(for indexes scroll below the volume information)
Essays in Economic and Business History
(Click
here to see the cover of volumes I and II.)
[Volume I essays are available at this site. They are linked to the following table of contents as well as to the pertinent author index entries and title index entries.]
TABLE of CONTENTS (volume I)
Part One/Entrepreneurs and Managers
Southern Merchants and the Origins of Sharecropping: A Case Study. by Ronald F. L. Davis, 15-31
Made in Japan: The Changing Image, 1945--1975 by Nobuo Kawabe, 32-45
Organization and Management Theory in the Soviet Union: 1917--1950, by J. Malcolm Walker, 46-66
The Entrepreneurship of Francis King Carey, by Dena S. Markoff, 67-77
Part Two/Aspects of Labor History
Two Early Pension Plans: The B&O and Pennsylvania Railroad Programs, by Neal Higgins, 97-107
Part Three/Some Legal Dimensions of Economic Change
The Legal-Economic Process in Twentieth-Century America, by Gilbert L. Mathis, 127-33
The Electrical Cases: Twenty Years Later, by Theodore P. Kovaleff, 134-44
Part Four/Financial History
The New York City Banking Suspension of 1837, by Milton Esbitt, 163-73
An Antebellum Attempt at National Bank Regulation: Deposit Banks, by Milton Esbitt. 174-96
Silver and the Spanish Empire, by Dennis O. Flynn, 197-211
Coin Scarcity in Italy and Money Substitutes: 1973-1977, by Reinhold Schumann, 212-17
Part Five/National Economies
Theories of the Great Depression: 1929-1933, by William T. Carlisle, 221-32
A Survey of Nordic Cooperation, by Larry Hufford, 233-41
Swedish Socialist Debates of the 1920s, by Larry Hufford, 242-50
The American Economy in 1776: Some Perspectives, by K. Peter Harder, 251-56
Part Six/Regional Economic Development
Slavery and Southern Urbanization: A Reformulation of the Argument, by Kenneth Weiher, 259-67
Energy and Industrialization: The Case of Southern New England, by Saul Engelbourg, 268-79
Part Seven/Economic Dimensions of Cultural Change
Gothic Cathedral Building as Public Works, by Virginia Lee Owen, 283-92
Economic Influences on the French and American Impressionist Movement, by Virginia Lee Owen, 293-319
* * *
Volume 2 was published in 1979 with papers from the 1979 annual meeting. No volume number appears on the printed copy. The editor was James H. Soltow.
Volume 3 was published in 1984 with papers from the 1980, 1981, and 1982 annual meetings. Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 4 was published in 1986 with papers from the 1983, 1984 and 1985 annual meetings. Edwin J. Perkins, editor.
After volume 4 the Economic and Business Historical Society published an Essays issue each year with the papers from the meeting held the year before.
Volume 5, 1987, Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 6, 1988, Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 7, 1989, Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 8, 1990, Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 9, 1991, Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 10, 1992, Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 11, 1993, Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 12, 1994, Edwin J. Perkins, editor
Volume 13, 1995, William R. Childs, editor
Volume 14, 1996, William R. Childs, editor
Volume 15, 1997, William R. Childs, editor
Volume 16, 1998, William R. Childs, editor
Volume 17, 1999, Michael V. Namorato, editor
Volume 18, 2000, Michael V. Namorato, editor
Volume 19, 2001, Michael V. Namorato, editor
Volume 20, 2002, Michael V. Namorato, editor
Volume 21, 2003, Michael V. Namorato, editor
Volume 22, 2004, Michael V. Namorato, editor
Volume 23, 2005, David O. Whitten, editor
Volume 24, 2006, David O. Whitten, editor
Volume 25, 2007, Lynne Pierson Doti, editor
Volume 26, 2008, Lynne Pierson Doti, editor
The EBHS On-Line Proceedings Journal was started in 2005 with volume 23 to line up with the printed Essays in Economic and Business History volume 23 for 2005. The author and title indexes do not include Proceedings because those articles are available on-line and can be explored with search engines.
AUTHOR INDEX AND TITLE INDEX
ESSAYS IN ECONOMIC AND BUSINESS HISTORY
Volumes 1 – 26
(Please report errors to whittdo@auburn.edu)
AUTHOR INDEX, Volume/First Page of Article
Abbott, John, 17/37
Ackerman, Jill, 15/251
Ackerman, Julie, 12/428
Adams, Sean Patrick, 15/121
Akalou, W. M., 13/289
Alchon, Guy, 7/25
Allender, Mary E., 11/218; 14/219
Allen-Schult, Edith, 3/35
Alpert, Cady, 17/89
Anderson, Eric S., 14/291
Anderson, James R., 8/289
Andrews, Melodie, 8/109; 13/277
Ansari, Mohammed, 18/33
Argue, David, 9/277
Auerbach, Paul R., 20/57
Austin, Barbara, 10/56; 11/231; 16/229
Avallone, Paola, 14/45
Badaracco, Claire, 8/131; 9/170
Baer, Christopher T., 11/191
Baggarly, A. L., 6/256
Baker, Astrid, 20/39
Bakken, Gordon M., 2/1; 3/176
Barcsay, Thomas, 10/66
Bateman, Fred, 20/71; 26/159
Bates, Toby, 22/81
Bean, Jonathan, 12/95
Beaubouef, Bruce, 13/197
Beeth, Howard, 10/41
Benson, Erik, 18/17; 19/61; 21/1; 22/97; 23/91; 25/5; 26/103
Bilstein, Roger E., 8/30
Bishop, John C., 8/40; 9/183; 10/281
Blackford, Mansel G., 2/9; 3/1; 4/275; 14/365; 15/357
Blake, Gordon J., 12/178
Blanke, David, 12/319
Blocker, Jack S., Jr., 12/335
Bordon, Karl, 14/465
Bornet, Vaughn D., 6/289
Brandl, Michael W., 18/233
Brown, John K., 17/109
Bucheli, Marcelo, 15/65
Bures, Allen, 5/142; 8/173; 14/143; 18/33; 21/51
Burke, Martin J., 17/125
Burnette, Joyce, 14/387
Buss, Dietrich G., 1/3 (click to access article)
Butrica, Andrew J., 6/211
Butterworth, Paul L., 23/125
