JEL classification

Journal of Economic Literature Classification (10696) N - Economic History (877) N0 - General (63) N01 - Development of the Discipline: Historiographical; Sources and Methods (13)
Number of items at this level: 13.
2025
  • Minns, Chris (2025). Institutions and economic development on the northern frontier: the economic history of colonialism in Canada. In Frankema, Ewout, Roy, Tirthankar (Eds.), Handbook of the Economic History of Colonialism . Routledge. picture_as_pdf
  • 2022
  • Ceylan, Pinar (2022). Measuring and explaining rural inequality in a pre-industrial setting: income inequality in sixteenth-century Ottoman Manisa. (Economic History Working Papers 346). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Schneider, Eric B. (2022). The effect of nutritional status on historical infectious disease morbidity: evidence from the London Foundling Hospital, 1892-1919. History of the Family, https://doi.org/10.1080/1081602X.2021.2007499 picture_as_pdf
  • 2021
  • Deng, Kent, O'Brien, Patrick (2021). The Kuznetsian paradigm for the study of modern economic history and the Great Divergence with appendices of literature review and statistical data. (Economic History Working Papers 321). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Schneider, Eric B. (2021). The effect of nutritional status on historical infectious disease morbidity: evidence from the London Foundling Hospital, 1892-1919. (Economic History Working Papers 328). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • 2020
  • Claridge, Jordan, Gibbs, Spike (2020). Waifs and strays: property rights in late medieval England. (Economic History Working Papers 313). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Schneider, Eric B. (2020). Collider bias in economic history research. Explorations in Economic History, 78, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2020.101356 picture_as_pdf
  • 2018
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2018). Cosmographies for the discovery, development and diffusion of useful and reliable knowledge in pre-industrial Europe and Late imperial China: a survey and speculation. (Economic History working papers 289). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Seltzer, Andrew J., Hamermesh, Daniel S. (2018). Co-authorship in economic history and economics: are we any different? Explorations in Economic History, 69, 102-109. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2018.04.001
  • 2017
  • Deng, Kent, O'Brien, Patrick (2017). How well did facts travel to support protracted debate on the history of the Great Divergence between Western Europe and Imperial China? (Economic History Working Papers 257/2017). London School of Economics and Political Science, Economic History Department.
  • 2016
  • Broadberry, Stephen, Gardner, Leigh A. (2016). Economic development in Africa and Europe: reciprocal comparisons. Revista de Historia Economica - Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History, 34(1), 11-37. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0212610915000348
  • 2012
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2012). Beyond divergence: rethinking the economic history of India. Economic History of Developing Regions, 27(sup1), S57-S65. https://doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2012.657458
  • 1999
  • Crafts, Nicholas (1999). Quantitative economic history. (Economic History working papers 48/99). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.