Business History
1997 - 2025
Current editor(s): Professor John Wilson and Professor Steven Toms From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 51, issue 6, 2009
- Business and the limited reconstruction of industrial relations in the UK in the 1970s pp. 801-816

- Jim Phillips
- Risk and risk management in the Liverpool slave trade pp. 817-834

- Sheryllynne Haggerty
- Cooperation between business associations and the government in the Korean cotton industry, 1950-70 pp. 835-853

- Sub Park
- Avoiding toxic assets and ensuring bank stability: English commercial bank investments, 1880-1910 pp. 854-874

- Mae Baker, Caroline Eadsforth and Michael Collins
- Serious cartel conduct, criminalisation and evidentiary standards: Lessons from the Coal Vend case of 1911 in Australia pp. 875-906

- Martin Shanahan and David Round
- Bond markets and banks in inter-war Japan pp. 907-926

- Makoto Kasuya
- Entrepreneurial leadership in the Meiji cotton spinners' early conceptualisation of global competition pp. 927-958

- Eugene Choi
- British conservatism and trade unionism, 1945-1964 pp. 959-960

- Neil Rollings
- A fair day's wage for a fair day's work? Sweated labour and the origins of minimum wage legislation in Britain pp. 960-962

- Clare Rose
- The Soviet dream world of retail trade and consumption in the 1930s pp. 962-963

- Melanie Ilic
- Industry and modernism: companies, architecture, and identity in the Nordic and Baltic countries during the high-industrial period pp. 963-965

- Lesley Whitworth
- The Puritan gift: reclaiming the American dream amidst global financial chaos pp. 965-966

- John Wilson
- American consumer society, 1865-2005: from hearth to HDTV pp. 966-968

- Vicki Howard
- Bankruptcy to billions: how the Indian railways transformed pp. 968-969

- Terry Gourvish
- Shanghai splendor: economic sentiments and the making of modern China, 1843-1949 pp. 970-971

- Elisabeth Koll
- The globalization of corporate governance pp. 971-973

- Alan Rugman
- The invisible hook: the hidden economics of pirates pp. 973-975

- Mark Roodhouse
- Globalization's limits: conflicting national interests in trade and finance pp. 973-973

- Alan Rugman
- The genesis of macroeconomics: new ideas from Sir William Petty to Henry Thornton pp. 975-977

- Gordon Fletcher
- Spirituality and corporate social responsibility: interpenetrating worlds pp. 977-978

- Alistair Mutch
- The globalization of retailing: volumes I and II pp. 978-980

- Steve Wood
Volume 51, issue 5, 2009
- Transactions and interactions - the flow of goods, services and information pp. 645-648

- Harm Schroter
- Memory and learning: Selecting users in the port of Rotterdam, 1883-1900 pp. 649-667

- Hugo van Driel and Irma Bogenrieder
- Absorptive capacity, knowledge circulation and coal cleaning innovation: The Netherlands in the 1930s pp. 668-690

- Mila Davids and Sue-Yen Tjong Tjin Tai
- Escape from 'Safehaven': The case of Christiani & Nielsen's blacklisting in 1944 pp. 691-711

- Steen Andersen
- Global lobbies for a global economy: The creation of the Spanish Institute of Family Firms in international perspective pp. 712-733

- Paloma Fernandez Perez and Nuria Puig
- From 'peculiar stores' to 'a new way of thinking': Discussions on self-service in Swedish trade journals, 1935-1955 pp. 734-753

- Fredrik Sandgren
- How cartels stimulate innovation and R&D: Swiss cable firms, innovation and the cartel question pp. 754-769

- Alain Cortat
- Vernon's product life cycle and maritime innovation: Specialised shipping in Bergen, Norway, 1970-1987 pp. 770-786

- Stig Tenold
- Buying for the home: shopping for the domestic from the seventeenth century to the present pp. 787-788

- Catherine Casson
- The manager's tale: stories of managerial identity pp. 788-789