Calder, Lendol G., 14/185
Cao, Than Van, 10/225; 11/89
Carlos, Ann M., 11/116
Carman,
Carpenter, Gerald, 7/76
Cassell, David, 15/309
Cheape, Charles W., 25/17
Childs, William R., 15/375
Churella, Albert, 12/347
Cleveland, Paul A., 7/176
Coburn, Leonard L., 9/188
Coetzee, Z. Rian, 14/15
Cohn, Raymond L., 2/17
Connors, Duncan Philip, 25/27
Connors, Raymond L., 8/204
Cooper, James C., 14/465
Coopersmith, Jonathan, 13/71
Costa, Carla Guapo,
21/175
Coyne, Michael P., 25/131
Crofton, Stephanie O., 23/1; 25/41
Crum, Robert P., 4/47
Cunningham, Billie M., 4/162
Dalrymaple, Scott, 23/55
Damms, Richard V., 14/279
Diehl-Taylor, Christiane [See also, Taylor, Christiane Diehl] 17/137
De La Vina, Lynda Y., 4/196
DeRidder, Jerome J., 4/235; 5/142; 8/ 173; 12/78; 12/86; 13/335; 14/143; 17/253; 22/323; 23/14
Dickie, Thomas S., 4/149
Dighe, Ranjit S., 20/85; 21/71, 24/69
Di Quirico, Roberto, 16/53
Doherty, Maura, 17/149 (to access Doherty's article click here)
Dombrowski, Robert F., 10/191
Donovan, James W., 6/177; 13/305; 14/497
Dopico, Luis G., 25/41
Doti, Lynne P., 2/27; 9/141; 14/151; 15/309
Dragon, Andrea C., 13/217
Eayrs,
Edwards, Pam, 12/355 (to access Edwards' article on Carrier Air Conditioning click here)
Eisenstadt, Peter, 15/335
Elfenbein, Jessica I., 15/191; 26/89
Eloranta, Jari, 19/17; 26/73
Elvik, Kenneth O., 3/265
Embry, Olice H., 5/155; 6/256; 7/237; 11/210
Engelbourg, Saul, 1/268; 4/98; 6/37; 12/1; 19/91
Estapé-Triay,
Euraque, Dario, 11/49
Fender, Ann Harper, 9/204
Ferrarine, Tawni Hunt, 14/27
Flaherty, Jane, 19/103
Foroughi, Tahirih K., 8/180; 9/217; 11/146
French, Michael, 15/43
Freeze, Gary R., 13/107
Freyer, Tony, 3/184
Funigiello, Philip J., 8/46
Furman, Jerry L., 26/133
Gardinier, David E., 17/1
Gardner, Mark L., 11/272; 13/365; 20/229
Gatch, Loren, 26/47
Genovese,
Gibbs, Ronald D., 11/295
Giedeman, Daniel C., 22/111
Gillam, James T., 4/28
Glende, Philip M. 26/5
Gomery,
Gough, Robert J., 5/46
Graddy, Duane B., 12/48
Grant, Jonathan, 15/29
Green, George, 17/137
Gregg, Matthew T., 23/20
Gregory, Rick, 9/224; 10/183; 11/283; 14/487
Gunderson, Ralph O., 18/43
Gunter, Bernhard G., 13/55
Hansen, Bradley A., 24/120
Hansen, Mary Eshcelbach, 18/59, 24/120
Haulman,
Hansen, Brad, 15/155
Haupert, Michael J., 20/57; 21/89
Hausman, William J., 6/110; 16/289
Hay, David L., 5/30
Herr,
Heier, Jan Richard, 8/187
Hessen, Robert, 8/1
Hufford, Larry, 1/233; 1/242; 5/76; 9/236; 13/305; 14/497
Huang, Kailai, 23/107; 16/15; 19/33
Hudspeth, Harvey Gresham, 16/179; 17/163: 18/73; 19/119; 20/97; 21/103; 23/39, 24/29
Huttman, John P., 6/200
Isbell, Steven B., 13/169; 19/253
Jallow,
Jensen, Richard A., 2/17
Johnson, David A., 3/206
Johnson, Linda L., 16/1
Johnson, Noel D., 24/16
Johnson, Raymond, 12/65
Jones, Hadd, 12/133
Jones, Laird, 17/17
Jordan-Wagner, James M., 12/31
Kapp, Richard W., 10/82
Karsner,
Kauffman, Kyle D., 17/89
Kauppila, Jari, 26/73
Keehn, Richard H., 3/303; 4/121; 5/58; 6/136; 9/161; 11/131; 13/157
Keeling, Drew, 17/195
Kennedy, Michael V., 16/113; 21/115; 22/127
Khula, Bruce A., 15/277
Kili, Terje, 14/105
Kinghorn, Janice Rye, 14/339
Klein, Daniel B., 11/191
Kovaleff, Theodore P., 1/134; 6/100
Koziara, Edward C., 7/220; 8/391; 9/100; 11/304; 12/428; 13/211; 15/251; 18/243
Koziara, Edward K., 12/428; 13/211; 15/251
Kozub, Robert M., 4/47; 8/204
Kraft, James P., 13/19
Kranowski, Nathan, 4/244
Lai, Chi-Kong, 12/145
Landry, Michael, 19/151; 21/127; 22/213;
23/82; 26/63
Lane, Carl, 25/67
Lange, David R., 12/65
Lee, Jonathan, 14/319
Lewis, Myrddin John, 26/117
Lewis, W. David , 8/257; 18/85; 20/113
Libby, Barbara, 3/273; 5/179; 8/121; 16/261; 18/101
Lile, Stephen E., 12/250; 18/113
Lipartito, Kenneth, 6/27; 15/367
Lloyd-Jones, Roger, 26/117
Lofquist, William, 8/317
LoRomer, David, 2/43
Lynch,
McAvoy, Michael, 22/143
McCall, J. B., 3/152
McHugh, Cathy L., 4/186
MacGarvie, Megan, 26/133
Mackey, Thomas, 12/287
Mahate, Ashraf A., 14/67
Majewski, John, 11/191
Malone, Laurence J., 16/147; 17/254; 18/123
Mandell, Nikki, 18/135
Mann, Harold W., 4/109
Marber, Allen S., 13/83; 14/305; 15/85
Martin, Albro, 2/53
Mason, David L., 18/149
Mathews, Don, 13/97; 15/109; 18/163
Mathews, Jeffrey J., 20/127, 24/102
Mathews, William C., 7/101
Mathis, Gilbert L., 1/127; 3/248; 4/209; 5/19; 14/375; 25/79
Mayes, Jennifer, 14/409
Mazzoleni, Roberto, 20/21; 22/63
Meskill, David, 23/66
Mierzejewski, Alfred C., 22/17
Millard, A. J., 3/68
Miller, John W., 18/175
Mishima, Yasuo, 3/24
Montgomery, Gilbert, 12/372
Moran, Nora K., 14/229
Moreira, Maria Cristina, 25/95
Moyer, Karyn Lyn, 22/171
Muller, H. Reed, 8/173; 12/78; 13/335; 14/143; 17/253
Namorato, Michael V., 13/129; 14/267; 15/241
Nash, Gerald D., 13/1
Naudé, William A., 14/15
Nier, Keith A., 6/211
Noraian, Monica Cousins, 19/163
Oberly, James W., 4/58
O’Connell, Sean, 22/29
O’Donnell, James M., 21/177
Ogram, Ernest W., Jr., 8/281; 9/90
Okunade, Albert A., 9/75
Oliver, Michael J., 14/117
Olliff, Martin T., 12/275; 19/179
Orton, Eliot S., 4/133; 6/129
Owen, Virginia Lee, 1/283; 1/293; 3/95
Osment, John, 19/151
Pace, D. Gene, 3/79; 5/67; 6/166; 14/133; 21/61, 24/48
Paez, Yvette M., 12/220
Palmer, Charles Steven, 22/183
Pascoe, Craig S., 12/191
Paterra, Alice E., 13/335
Pedersen, Kai R., 16/95
Perera, Manisha, 9/183; 10/96; 11/76
Perkins, Edwin J., 3/131; 3/218
Peirpaoli, Paul G., Jr., 12/106; 15/263
Phelps, Greg A., 24/48
Phillips, William H., 8/378
Piveronus, Peter J., Jr., 17/255
Pratt, Joseph A., 2/60
Pritchett, Betty M., 8/147; 9/69
Pruitt, Bettye, 15/361
Pusteri, C. Joseph, 6/1
Putnam, Karl B., 12/220
Quirico. See, Di Quirico.
