Timothy (2007). Carlyle and the French Enlightenment: transitional readings of Voltaire and Diderot. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do ‘facts’ travel? 21/07). London School of Economics and Political Science, Department of Economic History.
  • Howlett, Peter, Schulze, Max-Stephan, Epstein, Philip (2007). Trade, convergence and globalisation: the dynamics of change in the international income distribution, 1950-1998. Explorations in Economic History, 44(1), 100-113. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2005.10.006
  • Humphries, Jane, Leunig, Tim (2007). Was Dick Whittington taller than those he left behind?: anthropometric measures, migration and the quality of life in early nineteenth century London. (Economic History Working Papers 101/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Hunter, Janet (2007). Britain and the Japanese economy during the first world war. In Towle, Philip, Kosuge, Nobuko Margaret (Eds.), Britain and Japan in the Twentieth Century : One Hundred Years of Trade and Prejudice (pp. 15-32). I.B. Tauris Publishers.
  • Hunter, Janet (2007). The Industrial Revolution in Japan. In Rider, Christine (Ed.), Encyclopedia of the Age of the Industrial Revolution . Greenwood Press (Westport, Conn.). https://doi.org/10.1336/031333501X
  • Hunter, Janet (2007). The industrial revolution in Britian. In Rider, Christine (Ed.), Encyclopedia of the Age of the Industrial Revolution, 1700-1920 . Greenwood Press (Westport, Conn.).
  • Jenner, Mark S.R., Wallis, Patrick (2007). The medical marketplace. In Medicine and the Market in England and its Colonies, c.1450- c.1850 (pp. 1-23). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230591462_1
  • Johnson, Paul, Zaidi, Asghar (2007). Work over the life course. In Crafts, Nicholas, Gazeley, I, Newell, A (Eds.), Work and Pay in Twentieth-Century Britain (pp. 98-116). Oxford University Press.
  • Khan, Arshi Rasheed (2007). Did zakat deliver welfare and justice? Islamic welfare policy in Pakistan, 1980-1994. [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Ma, Debin, Fukao, Kyoji, Yuan, Tangjun (2007). Real GDP in pre-war East Asia: a 1934–36 benchmark purchasing power party comparison with the U.S. Review of Income and Wealth, 53(3), 503-537. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4991.2007.00243.x
  • Millar, Ashley E. (2007). The Jesuits as knowledge brokers between Europe and China (1582-1773): shaping European views of the Middle Kingdom. (Economic History Working Papers 105/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Minns, Chris (2007). The times they are not changing: days and hours of work in old and new worlds. Explorations in Economic History, 44(4), 538-567. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2007.03.002
  • Minns, Chris, MacKinnon, Mary (2007). The costs of doing hard time: a penitentiary-based regional price index for Canada, 1883–1923. Canadian Journal of Economics, 40(1), 528-560. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.00420.x
  • Morgan, Mary S. (2007). Reflections on exemplary narratives, cases, and model organisms. In Creager, Angela N. H., Lunbeck, Elizabeth, Norton Wise, M. (Eds.), Science Without Laws: Model Systems, Cases, Exemplary Narratives (pp. 264-274). Duke University Press.
  • Morgan, Mary S. (2007). An analytical history of measuring practices: the case of velocities of money. In Boumans, Marcel (Ed.), Measurement in Economics : a Handbook (pp. 105-132). Elsevier (Firm).