- Jean Clarke
- Aspects of independent Romania's economic history with particular reference to transition for EU accession pp. 789-791

- Agnes Pogany
- Finance and modernization: a transnational and transcontinental perspective for the nineteenth and twentieth centuries pp. 791-793

- Ranald Michie
- Mining tycoons in the age of empire, 1870-1945: entrepreneurship, high finance, politics and territorial expansion pp. 793-794

- Christopher Schmitz
- Capitalizing on change: a social history of American business pp. 794-795

- William Hausman
- The day Wall Street exploded: a story of America in its first age of terror pp. 795-797

- Chad Pearson
- Inside the Fed: monetary policy and its management, Martin through Greenspan to Bernanke pp. 797-799

- Robert Wright
- Power struggles: scientific authority and the creation of practical electricity before Edison pp. 799-800

- Graeme Gooday
Volume 51, issue 4, 2009
- 'What the electorate can be expected to swallow': Nationalisation, transnationalism and the shifting boundaries of the state in post-war Britain pp. 501-528

- Glen O'Hara
- Collaboration - a competitor's tool: The story of Centocor, an entrepreneurial biotechnology company pp. 529-546

- Lara Vivienne Marks
- The restructuring of the Spanish integrated steel industry in the European panorama (1971-86): A lost opportunity pp. 547-568

- Pablo Diaz-Morlan, Antonio Escudero and Miguel Saez
- No need for governance? The impact of corporate governance on valuation, performance and survival of German banks during the 1870s pp. 569-601

- Carsten Burhop
- Knowing the shape of demand: Britain's exports of ponchos to the Southern Cone, c. 1810s-70s pp. 602-621

- Manuel Llorca-Jaña
- British Railways, 1997-2005: Labour's strategic experiment pp. 622-624

- Chris Nash
- The empire in one city?: Liverpool's inconvenient imperial past pp. 624-626

- J. Forbes Munro
- Credit and community: working-class debt in the UK since 1880 pp. 626-627

- John Benson
- Good money. Birmingham button makers, the Royal Mint and the beginnings of modern coinage, 1775-1821 pp. 627-628

- Francesca Carnevali
- Labour unionism in the financial services sector: fighting for rights and representation pp. 628-630

- Andrew Seltzer
- The business, life and letters of Frederick Cornes: aspects of the evolution of commerce in modern Japan, 1861-1910 pp. 630-631

- Nicholas White
- Invisible hands: the making of the Conservative movement from the New Deal to Reagan pp. 631-633

- Chad Pearson
- Horse trading in the age of cars. Men in the marketplace pp. 633-635

- Margaret Walsh
- Global electrification: multinational enterprise and international finance in the history of light and power, 1878-2007 pp. 635-636

- Howard Cox
- Centres and peripheries in banking: the historical development of financial markets pp. 637-638

- Bernardo Batiz-Lazo
- Merchants, traders, entrepreneurs: Indian business in the colonial era pp. 638-639

- Anthony Webster
- Pathways to the present: U.S. development and its consequences in the Pacific pp. 640-641

- Jane Yamashiro
- Premodern trade in world history pp. 641-642

- Kent Deng
- Taking place: the spatial contexts of science, technology and business pp. 642-644

- Sally Horrocks
Volume 51, issue 3, 2009
- Business history and international business pp. 307-333

- Peter Buckley
- Multinational enterprise in insurance: An historical overview pp. 334-363

- Mira Wilkins
- Siegmund Warburg, the City of London and the financial roots of European integration pp. 364-382

- Niall Ferguson
- Revisiting the psychic distance paradox: International retailing in China in the long run (1840-2005) pp. 383-400

- Haiming Hang and Andrew Godley
- The multinational enterprise and subsidiary evolution: Scotland since 1945 pp. 401-425

- Pavlos Dimitratos, Ioanna Liouka, Duncan Ross and Stephen Young
- Resolving the global efficiency versus local adaptability dilemma: US film multinationals in their largest foreign market in the 1930s and 1940s pp. 426-444