Ramsett, David, 3/231
Rao, C. P., 7/230; 8/158
Rappl,
Raymond, Raymond James, 2/73; 3/115
Reback, Charles S., 25/105
Reed, Chris, 22/29
Rees, Jonathan, 16/197
Richter, Ralf, 26/173
Roberts, Priscilla, 16/31; 20/145
Rodger, Richard, 6/227
Rogers, Robert P., 22/199
Rosen, Christine, 6/13
Rosenberg, L. Joseph, 5/160; 6/273; 7/230; 8/158
Rossi, John Paul, 12/307; 13/231; 21/141
Runyon, Richard, 14/151
Ruparel, Ramila, 4/235
Russ, Jonathan S., 19/49
Russell, Malcolm B., 12/383; 21/151
Sabin, Arthur J., 12/398
St. Clair, David, 3/160
Salvary, Stanley C. W., 8/217; 11/153; 14/441; 16/307
Santamarina, Jaun Carlos, 19/75
Savitt, Ronald, 10/201
Scheidenhelm, Richard, 4/74
Schultz, James T., 8/164; 23/125;12/235
Schultz, Marian C., 8/164; 10/130; 11/ 344; 23/125; 12/235
Schumann, Reinhold, 1/212; 3/108
Schwartz, Gary T., 3/218
Schweikart, Larry, 12/118
Scott, Carole E., 7/140; 8/368; 9/51
Scott, Roy V., 10/298; 11/258
Seavoy, Ronald E., 9/35
Seltzer, Andrew, 20/167
Shilts, Wade E., 22/47
Sicilia, David, 15/353
Sigel, Louis T., 10/104; 11/25; 11/102
Silva, Jonathan, 14/207
Sisson, Edward B., 11/66
Smiley, Gene, 5/58; 6/136; 8/303; 9/161; 11/131; 13/157
Smith, James D., 19/265
Smith, Michael S., 4/14; 11/1; 13/41; 17/49
Smith, Philip R., 1/145; 5/19; 8/57; 14/375
Smith, Woodruff, 4/1
Snell, William M., 25/79
Soltow, James H., 4/271; 8/73; 15/293
Sprague, Stuart Seely, 10/12; 12/245
Stallbaumer, L. M., 17/63
Steeples, Douglas W., 10/152; 11/326; 12/264; 13/141; 14/167; 15/173; 19/195; 20/183
Stephens, Ray G., 4/254
Stitt, James W., 8/343; 10/117; 12/167
Stone, Richard D., 19/273; 21/127; 22/213; 26/63
Stone, Susan, 7/220
Strach, Lauren, 21/151; 22/229
Streb, Jochen, 21/33
Strickland, Thomas H., 12/48
Stumpf, Stuart O., 4/38
Summers, Suzanne L., 15/85; 16/127
Supanichvoraparch, Pavarin, 12/48
Swanson, Bert E., 5/101; 6/87
Sweeney, Stuart, 26/147
Swilling, Mary C., 22/275
Taylor, Christiane Diehl [See also Diehl-Taylor, Christiane], 24/34, 26/33
Taylor, Jason E., 17/215; 20/71; 22/241; 25/117; 26/159
Taylor, Ronald K., 19.273
Throckmorton, Bruce H., 9/111; 10/271; 12/26
Tiffany, Paul, 5/1
Tong, Carl H., 18/33; 21/51
Tong, Hsin-Min, 8/173
Traflet, Janice M., 22/257, 24/89; 25/131; 26/189
Troemel, Benjamin H., Jr., 12/235
Turkel, Gerald, 8/317
Turner, Charles L., 10/218
Ulrich, Pamela V., 12/209; 13/247
Vance, Sandra S., 10/298; 11/258
Van Stone, Jill L., 13/261
Vascik, George S., 7/91; 8/355; 14/91; 15/11
Volckart, Oliver, 17/75
Vrooman, David M., 6/55; 7/159
Walker, Bethany J., 19/275
Walker, David A., 1/84
Walker, Juliet E. K., 8/399
Waller, Mary E., 7/40
Walsh, Gerald A., 12/86
Ward, Karen, 7/60
Weiher, Kenneth, 1/259; 2/95; 4/225; 7/124; 10/257; 13/319; 14/509; 16/277; 18/183; 19/209; 20/199
Weisenberger, Carol A., 10/274
Weiss, Marc A., 6/274; 7/1
Weiss, Thomas, 3/48
Wermuth, Thomas S., 9/20
White, Gerald, 2/109
Whitten, David O., 5/115; 6/124; 7/247; 8/82; 9/1; 10/240; 11/247; 12/414; 13/27; 14/249; 15/209; 16/161; 17/229; 18/197; 19/225; 22/291; 23/140, 24/133
Williams, Norman C., 12/257
Willis, Rachel A., 4/186
Wills, Jocelyn, 15/135
Wilson, Stephen Douglas, 12/10
Winpenny, Thomas R., 6/242; 7/190; 9/12; 10/1; 16/239; 17/245; 19/235; 21/167; 22/301
Winter, Kenneth, 21/89
Wintz, Cary D., 10/29; 13/289
Wohlcke, Anne, 24/1
Wolk, Carel M., 8/236
Wombwell, James A., 15/323
Wood, Gregory, 26/21
Wootton, Charles W., 8/236
Wrege, Charles D., 4/176; 6/189; 7/205
Wright, Robert E., 15/143
Wueschner, Silvano A., 18/211; 19/245; 20/215
Yalung-Mathews, Don, 8/331; 10/142
Yan, Chiou-Shuang, 8/391; 9/100; 11/304; 12/428; 13/211; 15/251; 18/233
Young, Nancy Beck, 13/181
Zalewski, David A., 15/227; 16/215; 18/223, 24/56
Zboray, Ronald J., 10/168
Zieren, Gregory, 22/313
Zlatkovich, Charles P., 12/220
TITLE INDEX, Volume/First Page of Article
Accounting,
Engineering, or Advertising? Limited Liability, the Company Prospectus, and the
Language of Uncertainty in Victorian
Accounting and Financial Reporting in a Changing Environment: Historical and Theoretical Perspectives, 16/307.
