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Financial History Review Published for the European Association for Banking and Financial History

Financial History Review Published for the European Association for Banking and Financial History

Financial Review Published for the European Association for Banking and Financial History

Editor Stefano Battilossi, Universidad Carlos III Madrid, Spai Associate Editor (North America) David Weiman, Barnard College, Columbia University, USA

Financial History Review Increasing to 3 issues per year in 2011 is available online at: http://journals.cambridge.org/fhr

Established in 1994, Financial History Review has earned a solid international reputation as an committed to research of high scholarly standards.

The Review deliberately seeks to embrace a broad To subscribe contact approach to financial, banking and monetary history, Customer Services

which appeals to a wide audience of historians, in Cambridge: economists and practitioners. We welcome different Phone +44 (0)1223 326070 perspectives including analytical narratives, theoretically- Fax +44 (0)1223 325150 Email [email protected] inspired research, advanced empirical analysis, and the interrelations between history, finance, policy, culture and in New York: society. Phone (845) 353 7500 Fax (845) 353 4141 FHR is keen to provide a global perspective on national Email and international financial history and publishes research [email protected] articles dealing with any historical period and country or regional area. The Reviews, through its section “The Past Mirror”, is also an assiduous advocate of the relevance of history for a proper understanding of present financial Free email alerts and monetary developments, and no less importantly for Keep up-to-date with new informed and educated policy responses to them. material – sign up at journals.cambridge.org/register

For free online content visit: http://journals.cambridge.org/fhr

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Published for Instituto Figuerola de Historia y Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid

Editor Revista de Historia Económica - Journal of Iberian and Latin Luis Bértola, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay American Economic History Alan Dye, Columbia University, USA is available online at: Antonio Tena (Chief Editor), Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain http://journals.cambridge.org/rhe

Revista de Historia Económica - Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History (RHE-JILAEH) welcomes contributions with comparative approaches, especially To subscribe contact Customer Services those that include a wide geographical or global coverage. The journal will promote the presentation of Americas: Phone +1 (845) 353 7500 new topics, ideas and perspectives from the different Fax +1 (845) 353 4141 social sciences, notably new historical and economic Email methods. RHE-JILAEH publishes original research papers [email protected] on economic history, economic thought and all those Rest of world: areas of economics concerned with long-term analysis. Phone +44 (0)1223 326070 Fax +44 (0)1223 325150 The geographical area addressed in these papers should Email [email protected] preferably cover Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries and wider areas including any of these countries.

Free email alerts Keep up-to-date with new material – sign up at journals.cambridge.org/register

For free online content visit: http://journals.cambridge.org

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Published for the Economic History Association

Co-Editors The Journal of Economic History Price V. Fishback, University of Arizona, USA is available online at: Jean-Laurent Rosenthal, California Institute of Technology, USA http://journals.cambridge.org/jeh

The Journal of Economic History is devoted to the interdisciplinary study of history and economics, and is To subscribe contact of interest not only to economic historians but to social Customer Services and demographic historians, as well as economists in Americas: general. The journal has broad coverage, in terms of Phone +1 (845) 353 7500 Fax +1 (845) 353 4141 both method and geographic scope. Topics include Email money and banking, trade, manufacturing, technology, [email protected]

transportation, industrial organisation, labour, agriculture, Rest of world: servitude, demography, education, and the role of Phone +44 (0)1223 326070 government and regulation. In addition, an extensive Fax +44 (0)1223 325150 Email [email protected] review section includes the latest books in economic history and related fields.

Free email alerts Keep up-to-date with new material – sign up at journals.cambridge.org/register

