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Details about Simon D. Smith

Workplace:Wilberforce Institute for the Study of Slavery and Emancipation

Access statistics for papers by Simon D. Smith.

Last updated 2012-11-18. Update your information in the RePEc Author Service.

Short-id: psm119


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Working Papers

2009

  1. Surviving Slavery. Mortality at Mesopotamia, a Jamaican sugar estate, 1762 - 1832
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York Downloads

Undated

  1. A Note on the Current and Constant Value of Eighteenth-Century English Exports
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York
  2. Accounting For Taste: British Coffee Consumption In Historical Perspective
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York
  3. Adam Smith's Nation of Shopkeepers
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York
  4. The Significance of New World Demand for English Wool Textiles 1699-1783, with Special Reference to Continental North America
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York

Journal Articles

2008

  1. Trade, empire and British foreign policy, 1689–1815: the politics of a commercial state – By Jeremy Black
    Economic History Review, 2008, 61, (1), 239-239 Downloads

2007

  1. The Atlantic Economy during the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries: Organization, Operation, Practice, and Personnel. Edited by Peter A. Coclanis. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2005. Pp. xix, 377. $49.95
    The Journal of Economic History, 2007, 67, (4), 1076-1077 Downloads

2006

  1. The making and unmaking of empires: Britain, India, and America c.1750–1783 – P.J. Marshall
    Economic History Review, 2006, 59, (2), 407-408 Downloads
  2. The social life of coffee: the emergence of the British coffeehouse – Brian Cowan
    Economic History Review, 2006, 59, (3), 640-641 Downloads

2002

  1. Slavery, Atlantic Trade and the British Economy, 1660–1800. By Kenneth Morgan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Pp. ix, 120. $39.95, cloth; $11.95, paper
    The Journal of Economic History, 2002, 62, (2), 599-600 Downloads
 
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