Accounting Systems of Neapolitan Public Banks in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, 14/45.
Ad Valorem Transaction Taxes in the Colonial Era, 4/47.
Advertising and an Accidental Classic: Illustrated Sketches of Death Valley, 19/195.
African Business Problems and Potential Solutions, 2/17.
Airline Deregulation: Who Lost and Who Benefitted? 4/209.
Agricultural Development and Technological Innovation in Pre-War Japan: The House of Homma in Shonai, 16/1
An All-American System? Business/Government Relations and the Radio Corporation of American, 1917-1932, 12/307.
An
Alternative
Alternative Routes: Exceptional Road Building Materials, 17/229 (click to access).
Alternatives to Mass Production: Industrial Dualism and Business Structure in Victorian Scotland, 6/227.
American Business and Normalization of US-China Commercial Relations, 1979-1980, 23/107.
American Business and the China Trade Embargo in the 1950s, 19/33.
The American Economy in 1776: Some Perspective, 1/251 (click to access).
American Jewish Bankers and European Recovery after the First World War: The Case of Kuhn, Loeb and Company, 16/31.
American Manufacturing, American Technology and the Labor Question at the Paris Exposition Universelle of 1867, 22/313.
America`s
First Financiers, Bankers, and Financial Executives: The New York Iron
Merchants` Role in the First Banks and Insurance Companies, 15/85.
America`s First Marketers: The New York Iron Merchants, 13/83.
The Amana Colonies: An Experiment in Communalism, 4/85.
An American Armorer: George Augustus Miller, Jr., 1894-1983, 9/1. (click to see article)
The American Business Press and Business Community`s Reaction to German Aggression, 1932–1940, 19/163.
An Analysis of the First Receivership of the Rio Grande Southern Railroad, 1893–1895, 9/122.
Ancient Accounting, 8/173.
The Ancient Samurai Secret of Daniel Willard: Quality Circles and the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Cooperative Plan of 1923, 6/55.
An Antebellum attempt at National Bank Regulation: Deposit Banks, 1/174. (click title to Access)
Antebellum Banking in Georgia and South Carolina, 8/368.
Antebellum Communities Coveting a National Foundry: A Self-Serving Non-Answer to an On-going Problem, 10/1.
Antitrust in Camelot: A Lost Opportunity, 6/100.
Anti-Vice and the Apple: The Business of Anti-Vice Reform and the Committee of Fourteen in New York City, 1905–1932, 12/287.
Artisan’s Escape: A Profile of the Postbellum Liquor Trade in a Midwestern Small Town, 12/335.
As Time Goes By: A Chronological Study of Women in the Economics Profession, 1900–1940, 16/261.
At the Intersection of Economics and Culture: The Thrift Industry and Progressive Era Social Reform, 18/149.
The Automobile Industry’s Interest in Interstate Highway Legislation, 1930–1956, 3/160.
The Automobile in the 1920s: The Critical
Decade, 6/200.
Aviator of Fortune:
Bangles,
Beads and Bedouin: Excavating A Late
Bankers’ Preferences and Locating Federal Reserve Bank Locations, 22/143.
Banking in California, 1878–1905: Some Evidence on Structure, 2/27.
Banks, Boards, and the Question of Bank Dominance in Late Imperial Russia: The Case of the Putilov Company, 1907–1914, 15/29.
Barnstormers, Businessmen, and V12S: Bloomsburg’s Romance with Aviation, 19/135.
Barry Manufacturing Company and the U.S. Shoe Industry in the 1980s, 8/281.
B. F. Goodrich Becomes a Multinational Corporation, 1910–1929, 14/365.
The Beginning of Big Business in France, 1880–1920: A Chandlerian Perspective, 11/1.
The Best Laid Plans: Fred M. Vinson and the Decline and Fall of the Roosevelt Court, 1946–1949, 19/119.
Between
Coercion and Cooperation: The Flick Concern in Nazi
Beyond Guns and Butter: Finnish Central Government Spending Patterns in the Twentieth Century, 26/73.
Big Business Support for the Enactment of a Corporate Tax, 6/129.
The Birth and Development of Georgia’s First Enclosed Shopping Mall, 5/155.
Black Business in Houston, 1910–1930, 10/29.
A Black Elite Agenda in the Urban South: The Call for Political Change and Racial Economic Solidarity in Houston During the 1920s, 10/41.
Blind Faith of Antitrust: A History of the Relationship Between the Learned Professions and Federal Antitrust Regulation, 4/162.
Brazil’s ‘Long March’: Opposition to the Economic Elite of the Old Regime, 14/133.
British Bank Mergers Between 1891 and 1914: Their Effects on Shareholder Wealth, 14/67.
Broad Principles of Cooperation? The Open Door and Western Electric in China, 1917–1925, 13/231.
The Brussels Convention of 1902: Reevaluating the Roles of State and Industry in Wilhelmine Germany, 7/91.
The Bubonic Plague of 1349, the Wage-to-Rent Ratio, and the English Peasant Family, 23/1.
Business Cycles Creation: Some Historical and Theoretical Perspectives, 14/441.
Business Enterprise and the Construction of American Community Life in the Northwest: St. Paul, Minnesota, 1849–1862, 15/135.
Business Fluctuations and Financial Accounting Measurement: Historical Comments, 8/217.
Business Growth and Technological Change: Buckeye Steel Castings, 1881–1916, 2/9.
Business, Health, and Public Policy: The Impact of the Vinyl Chloride Case, 11/295.
The Business of Military Bounty Land Grants Before the Civil War, 4/58.
The Business of the Canal: the Economics and Politics of the Carter Administration’s Panama Canal Zone Initiative, 1978, 22/275.
The Business of Wellness: The Health Insurance Industry’s Response to Public Health Campaigns, 1960–1990, 17/137.
The Business Practices of the Frontier Editor: Indiana in the Early Nineteenth Century, 18/175.
Business Perspectives on the Full Employment Bill of 1945 and Passage of the Employment Act of 1946, 8/331.
The Business Side of Media Development: Popular Women’s Magazines in the Late Nineteenth Century, 7/40.
Businesswomen in Industrial Revolution Britain: Evidence from Commercial Directories, 14/387.
Butler
Brothers and the Rise and Decline of the Ben Franklin Variety Stores: A Study
in Franchise Retailing, 11/258.