For free online content visit: http://journals.cambridge.org/jeh

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An Economic Markets and The Merchants’ Capital Theory of Greed, Measurements New Orleans and the Political Economy Love, Groups, and in Nineteenth- of the Nineteenth-Century South Networks Century Britain Scott P. Marler Paul Frijters Aashish Velkar Cambridge Studies on the With Gigi Foster Cambridge Studies in American South $99.00: Hb: Economic History - $95.00: Hb: 978-0-521-89764-8: 336 pp. 978-1-107-02627-8 Second Series $34.99: Pb: 978-1-107-67894-1: 445 pp. $99.00: Hb: 978-1-107-02333-8: 274 pp. Western Union and the Creation of the American Doing Capitalism in the Solvay Corporate Order, 1845–1893 Innovation Economy History of a Joshua D. Wolff Markets, Speculation and the State Multinational $90.00: Hb: 978-1-107-01228-8: 306 pp. William H. Janeway Family Firm $34.99: Hb: 978-1-107-03125-8: 340 pp. Kenneth Bertrams, Outsourcing Economics Nicolas Coupain, and Global Value Chains in Ernst Homburg 2013 Hagley Business History Prize Capitalist Development $99.00: Hb: William Milberg and and the 978-1-107-02480-9: 646 pp. Deborah Winkler Maritime World $99.00: Hb: 978-1-107-02699-5 A Twentieth Century The Cooperative $36.99: Pb: 978-1-107-60962-4: 384 pp. History Business Michael B. Miller Movement, Pay $99.00: Hb: 1950 to the Present Why People Earn What They Earn 978-1-107-02455-7: 447 pp. Edited by and What You Can Do Now to Make More Patrizia Battilani Kevin F. Hallock Second Edition! and Harm G. Schröter $30.00: Hb: 978-1-107-01498-5: 238 pp. Financial Markets Comparative Perspectives in and Institutions Business History Second Edition! A European Perspective $95.00: Hb: 978-1-107-02898-2: 291 pp. The Shadow Economy Jakob de Haan, Sander Oosterloo, An International Survey and Dirk Schoenmaker The Foundations Friedrich Schneider and $109.00: Hb: 978-1-107-02594-3 of Worldwide Dominik H. Enste $49.00: Pb: 978-1-107-63592-0: 496 pp. Economic $99.00: Hb: 978-1-107-03484-6: 223 pp. Integration Insurance and Power, Institutions, The Third Industrial Revolution Behavioral Economics and Global Markets, in Global Business Improving Decisions in the 1850–1930 Most Misunderstood Industry Edited by Giovanni Dosi and Edited by Louis Galambos Howard C. Kunreuther, Christof Dejung Comparative Perspectives in Mark V. Pauly, and and Niels P. Petersson Business History Stacey McMorrow Cambridge Studies in the $90.00: Hb: 978-1-107-02861-6: 352 pp. $90.00: Hb: 978-0-521-84572-4 Emergence of Global Enterprise $29.99: Pb: 978-0-521-60826-8: 338 pp. $95.00: Hb: 978-1-107-03015-2: 292 pp. Prices subject to change.

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Business History Review seeks articles drawn from rigorous primary research that address major debates and offer comparative perspectives. We consider the history of entrepreneurs, fi rms, and business systems, and the subjects of innovation, globalization, and regulation. We are also interested in the relation of businesses to political regimes and the environment. Manuscripts are considered for publication on the understanding that they are not currently under consideration elsewhere and that the material—in substance as well as form—has not been previously published. Manuscripts should be submitted by e-mail to [email protected]. Authors of accepted manuscripts will receive a copy of the issue in which their article appears and a pdf fi le. We encourage BHR authors to make their abstracts available on SSRN after the publication of their articles.

MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION Authors must remember not to identify themselves in the body of the manuscript; specifi cally, references to their own work in the text should be in the third person, and citations should be written without possessive pronouns—not “See my . . .” We use the 16th edition of The Chicago Manual of Style (2010) and spell and hyphenate words according to Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary. Send a bio of three to four sentences, stating affi liation and recent publications. Be sure to include an abstract of no more than 100 words outlining the main point(s) of the paper and placing the article in context. Subheads should be used to divide the manuscript into three or four sections (or more, depending on length). Articles should not be more than 10,000 words in length, including footnotes. Each table and fi gure must be accompanied by a complete source. When submitting fi gures, make sure images are in black and white and also include the data fi les. Tables should be prepared in a Word format to facilitate in-house editing. Authors are responsible for obtaining all illustrative materials and permissions for reproduc- tion, and for writing captions. The journal encourages authors to use gender-neutral prose in all cases where it is not anach- ronistic to do so; male nouns and pronouns should not be used to refer to people of both sexes. We use the day-month-year form for dates in citations, as 11 February 2007. Double quotation marks should be used for journal article titles and direct quotation; single quotation marks are used for quoted material inside quotations.

SAMPLE CITATIONS BOOK: Thomas K. McCraw, Prophet of Innovation: Joseph Schumpeter and Creative Destruction (Cambridge, Mass., 2007), 205–21. JOURNAL: Naomi R. Lamoreaux, “Scylla or Charybdis? Historical Refl ections on Two Basic Problems of Corporate Governance,” 83 (Spring 2009): 9–34. Note that we do not include the publisher in book citations. We do not use loc. cit., op. cit., or idem., but ibid. (not italicized) may be used.

EDITORIAL OFFICE BUSINESS OFFICE Business History Review Cambridge University Press Harvard Business School The Edinburgh Building Soldiers Field Shaftesbury Road Boston, MA 02163, USA Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK Tel.: +1 617 495 1003 Tel.: +44 1223 32 6498 Fax: +1 617 495 2705 Fax: +44 1223 32 5801 E-mail: [email protected] E-mail: [email protected] www.hbs.edu/bhr www.journals.cambridge.org/bhr

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Markets for Innovation

Naomi R. Lamoreaux, Kenneth L. Sokoloff , and Dhanoos Sutthiphisal, Patent Alchemy: Th e Market for Technology in US History B. Zorina Khan, Selling Ideas: An International Perspective on Patenting and Markets for Technological Innovations, 1790–1930 Carsten Burhop and Nikolaus Wolf, Th e German Market for Patents during the “Second Industrialization,” 1884–1913: A Gravity Approach Alessandro Nuvolari and James Sumner, Inventors, Patents, and Inventive Activities in the English Brewing Industry, 1634–1850 Tom Nicholas and Hiroshi Shimizu, Intermediary Functions and the Market for Innovation in Meiji and Taishō Japan

Harvard Business School Boston MA 02163 [email protected]

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