- Peter Miskell
- The internationalisation process theory and the internationalisation of Norwegian firms, 1945 to 1980 pp. 445-461

- Rolv Petter Amdam
- A silent revolution: The internationalisation of large Spanish family firms pp. 462-483

- Nuria Puig and Paloma Fernandez Perez
- British overseas railways as free-standing companies, 1900-1915 pp. 484-500

- David Boughey
Volume 51, issue 2, 2009
- Business history as history pp. 143-156

- Franco Amatori
- 'Parasitic invasions' or sources of good governance: Constraining foreign competition in Hong Kong banking, 1965-81 pp. 157-180

- Catherine Schenk
- Between the firm and the market: An international comparison of the commercial structures of the cotton industry (1820-1939) pp. 181-201

- Marc Prat
- Supply Chain Management: Unheard of in the 1970s, core to today's company pp. 202-221

- Rafaela Alfalla-Luque and Carmen Medina-Lopez
- Transactions, standardisation and competition: Establishing uniform sizes in the British wire industry c.1880 pp. 222-247

- Aashish Velkar
- Organisational capabilities and the role of routines in the emergence of a modern life insurer: The story of the AMP pp. 248-267

- Monica Keneley
- Information, quality and legal rules: Wine adulteration in nineteenth century France pp. 268-291

- Alessandro Stanziani
- The Oxford handbook of business history pp. 292-294

- Michael Rowlinson
- Social capital, trust and the Industrial Revolution, 1780-1880 pp. 295-296

- Andrew Popp
- Friends of the unrighteous mammon: Northern Christians and market capitalism, 1815-1860 pp. 296-298

- Alistair Mutch
- Innovation corrupted: the origins and legacy of Enron's collapse pp. 298-300

- James Taylor
- Plantation Jamaica 1750-1850: capital control in a colonial economy pp. 300-301

- Marcelo Bucheli
- Managing the embedded multinational: a business network view pp. 302-303

- Anna Spadavecchia
- The corporate eye: photography and the rationalization of American commercial culture, 1884-1929 pp. 303-306

- Stefan Schwarzkopf
Volume 51, issue 1, 2009
- Emergence and evolution of ATM networks in the UK, 1967-2000 pp. 1-27

- Bernardo Batiz-Lazo
- Facilitating and restricting a challenger: Patents and standards in the development of the Bull-Knutsen punched card system, 1919-1938 pp. 28-44

- Lars Heide
- Managerial strategies in canning industries: A case study of early twentieth century Portugal pp. 45-58

- Maria Eugenia Mata
- Development of a mature securities market in Montreal from 1817 to 1874 pp. 59-76

- David McKeagan
- The origins of business groups in China: An empirical testing of the three paths and the three theories pp. 77-99

- Keun Lee and Xuehua Jin
- A strategy of seduction? The role of commercial advertisements in the eighteenth-century retailing business of Antwerp pp. 100-121

- Dries Lyna and Ilja Van Damme
- Review Essay pp. 122-125

- Michael Heller
- Estates, enterprise and investment at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution: estate management and accounting in the North-East of England, c.1700-1780 pp. 126-127

- Lisa Jack
- The nineteenth-century child and consumer culture pp. 127-129

- Laura Ugolini
- William Crookes (1832-1919) and the commercialization of science pp. 129-130

- Colin Hempstead
- Revista de la historia de la economia y de la empresa. No. 2: Historia empresarial Espanola pp. 131-133

- Javier Fernandez-Roca
- Economies of representation, 1790-2000: colonialism and commerce pp. 133-134

- Valerie Johnson
- A Weberian analysis of business groups and financial markets pp. 135-136

- Mark Casson
- International entrepreneurship in family businesses pp. 136-137

- Paloma Fernandez Perez
- Privatisation: successes and failures pp. 138-139

- Robert Millward
- Understanding technological innovation: a socio-technical approach pp. 139-141

- Paul Israel
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