Buy Now! Buy Here!: The Rise and Fall of the Patriotic Blue Eagle Emblem, 1933—1935, 25/117.
Calico Silver and the Fabric of Western Development, 13/141.
The Canadian Political Business Cycle, 18/101.
Can Politicians Speed Up Long-Term Technological Change? Some Insights from a Comparison of the German and US-American Synthetic Rubber Programs Before, During, and After World War II, 21/33.
Cantonese Business Networks in Late Nineteenth Century Shanghai: The Case of the Kwang-Chao Kung-So, 12/145.
Capitalism in Sri Lanka: The Scion of Colonialism, 10/96.
Carrier Air Conditioning and the Textile Industry, 12/355 (click here for a copy of the article).
Cartels or Fair Competition? The Economics of the National Industrial Recovery Act, 17/215.
The Case of the ‘Vacillating Jurist:’ Pittsburgh’s George Shiras, Jr. and the Income Tax Case of 1895, 21/103.
Catholicity and Civilization: Catholics and the Capitalist Ethic in Nineteenth-Century America, 17/125.
Cautious Transition: Charles Evans Hughes and the Supreme Court from the ‘Nine Old Men’ to the ‘Roosevelt Revolution,’ 1930–1937, 16/179.
Changing Class Relations in Detroit: 1880–1900, 1/81. (click to access)
Chaos: Historical Background and Economic Possibilities, 10/218.
Challenges in Transportation: Honda of America and the Search for Personnel, 19/49.
The Chosen Instrument? Reconsidering the Early Relationship Between Pan American Airways and the U.S. Government, 22/97.
Cleaner Clothes for Less Work: The Upton Machine Company, 1911–1929, 12/383. (click to Access)
Coin Scarcity in Italy and Money Substitutes: 1973–1977, 1/212. (click on title to access)
The Comforts of Home: U.S. Textile Firms and International Markets, 13/247.
Community Power Trends in San Antonio, Texas, 6/87.
A Comparison of the Catalogs Issued from Sears, Roebuck & Company and Montgomery Ward & Company, 1893–1906, 12/319.
Comparative Economic and Financial Structures in Argentina and Mexico: A Study of Elitist Policies, 1880 to 1916, 11/38.
Competition and State Government in Antebellum Georgia and South Carolina, 7/140.
Competition-Through-Innovation: The Third Industrial Revolution, 19/265.
A Competitive Analysis of the US-Japan Trade Relations, 1985–1995, 18/33.
A Comparative Study of the Development of Capitalism in Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Nepal, 11/76.
Conflict and Consensus in the German Political Economy During the Inflation, 1918–1923: Design or Default, 7/101.
The Consequences of Cruelty: The Escalation of Servant and Slave Abuse, 1750–1780, 22/127.
The Consultant and the Historian: Thoughts on the Future of Professionalism, 15/367.
The Consultant and the Historian: Thoughts on the Future of Professionalism. Comment. 15/375.
Continuity and Change in Georgia’s Cotton and Knit Goods Industries, 1880–1929, 12/209
Constitutionalization of Laissez-Faire Business Policy in the United States, 9/35.
Containing the Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex: President Eisenhower’s Science Advisers and the Case of the Nuclear-Powered Aircraft, 14/279.
Cooperation in the South: Efforts to Control the Price of Cotton, 12/191.
The Cooperative Traffic Program: Employee Participation on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, Phase 2, 7/159.
Corporatist and Voluntarist Approaches to Cold War Rearmament: The Private Side of Industrial and Economic Mobilization, 1950–1953, 15/263.
Corporate Cooperation and Collision: Dominion Textile and Burlington Industries, 1945 and 1987, 16/229.
Corporate Management of the External Environment: Bethlehem Steel, Ivy Lee, and the Origins of Public Relations in the American Steel Industry, 5/1.
Corporate Response to Technological Change: The Electro-Motive Division of General Motors During the 1930s, 12/347.
Corporate Strategy in Crisis Management: Johnson & Johnson and Tylenol, 8/164.
Corpse Abuse and the Body-Parts Market, 23/140 (click to access).
The Cost of a Man’s Life in Sixteenth-Century Naples: Galley Rowers on the Early Modern Mediterranean, 22/17.
The Cost of Credibility: The Company of General Farms and Fiscal Stagnation in Eighteenth-Century France, 24/16
The Courts and the Comstock Lode: The Travail of Nevada’s John Wesley North, 3/206.
Crisis or Transformation? Confronting the Myth of Agricultural Depression in Wilhelmine Germany, 14/91.
Cultural Influences on Labor Policy: American Steel Manufacturers in the Nonunion Era, 16/197.
The Cuba Company and Eastern Cuba’s Economic Development, 1900–1959, 19/75.
Dana and the Chronicle, 10/152.
Daredevils and Ladybirds: Gender and the
Aviation Industry Before World War II, 13/277.
The Decline of British Shipbuilding: Negotiations between the British Government and the Scott Lithgow Company 1960—1987, 25/27.
The Decline of the Federal Debt: Life Without Hamilton’s Blessing? 20/199.
Delivering the Goods by Air: The United States Air-Cargo Industry, 1945–1955, 8/40.
Depositor Monitoring and the Failure of the Bank of the United States, 15/227.
Depression of Deflation: A Comparison of the 1930s and 1840s, 2/95.
The Development and Implementation of the 1980 Arizona Groundwater Management Act, 10/225.
The Development of a Petroleum-Dominated Economy in Gabon, 17/1.
Development of a Work Ethic in the Family of William T. Dillard: Mercantile Giant of the 1980s, 8/158.
Development of the Accounting Profession in Maryland [Abstract], 17/253.
Development of the U.S. Film Industry: The B&K System, 2/36.
Did Stability of Common Stock Dividends Contribute to the 1920s Stock Market Boom? 9/161.
Dieselization of American Railroads: A Case Study, 3/152.
Dillard Department Stores, Inc.: A Look at Several Current Strategies, 6/273.
Dillard Department Stores, Inc.: Its Expansion Strategy, 1969–1975; 5/160.
Direct Worker Ownership: The Russian Formula for Economic Reform (1984–1994) [Abstract], 17/255.
Discovering an Economic Clique in the Development and Growth of Houston, 5/101.
Dissent from the Federal Open Market Committee Policy Directive, 1981–1990, 12/26.
Dividing Cartel Profits: The Southern Railway and Steamship Association, 9/277.
Do Business and Economic Historians Understand Corporations? 8/1.
Does the U.S. Constitution Establish Private Property Rights? 13/97.
Doing Company Histories: Working with Corporate Executives, 15/357.
Domestic Trunk Air Transportation: From Regulatory Control to Deregulation, 7/176.
Downsizing to Corporate Anorexia While Dismantling the Middle Class: Are We In Danger of Recreating the 1920s? 17/245.
