0800-0900 Breakfast (provided in Rootes)
0900-1045 Academic Session I (6 parallel sessions)
IA: Historical Roots of Poverty
(chair: Sue Bowden) (SS0.21)
Politics, public expenditure and the evolution of poverty in Africa, 1920-2007
Sue Bowden (University of York) & Paul Mosley (University of Sheffield)
Chasing germs in Southern Europe: lessons for developing economies in the elimination of disease
Alvaro Pereira (Simon Fraser University)
Mineral resource abundance and regional economic growth in Spain, 1860-2000
Jordi Domenech (University of York)
IB: Long Run Economic Change in Asia
(chair: Bishnupriya Gupta) (SS0.11)
Two hundred years of economic growth in Indonesia, 1800-2000
Daan Marks & Jan Luiten van Zanden (Utrecht University)
Railroads and the Raj: the economic impact of transportation infrastructure
David Donaldson (London School of Economics)
Evolution of living standards and human capital in China, 18-20th centuries: evidence from real wages and anthropometrics
Jörg Baten (University of Tuebingen), Debin Ma (LSE), Stephen Morgan (Nottingham) & Qing Wang (Munich)
IC: Second Serfdom: Macro Perspectives
(chair: Rick Trainor) (SS0.13)
European yeomanries: a non-immiseration model of agrarian social history 1350-1800
William W Hagen (University of California, Davis)
Russian serfdom in a global history perspective
Alessandro Stanziani (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique)
Inputs and outputs to primary education in Tsarist Russia
Steven Nafziger (Williams College)
ID: Finance
(chair: Paolo di Martino) (SS0.18)
‘Between a rock and a hard place’: British banks and working class customers, 1945-70
Alan Booth (University of Exeter) & Mark Billings (University of Nottingham)
Spreading the net: distance, shareholding and the geography of risk in England and Wales 1870-1935
David Green (King’s College London) & Janette Rutterford (Open University)
Predicting institutional collapse: stock markets, political violence and the Spanish Civil War, 1920-36
Stefan O Houpt & Stefano Battilossi (Universidad Carlos III, Madrid)
IE: International Trade
(chair: Matthias Morys) (SS0.19)
The art of simulation; or, did the Third French Republic just pretend to be protectionist?
Jean-Pierre Dormois (University of Strasbourg)
US-Portuguese trade in the era of the first real world war and beyond: instability and opportunity, 1796-1831
Jari Eloranta (Appalachian State University) & Cristina Moreira (Universidade do Minho)
Trade booms, trade busts, and trade costs
Christopher Meissner (University of California, Davis), David S Jacks (Simon Fraser & NBER) & Dennis Novy (Warwick)
IF: Health
(chair: Barry Doyle) (SS0.20)
Analysing long-term trends in sickness and health: further evidence from the Hampshire Friendly Society
Martin Gorsky (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine), Aravinda Guntupalli, Bernard Harris & Andrew Hinde (University of Southampton)
Milk, meat, men, women and modernity
Beatrice Moring (University of Cambridge)
Reassessing the decline of smallpox in later Georgian London: a new approach
Leonard Schwarz (University of Birmingham) & Jeremy Boulton (University of Newcastle)
1045-1115 Coffee (Warwick Arts Centre)
1115-1300 Academic Session II (6 parallel sessions)
IIA: Women and Academic Careers
(chair: Francesca Carnevali) (SS0.21)
Women and economic history research in UK higher education: results from the EHS census
Helen Julia Paul (University of Southampton)
The gender pay gap in academia
James Walker, Marina Della Giusta (University of Reading) & Anna Vignoles (Institute of Education, London)
Economic history careers and LSE
Janet Hunter (London School of Economics)
Women in economics
Jane Humphries (University of Oxford)
IIB: Social Networks
(chair: Anne Murphy) (SS0.11)
The role of social networks in the bankruptcies of early modern merchant-financiers
Thomas Max Safley (University of Pennsylvania)
The failure of the protectorate excise farms: social network theory and the management of counter-party risk
D’Maris D Coffman (University of Cambridge)
Financial crises and bankruptcy in early eighteenth-century England
Ann M Carlos (University of Colorado)
IIC: Second Serfdom: Micro Perspectives
(chair: Steven Nafziger) (SS0.13)
Explaining the rise of the early modern demesne economy (Gutswirtschaft) in East-central Europe: a critique of existing models
Markus Cerman (University of Vienna)
Contract enforcement in Russian serf society
Tracy Dennison (California Institute of Technology)
The effects of manorial institutions on peasant household patterns in late eighteenth-century Eastern Europe: theory, practice and regional disparities
Mikolaj Szoltysek (Max Planck Institute)
IID: Macroeconomic History
(chair: Stephen Broadberry) (SS0.18)
Gold, money and prices during the Napoleonic Wars: was Ricardo right?
