Economic History Review
1948 - 2025
Current editor(s): Stephen Broadberry
From Economic History Society
Contact information at EDIRC.
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Volume 56, month 11, 2003
- English individualism refuted—and reasserted: the land market of Earls Colne (Essex), 1550–1750 pp. 595-622

- H. R. French and R. W. Hoyle
- ‘The seat of death and terror’: urbanization, stunting, and smallpox pp. 623-656

- Deborah Oxley
- Freemasonry and business networking during the Victorian period pp. 657-688

- Roger Burt
- A soft touch? British industry, empire markets, and the self‐governing dominions, c.1870–1914 pp. 689-717

- Andrew Thompson and Gary Magee
- UK productivity performance from 1950 to 1979: a restatement of the Broadberry‐Crafts view pp. 718-735

- Stephen Broadberry and Nicholas Crafts
- The Broadberry‐Crafts view and the evidence: a reply pp. 736-742

- Alan Booth
- List of publications on the economic and social history of Great Britain and Ireland published in 2002 pp. 743-787

- Matthew Hale, Richard Hawkins and Michael Partridge
Volume 56, month 08, 2003
- Progress and poverty in early modern Europe pp. 403-443

- Robert Allen
- Mechanical innovation in the industrial revolution: the case of plough design pp. 444-477

- Liam Brunt
- Steam, hot air, and small change: Matthew Boulton and the reform of Britain's coinage pp. 478-509

- George Selgin
- Gentlewomanly capitalism? Spinsters, widows, and wealth holding in England and Wales, c. 1800–1860 pp. 510-536

- David R. Green and Alastair Owens
- Evaluating inventive activity: the cost of nineteenth‐century UK patents and the fallibility of renewal data pp. 537-562

- Christine MacLeod, Jennifer Tann, James Andrew and Jeremy Stein
Volume 56, month 05, 2003
- The historiography of French economic growth in the nineteenth century pp. 215-242

- François Crouzet
- Feeding the colleges: Cambridge's food and fuel supplies, 1450–1560 pp. 243-264

- John S. Lee
- Rehabilitating Arthur Young pp. 265-299

- Liam Brunt
- Monetization and financial development in Southeast Asia before the Second World War pp. 300-345

- Gregg Huff
- A comment on Payling's ‘Economics of marriage’ pp. 346-350

- Eileen Spring
- ‘The economics of marriage’: a reply to Spring pp. 351-354

- S. J. Payling
- Business networking in the industrial revolution: some comments pp. 355-361

- John F. Wilson and Andrew Popp
- Business networking in the industrial revolution: riposte to some comments pp. 362-368

- Robin Pearson and David Richardson
Volume 56, month 02, 2003
- The manufacturing failure hypothesis and the performance of British industry during the long boom pp. 1-33

- Alan Booth
- Colonization of the wasteland in County Durham, 1100‐1400 pp. 34-56

- H.M. Dunsford and S. J. Harris
- A ‘Financial Revolution’ revisited: public finance in Holland during the Dutch Revolt, 1568–1648 pp. 57-89

- W. Fritschy
- A British industrial success: productivity in the Lancashire and New England cotton spinning industries a century ago pp. 90-117

- Tim Leunig
- New revisionists and the Keynesian era in British economic policy: a comment pp. 118-124

- G.C. Peden
- New revisionists and the Keynesian era: an expanding consensus? pp. 125-130

- Alan Booth
- Review of Periodical Literature Published in 2001 pp. 131-180

- R.H. Britnell, Steve Hindle, R. C. Nash, Sue Bowden and David Higgins
Volume 55, month 11, 2002
- Villein rents in thirteenth–century England: an analysis of the Hundred Rolls of 1279–1280 pp. 593-618

- Junichi Kanzaka
- The ‘revolt of the early modernists’ and the ‘first modern economy’: an assessment pp. 619-641

- Jan Luiten van Zanden
- Baltic iron and the British iron industry in the eighteenth century pp. 642-665

- Chris Evans, Owen Jackson and Göran Rydén
- Dominion or Republic? Migrants to North America from the United Kingdom, 1870–1910 pp. 666-696

- Alan Green, Mary MacKinnon and Chris Minns
- Regime shift and fast recovery on the periphery: New Zealand in the 1930s pp. 697-720

- David Greasley and Les Oxley
- List of publications on the economic and social history of Great Britain and Ireland published in 2001 pp. 721-759

- Matthew Hale, Richard Hawkins and Michael Partridge
Volume 55, month 08, 2002
- Theo Barker pp. v-ix

- F.M.L. Thompson
- Coercion, compliance, and the collapse of the Soviet command economy pp. 397-433

- Mark Harrison
- Merchants and planters revisited pp. 434-465

- S. D. Smith
- Sinews of trade and empire: the supply of commodity exports to the East India Company during the late eighteenth century pp. 466-486

- H. V. Bowen
- Mortality in the North Dublin Union during the Great Famine pp. 487-506

- Timothy Guinnane and Cormac Ó Gr´da
- Acceptance of innovations in early twentieth–century Indian weaving pp. 507-532

- Tirthankar Roy
- The financial health of voluntary hospitals in interwar Britain pp. 533-557

- Martin Gorsky, John Mohan and Martin Powell
Volume 55, month 05, 2002
- The grain trade in northern Europe before 1350[Northern E] pp. 219-247

- Nils Hybel
- Philip I of England, embezzlement, and the quantity theory of money[I wish to ] pp. 248-261

- Glyn Redworth
- English rural societies and geographical marital endogamy, 1700–1837 pp. 262-298

- K. D. M. Snell
- The rural labour market in the early nineteenth century: women’s and children’s employment, family income, and the 1834 Poor Law Report[I acknowle] pp. 299-323

- Nicola Verdon
- The wheels of a command economy: allocating Soviet vehicles[Research f] pp. 324-348

- Valery Lazarev and Paul R. Gregory
Volume 55, month 02, 2002
- From imitation to invention: creating commodities in eighteenth-century Britain[I am grate] pp. 1-30

- Maxine Berg
- The wholesale and retail markets of London, 1660–1840[I am grate] pp. 31-50

- Colin Smith
- External economies of scale in the Lancashire cotton industry, 1900–1950[Without im] pp. 51-77

- Stephen Broadberry and Andrew Marrison
- Towards the ‘cult of the equity’? Insurance companies and the interwar capital market[I am grate] pp. 78-104

- Peter Scott
- Causes of repressed inflation in the Soviet consumer market, 1965–1989: retail price subsidies, the siphoning effect, and the budget deficit[I thank An] pp. 105-127

- Byung-Yeon Kim