The Dual Economy and the Reinterpretation of Irish Economic History, 3/115.
Early Historical Development of a Distinctive American Accounting Profession, 4/254.
Earth Roads are Easy, 18/197 (to access article click on title).
Eastern Airlines: The Rise and Fall of ‘The Wings of Man’, 12/235
Economic Gloomsterism from Malthus to Batra, 8/17.
The Economic Impact of the Civil War: The Case of Cincinnati, 10/12.
The Economic Impact of Residential Desegregation on Historically Black Neighborhoods in Houston, [Texas]1950–1990, 13/289.
Economic Nationalism, State Intervention, and Foreign Multinationals: The Case of the Spanish Ford Subsidiary, 1936–1954, 16/75.
Economic Pragmatism: The Iowa Amish and the Vision of Communal Coherence in Late Twentieth Century America, 20/215.
The Economics Behind the Role of the Korean Family Institution in the Development of South Korea, 14/27.
Economics, Grievances, Protective-Employee Unionization, and the 1978 Memphis Fire and Police Strikes, 22/183.
The Economics of Early Monorail Railroads: The Bicycle Railroad of E. Moody Boynton, 8/378.
The Economics of the Union Draft: Institutional Failure and Government Manipulation of the Labor Market During the Civil War, 17/89.
Eddie Richenbacker: Racetrack Entrepreneur, 18/85.
Edward Bok: The Editor as Entrepreneur, 20/113.
The Effect of the Civil War on Taxation in Alabama, 8/187.
Effect of Regulation on Banking: California 1879–1929, 14/151.
Efficiency Wages, Insiders and Outsiders, and the Great Depression, 21/71.
The Electrical Cases: Twenty
Years later, 1/134. (click to access)
The Elimination of the National Debt in 1835 and the Meaning of Jacksonian Democracy, 25/67.
The Emergence of Managerial Capitalism in France, 1880–1930: Three Case Studies, 13/41.
The Emergence of Professional Accounting Societies and Their Impact Upon the Development of the U.S. Financial Accounting and Reporting Leading to the Establishment of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), 12/86.
Employers Strike Insurance, 7/220.
Ending a NYSE Tradition: The 1975 Unraveling of Brokers’ Fixed Commissions and its Long Term Impact on Financial Advertising, 25/131
Energy and Industrialization: The Case of Southern New England, 1/268. (click title to access)
The Engineer as Promoter: Richard B. Osborne, the Camden and Atlantic Railroad, and the Creation of Atlantic City, 22/301.
The English Common Law in the Trans-Mississippi West, 3/176.
Entrepreneurial Conflict on an Iron Range Frontier, 2/84.
Entrepreneurial Traditions in East-Central Europe, 10/66.
Entrepreneurship and the Development of Electrical Power in Southwestern Colorado, 8/270.
The Entrepreneurship of Francis King Carey, 1/67. (click to access)
An Evaluation of the Taxation and Expenditure Practices of the State of Alabama During its Formative Years: Causes and Consequences, 12/65.
The Evolution and Development of International Accounting Standards, 10/191.
The Evolution of Accounting in France, 4/244.
Evolution of Accounting Since Luca Paciolo, 23/14.
The Evolution of Auditing from Early Civilization to the 20th Century, 5/142.
The Evolution of Compensatory Fiscal Policy During the Depression Era, 9/128.
Evolution of Inter-Governmental Tax Immunity: From Articulation to Repudiation, 8/204.
The Evolution of the Agricultural Credit System in Vietnam: 1900–1975, 11/89.
The Evolution of the Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement: Bilateral and Global Prospects, 8/57.
An Explanation of Societal Development with Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics and Energetics, 3/231.
The Exxon Valdez Incidence—Where are We Today? 11/344.
A Father Who Distracts and a Family That Underfinances: The Early, Bittersweet Career of Milton S. Hershey, 9/12.
The Federal Reserve’s Endless Search for a Policy Target, 13/319.
Financial Crises and the Great Depression in Germany, 1927–1933: A Review with Some New Facts and Arguments, 13/55.
Financial Market Integration in the Late Nineteenth Century: Some New Evidence, 5/58.
Financing Italian Growth: Italian Banks and the New York Financial Market During the Inter-War Period, 16/53.
First Businesses of Columbus: Georgia’s First Planned City, 7/237.
Flying Down to Rio: American Commercial Aviation, the Good Neighbor Policy, and World War II, 1939–1945, 19/61.
The Foreign Connection: International Suppliers to the American Aerospace Industry, 8/30.
‘Foreseeing, Thrifty, Economical’? The
Provident Clothing and Supply Company and Working Class Consumer Credit in the
United Kingdom, 1925–1960, 22/29.
Forty Plus Clubs and White-Collar Manhood During the Great Depression, 26/21.
Frank A. Vanderlip and the National City Bank During the First World War, 20/145.
Franklin Roosevelt, Federal Spending, and the Postwar Southern Economic Rebound, 20/71.
Free Ports and Economic Development, 2/43.
Frieda Hennock and FCC Policy Toward Educational Broadcasting, 10/274.
From ‘Consumptive Credit’ to ‘Consumer Credit’: E .R .A. Seligman and the Moral Justification of Consumer Debt, 14/185.
From East Liverpool to Gotham: The Mixed Fate of the 19th Century Artisan, 6/242.
From Executive to Feminist: The Business Women’s Legislative Council of Los Angeles, 1927–1932, 7/60.
From Peripatetic Boilermaker to Successful Industrialist: A World-Class Apprenticeship Pays Off for John Best, 7/190.
From Satire to Selling: Stan Freberg’s Venture into Advertising, 23/82.
From Slavery to Freedom: The Economic History of Northeastern Kentucky: 1850–1875, 12/245.
From the Lewis and Clark Expedition to IBM, Dell, and Southwest Airlines: Teaching History and Leadership to Business Students, 24/102
From Trunk to Branch: Toll Roads in New York, 1800–1860, 11/191.
The Furnace Town of Phoenix: A Case Study of the Rebirth of an Economic Community, 13/335.
Gendered
Dollars: Pin Money, Mad Money, and Changing Notions of a Woman’s
The
Geographic and Social Origins of Antebellum Merchants in
German States and the Industrial Revolution, 1800–1871, 15/11.
Getting Down to Cases: Baker & Botts and the Texas Railroad Commission, 6/27.
The Ghost of Smoot-Hawley: Past, Present and Future, 5/19.
A Glass Half Full: Capitalist Ethics in the Novels of Will Payne, 23/55.
‘The Godless Trust’: The Effect of the Growth of Monopoly in the Tobacco Industry on Black Patch Tobacco Farmers, 1890–1914, 10/183.
Gold Prices and Inflation, 1900–1995: The Real Story, 16/277.
The Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval: From Innovative Consumer Protection to Popular Badge of Quality, 21/151.