George Chouliarakis & Paolo Di Martino (University of Manchester)
The dynamics of consumption and investment in the late Victorian economy
Nicholas Dimsdale (University of Oxford)
Business cycles in South-East Europe 1870s-1939
Matthias Morys (University of York) & Martin Ivanov (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences)
IIE: Labour
(chair: Roman Studer) (SS0.19)
Referral and job performance: evidence from the Ghana Colonial Army
Marcel Fafchamps (University of Oxford) & Alexander Moradi (University of Sussex)
‘The lowest edge of the black-coated class’: the family expenditures of Edwardian railway clerks
Peter Scott & James Walker (University of Reading)
IIF: Empire
(chair: James Foreman-Peck) (SS0.20)
Imperialism reconsidered: using the economic theory of institutions to explain imperial history
Mark Casson, Ken Dark (University of Reading) & Mohamed Azzim Gulamhussen (ISCTE, Lisbon)
Regional economies in the Roman Empire: a case study in the upper Valle Latina, Italy
Eric C de Sena (John Cabot University, Rome)
Europe meets Africa: the uses and abuses of debt in the Atlantic slave trade
Judith Spicksley (University of Hull)
1300-1400 Lunch (Rootes)
1415-1545 Meeting of Schools and Colleges Committee (SS0.17)
1415-1600 Academic Session III (6 parallel sessions)
IIIA: Learning by Doing in the First Financial Crisis
(chair: Ann M Carlos) (SS0.11)
Learning to speculate: the deals of Lord Londonderry, 1717-27
Larry Neal (London School of Economics)
Learning to invest: the financial choices of Charles Blunt, 1692-1720
Anne Murphy (University of Exeter)
Arbitrage and simple financial market efficiency during the South Sea Bubble: a comparative study of the Royal African and South Sea Companies’ subscription share issues
Gary Shea (University of St Andrews)
IIIB: Business Networks
(chair: Tim Leunig) (SS0.13)
Inheritance strategies amongst small business families in Liverpool and Manchester, 1760-1820
Hannah Barker & Mina Ishizu (University of Manchester)
The strength and persistence of entrepreneurial cultures in the twentieth century
James Foreman-Peck (Cardiff University)
Visual analytics and eighteenth-century business networks: pretty useful?
Sheryllynne Haggerty (University of Nottingham) & John Haggerty (Liverpool John Moores University)
IIIC: Medieval
(chair: Margaret Yates) (SS0.18)
Credit finance in the Middle Ages
Tony K Moore (University of Reading)
Currency unions, optimal currency areas and the integration of financial markets: Central Europe, 14-16th centuries
Lars Boerner (European University Institute) & Oliver Volckart (London School of Economics)
The working year of English day labourers, c. 1300-1830
Jacob L Weisdorf (University of Copenhagen) & Robert C Allen (University of Oxford)
IIID: Economic Growth
(chair: Nicholas Dimsdale) (SS0.19)
Did globalisation lead to segmentation? Identifying cross-country growth regimes in the long-run, 1870-2003
Gianfranco Di Vaio (LUISS Guido Carli University) & Kerstin Enflo (University of Copenhagen)
Debating the ‘national interest’: some under-appreciated connections between constitutional change and national economic growth in England, 1660-1720
William Pettigrew (University of Oxford)
Mr Woodcroft and the value of English patents of invention, 1617-1852
Alessandro Nuvolari (St. Anna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa) & Valentina Tartari (Imperial College London)
IIIE: Early Modern
(chair: Nigel Goose) (SS0.20)
Women’s transmission of landed property in early-modern Yorkshire
Amanda Capern (University of Hull)
Public economy and private interests: commercial navigation in sixteenth-century Venice
Claire Judde de Larivière (University of Toulouse)
Insipid or intrepid luxury: the material culture of the long eighteenth century viewed through documents relating to English retail history
Karin Dannehl & Nancy Cox (University of Wolverhampton)
IIIF: Industry
(chair: Sigfrido Ramírez Pérez) (SS0.21)
The making of the pharmaceutical industry: sunk costs, market size and market structure, 1800-2000
Gerben Bakker (London School of Economics)
The English cotton spinning industry, 1770–1840, as revealed in the columns of the London Gazette
Peter M Solar (Free University Brussels) & John S Lyons (Miami University)
1600-1630 Tea (Warwick Arts Centre)
1630-1730 Douglas Farnie in Memoriam (SS0.21)
John Wilson (University of Liverpool)
1730-1830 AGM of the Economic History Society (SS0.20)
1930-2000 Conference Reception (Panorama Suite, Rootes)
1930-2000 Book launch, supported by CUP (Panorama Suite)
The British Industrial Revolution in Global Perspective
Robert C Allen