  • Morgan, Mary S. (2007). The curious case of the prisoner's dilemma: model situation? Exemplary narrative? In Creager, Angela N. H., Lunbeck, Elizabeth, Norton Wise, M. (Eds.), Science Without Laws: Model Systems, Cases, Exemplary Narratives (pp. 157-185). Duke University Press.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2007). Global economic history as the accumulation of capital through a process of combined and uneven development: an appreciation and critique of Ernest Mandel. Historical Materialism, 15(1), 75-103. https://doi.org/10.1163/156920607X171609
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2007). The triumph and denouement of the British fiscal state: taxation for the wars against Revolutionary and Napoleonic France, 1793-1815. (Economic History Working Papers 99/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2007). Defining a profession: surgery, professional conflicts and legal powers in Paris and London, 1760–1790. In Rabier, Christelle (Ed.), Fields of Expertise: a Comparative History of Expert Procedures in Paris and London, 1600 to Present (pp. 85-114). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2007). Introduction: expertise in historical perspectives. In Rabier, Christelle (Ed.), Fields of Expertise: a Comparative History of Expert Procedures in Paris and London, 1600 to Present (pp. 1-15). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2007). Un épisode de la guerre de la science au Royaume-Uni. In Roux, Sophie (Ed.), Retours Sure L'affaire Sokal (pp. 51-89). Harmattan (Firm).
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2007). Globalization, factor prices, and poverty in colonial rural India. Australian Economic History Review, 47(1), 73-94. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8446.2006.00197.x
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2007). Out of tradition: master artisans and economic change in colonial India. Journal of Asian Studies, 66(4), 963-991. https://doi.org/10.1017/S002191180700126X
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2007). Rethinking economic change in India: labour and livelihood. Routledge.
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2007). Sardars, jobbers, kanganies: the labour contractor and Indian economic history. Modern Asian Studies, 42(5), 971-998. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X07003071
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2007). A delayed revolution: environment and agrarian change in India. Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 23(2), 239-250. https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/grm011
  • Rubiés, Joan-Pau (2007). Book review: Alejandro Cañeque, "the King's living image: the culture and politics of viceregal power in colonial Mexico". Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 35(2), 303-305. https://doi.org/10.1080/03086530701337864
  • Rubiés, Joan-Pau (2007). Book review: Daniel Castro, "another face of empire. Bartolome de Las Casas, indigenous rights and ecclesiastical imperialism". Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 58(4), 767-768. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022046907001704
  • Schulze, Max-Stephan (2007). Origins of catch-up failure: comparative productivity growth in the Habsburg Empire, 1870-1910. European Review of Economic History, 11(2), 189 - 218. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1361491607001955
  • Schulze, Max-Stephan (2007). Origins of catch-up failure: comparative productivity growth in the Hapsburg Empire, 1870-1910. (Economic History Working Papers 100/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Schulze, Max-Stephan (2007). Regional income dispersion and market potential in the late nineteenth century Hapsburg Empire. (Economic History Working Papers 106/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Shimizu, Hiroshi (2007). Competition, knowledge spillover, and innovation: technological development of semiconductor lasers, 1960- 1990 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Velkar, Aashish (2007). Accurate measurements and design standards: consistency of design and the travel of 'facts' between heterogeneous groups. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 18/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Viarengo, Martina (2007). An historical analysis of the expansion of compulsory schooling in Europe after the Second World War. (Economic History Working Papers 97/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Volckart, Oliver, Börner, Lars (2007). "...darumb das alsdann die Bequemikeit eyner einigenn Muntz sich manigfaltig erzeigenn mocht...": Spätmittelalterliche Währungsunionen und ihre Folgen. Bankhistorisches Archiv, 33(2).
  • Wallis, Patrick (2007). Apprenticeship and training in premodern England. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 22/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Wallis, Patrick (2007). Competition and cooperation in the early modern medical economy. In Wallis, Patrick, Jenner, Mark S. R (Eds.), Medicine and the Market in England and Its Colonies, C.1450-C.1850 (pp. 47-68). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Wallis, Patrick (2007). Introduction: Medicine and the market in England and its colonies, c.1450 - c.1850. In Wallis, Patrick, Jenner, Mark S. R. (Eds.), Medicine and the Market in England and Its Colonies, C.1450 - C.1850 . Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Wallis, Patrick, Jenner, Mark S. R (2007). Introduction: the medical marketplace. In Wallis, Patrick, Jenner, Mark S. R (Eds.), Medicine and the Market in England and Its Colonies, C.1450-C.1850 (pp. 1-23). Palgrave Macmillan.