Gothic Cathedral Building as Public Works, 1/283 (click on title to access).
Government and Early American Capitalism: An Interpretation, 3/184.
Government Financing of Industrial Facilities During World War II: Are There Energy Crisis Parallels? 2/109.
The Grand Illusion: Germany’s Plans for a Customs Union with Austria-Hungary in 1918, 10/82.
Hard Times: The Course of Depression, 1893–1897, 15/173.
Henry C. Wallich: A Third Generation Banker, 19/91.
Herbert Hoover, Great Britain, and the Ruber Crisis, 1924–1926, 18/211.
The Hidden Economy of Slavery: Commercial and Industrial Hiring in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware, 1728–1800, 21/115.
A Historical Analysis of ERM Realignments, 12/ 31.
Historical Aspects of Coal Development in Southwestern Colorado: The Hesperus Fuel Company, 3/88.
Historical Evolution of Financial Accounting from Early Civilization to the Twentieth Century, 4/235.
The Historical Evolution of the United States Statement of Cash Flows, 14/143.
An Historical Examination of the Evolution of Accounting in Iran, 1900–1975, 8/180.
The Historical External Constraints on the Structure of Black Urban Business in South Africa, 14/15.
Historical Turning Points in U.S. Oil Pipeline Regulation, 9/188.
History of Accounting Theory, 12/78.
The History and Genealogy of Georgia Federal Bank, FSB, 6/256.
The History of the United States Air Cargo Industry, 1955–1978, 10/281.
Hospital Advertising in the Beginning: Marketplace Dynamics and the Lifting of the Ban, 22/229.
Houses with Walls: A Foreigner Views Life and Business in Japan, 3/1.
The Impact of Britain’s Export Drive: The Case of Commercial Vehicles, 1945–1950, 15/43.
An Impecunious Pilot: British Business Culture and the Case of Lowell Yerex, 1933–1946, 21/1.
‘The Importance of Being Excellent’: Human Relations and ‘Corporate Culture,’ 1930–1995, 14/229.
Incidental Protection: An Examination of the Morrill Tariff, 19/103.
Indiana Freight Car Builder: The Haskell & Barker Car Company and Michigan City, Indiana, 1852–1922, 5/30.
The Indian in Profirian
Indian Railroads and Famine 1875-1914: Magic Wheels and Empty Stomachs, 26/147.
Innovation, Imitation, and Entrepreneurship: The Introduction and Diffusion of the Homeowners Policy, 1944–1960, 21/141.
Institutional Competition: A New theoretical Concept for Economic History, 17/75.
An International Comparison of Free Banking Periods: United States, California, France, Australia, Switzerland, and Scotland, 15/ 309.
Interpreting Nineteenth-Century Financial Data: An Accountant’s Viewpoint, 3/265.
The Invasion of Northern Markets by Southern Iron in a Decade of Boom and Bust: Sectional Competition in the 1880s, 8/257.
Irish Economic Planning and Policy Control: 1933–1958, 2/73.
Is Commissioned Corporate History Different? Not Whether: How? 15/353.
And It Will Never be History, Either, Unless . . ., 2/53.
‘I Want My Funeral Held in the Lunch Rooms’: The Industrial Work of the YMCA, 1879–1933, 15/191.
The Jantzen Company: A Classic Case of Marketing Success, 14/219.
The Japanese Conquest of Consumer Electronics: Experience of a U.S. Component Manufacturer, 8/73.
Japanese Multinationals Since the 1950s: The Myth of Uniqueness, 11/25.
Jobs and Presidential Performance, 11/304.
Jockey International: Product and Marketing Innovation in Underwear, 4/121.
J. P. Morgan, the Clayton Antitrust Act, and Industrial Finance-Constraints in the Early Twentieth Century, 22/111.
John Steward Kennedy and the Scottish American Investment Company, 6/37.
J. S. Mill’s Probably Influence on Marx’s Trade Cycle Discussions: An Inquiry, 9/75.
Judson Churchill Welliver, Wordsmith, 24/48
Kartells and Cartel Theory: Evidence from Early Twentieth Century German Coal, Iron, and Steel Industries, 14/339.
Kennedy, Johnson, and the Dilemma of Multinational Corporations: American Foreign Policy in the 1960s, 14/319.
Kleen-Tex Industries (KTI), 9/90.
Law and Business in California, 1850–1890: A Preliminary Study, 2/1.
Leading Merchants of Charleston’s First Golden Age, 4/38.
Leadership in the Canadian Iron and Steel Industry: The Rise of Dofasco, 10/56.
The Legal-Economic Process in Twentieth-Century America, 1/127. (click to access)
Lessons in Crisis Management from the 1929 Crash, 24/89
Liberal Politics and Business Investment: Wright Patman and Lone Star Steel, 13/181.
Lillian Gilbreth and the Science of Management, 1900–1920, 7/25.
Literary Enterprise and the Mass Market Publishers and Business Innovation in Antebellum America, 10/168.
Les Amis D’Escoffier and the Post-Depression Labor Market for Chefs de Cuisine in America, 19/179.
Lenin and the Shift from Workers’ Control to
One-Man Management, 1917–1920, 3/131.
Local Money in the
Lo Nuestro, A Worker-Owned Cooperative Restaurant, 13/305.
Look to Yourselves: Tobacco Growers, Problems of Production, and the Black Patch War, 11/295.
Losing Battles and Winning Wars: Franklin Roosevelt and the Fight to Transform the Supreme Court, 1937–1941, 17/163.
Losing the Race: The British Post Office and Picture Telegraphy, 13/71.
Macroeconomic Causes and Consequences of Major Stock Market Reversals: An Historical Study, 7/124.
Made in Japan: the Changing Image, 1945–1975, 1/32 (click for access).
Major Shifts in the Status of the Big Eight Accounting Firms in the United States Since 1900, 8/236.
Managerial Entrepreneurship in Cantonese State Enterprises in the Chinese Economic Reforms: 1978–1988, 11/102.
The Man Without A Country: Lowell Yerex, His Airline, and U.S. Policy Concerning International Commercial Aviation, 1939–1995, 18/17.
The Marketing Complex: The J. Walter Thompson Company, 1916–1929, 14/207.
Marketing Language Products, 1900–1905: The Case of Agricultural Advertising, 8/131.
The Marketing of Religion: 1900–1930, 8/147.
Market-Orientation and the Multi-Factor Productivity of Cherokee Indian Farmers Before Removal, 23/20.
Market Tours, Peddler Receipts and the Shopkeeper Grapevine: An Import Wholesaler’s Attempts to Gauge Rural, African Consumer Demand in Early Colonial Northwestern Tanzania, 17/17.
Marriage Behavior and the Industrial Revolution: Was There a Structural Break? 13/261
Mercantile Agencies and the Law of Defamation in Nineteenth-Century New York, 4/74.
