© EHES
European Historical
Economics Society
The Society has been
registered since 1995
with the Charity
Commissioners for
England and Wales
http://www.ehes.org/
|
Working Papers
EHES Working Papers in Economic History provide a non-exclusive means
for Society members to disseminate their research, in all fields of
economic history. In order to submit a potential working paper to the
series, you need to be a member of the EHES. To become a member of the EHES, please click here>>.Potential working papers
should be sent to the Editor, Nikolaus Wolf at nikolaus.wolf@wiwi.hu-berlin.de, who is responsible for
deciding whether papers are eligible for inclusion in the series or
not.
Paper No. 14:
Neither So Low Nor So Short: Wages and
Heights in Bourbon Spanish America from an International Comparative Perspective.
by Rafael Dobado-Gonzáles, Universidad Complutense; Héctor García-Montero,
Universitat Pompeu Fabra. February 2012.
Paper No. 13:
Agricultural Productivity Across
Prussia During the Industrial Revolution: A Thünen Perspective.
by Michael Kopsidis, IAMO Halle; Nikolaus Wolf, Humboldt-University Berlin and
CEPR. January 2012.
Paper No. 12:
War, Inflation, Monetary Reforms and
the Art Market.
by Geraldine David, Université Libre de Bruxelles; Kim Oosterlinck, Université
Libre de Bruxelles. January 2012.
Paper No. 11:
A Tale of Two Oceans: Market
Integration Over the High Seas, 1800-1940.
by Giovanni Federico, European University Institute and University of Pisa. October 2011.
Paper No. 10:
Landownership Concentration and the Expansion of Education.
by Francesco Cinnirella, Ifo Institute and CESifo; Munich Erik Hornung, Ifo Institute, Munich. October 2011.
Paper No. 9:
Taking Technology to Task: The Skill Content of Technological Change in Early Twentieth Century United States.
by Rowena Gray, University of Essex, UK. October 2011.
Paper No. 8:
Human Development in Africa: A Long-Run Perspective.
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III, Madrid. October 2011.
Paper No. 7:
Where It All Began:
Lending of Last Resort and the Bank of England
During the Overend, Gurney Panic of 1866.
by Marc Flandreau,Graduate Institute, Geneva; Stefano Ugolini, Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa. February 2011.
Paper No. 6:
Communal Responsibility and the Coexistence of
Money and Credit under Anonymous Matching.
by Lars Boerner, Free University of Berlin; Albrecht Ritschl,
LSE and CEPR. January 2011.
Paper No. 5:
Was the Emergence of the International Gold Standard Expected?
Melodramatic Evidence from Indian Government Securities.
by Marc Flandreau, Graduate Institute, Geneva; Kim Oosterlinck, Universite Libre de Bruxelles. January 2011.
Paper No. 4:
Forced Labour in Franco's Spain: Workforce Supply, Profits and Productivity.
by Fernando Mendiola Gonzalo,Universidad Publica de Navarra; Grupo de Estudios sobre Historia de la Prision y las Instituciones Punitivas.
(Research Group on the History of Prison and Punitive Institutions). January 2011.
Paper No. 3:
The Labor Market Integration of Migrants: Barcelona, 1930.
by Javier Silvestre, Universidad de Zaragoza; Ma Isabel Ayuda, Universidad de Zaragoza; Vicente Pinilla, Universidad de Zaragoza.
January 2011.
Paper No. 2:
Bondholders vs. bond-sellers? Investment banks and conditionality
lending in the London market for foreign government debt,
1815-1913.
by Marc Flandreau, Graduate Institute, Geneva; Juan Flores,University of Geneva January 2011.
Paper No. 1:
The role of technology and institutions for growth: Danish creameries in the late nineteenth century.
by Ingrid Henriksen, University of Copenhagen; Markus Lampe, Carlos III Madrid; Paul Sharp, University of Copenhagen. January 2011.
|
 |