Merchants
and Company Directors in Seventeenth-Century European Trading Corporations,
4/1.
Merger for Monopoly: The Formation of U.S. Steel, 25/105.
The Mexican Experience in Accounting for Inflation, 6/177.
Michigan Utility Regulation in the 1960s: Emergent Conflict, 8/289.
Middlemen in the Market for Grain: Changes and Comparisons, 18/59.
Military Competition Between Friends? Hegemonic Development and Military Spending Among Eight Western Democracies, 1920–1938, 19/17.
Misconceptions in Recent U.S. Macroeconomic History, 10/257.
Modernity,
Economic Power, and the Banana Companies in
Modernization in
Monetary Policy Credibility and the Behavior
of Interest Rates in Interwar
Monopsony and Minimum Wages: Evidence from the Tobacco Leaf-Processing Industry, 20/167.
The Moral Suasion of Arthur F. Burns: 1970–1977, 9/111.
More Than a Labor Dispute: The PATCO Strike of 1981, 23/125.
Mormon Bishops and the Economic Development of the Mormon Frontier, 1847–1900, 3/79.
Mortality Rates and the Slave Trader, 2/17.
Mortgage Banking in the Wisconsin Cutover Region: Union Mortgage Loan Company, 1905–1918, 5/46.
Mortuary Mergers and the Internationalization of Interment, 19/225 (click on title to access).
Ms. Manager in the Jazz Age, 9/69.
Naples, 1692: Bureaucracy, War Finance and the ‘Renaissance State,’ 21/17.
National Aerospace Plane: Evolving Management Approaches to a Revolutionary Technology Program, 12/118.
National Council of the Pottery Industry and Its Leadership in the Whitley Council Movement, 10/17.
Nationwide Branching: Some Lessons from California, 9/141.
Nebraska’s Great Cotton Mill, 12/178.
The New Deal Goes to War: The Role of the Alphabet Agencies in World War II Mobilization, 22/241.
The ‘New Economy,’ Solow’s Paradox, and Economic History, 19/253.
New Evidence for an Infrastructural Investment Cycle [Abstract], 17/254.
New Evidence on Race Discrimination Under 'Separate But Equal,' 24/120
A New Perspective on an Old Problem: History from the Bottom Up—Lafayette County, Mississippi, 13/129.
New York City Banking Suspension of 1837, 1/163. (click on title to access)
The Nineteenth-Century Origins of the American Service Industry Workforce, 3/48.
1957: Ludwig Erhard’s Annus Terribilis, 22/17.
The 1948 Tax Cut: Prelude to Reagonomics? 13/169.
The Nordstrom Way—Will It Survive? [Abstract], 20/229.
Norway—A Corporative State: Its Historical and Ideological Background, 14/105.
Now Hawaii Is Only Hours Away!: The Airlines Alter Tourism, 17/181.
The Oil Pollution Crisis of the 1920s: Institutional Adjustments to Technological Change, 2/60.
An ‘Old Story of High Purposes But Inadequate Means’: the Small Defense Plants Administration and the Politics of Small Business, 1951–1953, 12/95.
One Man's Demise is Another Man's Gain: The Growth of the Funeral Industry on the Iowa Frontier, 19/245.
‘One Percent Inspiration and 99 Percent
Tracing Paper’: The Pan-Electric Scandal and the Making of a Circuit Court
Judge, April–November 1886, 23/39.
On the Economic Efficiency of Organizations: Toward a Solution of the Efficient Government Enterprise Paradox, 25/143.
On the Historical Validity of Nominal Money as a Measure of Organizational Performance: Some Evidence and Logical Analysis, 11/153.
On the Road with King Cotton, 1926–1940, 10/240. (click on title to access article)
On the Role of Economic History in the Convergence Debate, 18/233.
OPIC and the Church Committee: A Case Study in 1970s Business-Congressional Relations, 15/277.
An Opportunity Seized: J & B Services, Inc., the 1970s and 1980s Deregulation of the Motor Carrier System, and the Potential for Small Business, 22/81.
Organizational and Locational Concentration: The Hudson’s Bay Company, 9/204.
Organization and Management Theory in the Soviet Union: 1917–1950, 1/46. (click to access)
The Origins and Development of Technical Market Analysis, 15/335.
Origins, Development, and Concentration of the Match Industry in the United States from 1830 to 1880, 16/147.
Origins of Midvale Steel (1866–1880): Birthplace of Scientific Management, 7/205.
Origins of the Corporate Income Tax, 4/133.
Origins of the Depression of the 1890s: An Economy in Transition, 14/167.
Origins of the Electronics Industry: United States, Germany, and Great Britain, 3/68.
Our Evolving Understanding of the Value of History for Hire, 15/361.
Oz, Populism, and Intent, 20/85.
Path-Dependency and Competitive Advantage: The Adaptation of EDP Systems at Northwestern Mutual Life, 1954–1964, 14/291.
Partial Adjustment Model of the Female Labor Supply: 1940–1946, 4/196.
Pay Ball: Estimating the Profitability of the New York Yankees, 1915–1937, 21/89.
Paz, Pri, and Progress, Octavio Paz’s Political, Economic, and Literary Struggle to Inspire Reform in Twentieth Century Mexico, 21/61.
Peasant Economic Calculations and the Household Economy in Imperial Germany, 17/37.
Perceptions of the Past: The Merging of Economic Analysis, Cultural Identity, and Literature, 22/171.
Peerless Advocate: Dana’s Chronicle, 20/183.
‘A Persistent Exception to Textbook Economics:’ A Historical Overview of International Airlines, 23/91.
Pioneer Educational Activities of the National Commercial Gas Association, 1910–1918, 4/176.
Political Business Cycles and the Election of 1992, 12/428.
Political Business Cycles: Method and Criticism, 13/211.
Political Economy at the College of William and Mary, 6/110.
The Political Economy of Bankruptcy: The 1898 Act to Establish a Uniform System of Bankruptcy, 15/155.
Politics and the Post World War II Economy of the United States, 15/251.
Politics in Command: United States-China Trade, 1972–1978, 16/15.
Pollution Control in Late Nineteenth-Century America, 6/13.
Portuguese Investments in Brazil: The Contribution of Historical and Cultural Proximity [Abstract], 21/175.
Post-War Business-Labor Relations: the ‘Politics of Productivity’ and the Anglo-American Council on Productivity, 15/ 323.
The Potato Chip Industry: Cottage to Factory, 9/183.
Predictions and Developments: The Mezzogiorno, 12/1.
Prejudices, Profits, Privileges: Commentaries on Captive Capitalists, Antebellum Entrepreneurs, 8/399.
President Hoover’s Historical Image, 6/157.
Presidential Promotion and the Use of TV: An Historical Process, 14/305.
The Presidential Studies: The History of P