This article revisits the late seventeenth-century histories of two of England's most successful overseas trading monopolies, the East India and Royal African Companies. It offers the first full account of the various enforcement powers and strategies that both companies developed and stresses their unity of purpose in the seventeenth century. It assesses the complex effects that the ?Glorious Revolution? had on these powers and strategies, unearthing much new material about the case law for monopoly enforcement in this critical period and revising existing accounts that continue to assert the Revolution's exclusively deregulating effects and that miss crucial subtleties in the case law and related alterations in company behaviour. It asks ...
This article surveys the changing role of fraud (dishonest and immoral commercial practices) in publ...
Incorporated companies in Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth century International trade develo...
Recent studies of the legacy of people enslaved in the British Caribbean have neglected how non-plan...
This article analyses the public debates about the two corporate forms used in the seventeenth centu...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
This article seeks to re-examine the intellectual context of commercial policy and regulation in sev...
Michael Pearson has argued that “rights for revenue” was an important element in the European way of...
This article examines the corporate conduct of the British East India Company (1600–1874). The EIC w...
The foundation of the East India Company coincided with a dramatic expansion of England's overseas a...
At the end of the seventeenth century, Whig and Tory debate over the organization and future of the ...
The operations of the chartered trading companies in the eighteenth century have long been regarded ...
With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations befo...
The operations of the chartered trading companies in the eighteenth century have long been regarded ...
This article places a new account of the English state's changing framework for economic regulation ...
The English East India Company was first chartered in 1600, endured until the late nineteenth centur...
This article surveys the changing role of fraud (dishonest and immoral commercial practices) in publ...
Incorporated companies in Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth century International trade develo...
Recent studies of the legacy of people enslaved in the British Caribbean have neglected how non-plan...
This article analyses the public debates about the two corporate forms used in the seventeenth centu...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
This article seeks to re-examine the intellectual context of commercial policy and regulation in sev...
Michael Pearson has argued that “rights for revenue” was an important element in the European way of...
This article examines the corporate conduct of the British East India Company (1600–1874). The EIC w...
The foundation of the East India Company coincided with a dramatic expansion of England's overseas a...
At the end of the seventeenth century, Whig and Tory debate over the organization and future of the ...
The operations of the chartered trading companies in the eighteenth century have long been regarded ...
With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations befo...
The operations of the chartered trading companies in the eighteenth century have long been regarded ...
This article places a new account of the English state's changing framework for economic regulation ...
The English East India Company was first chartered in 1600, endured until the late nineteenth centur...
This article surveys the changing role of fraud (dishonest and immoral commercial practices) in publ...
Incorporated companies in Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth century International trade develo...
Recent studies of the legacy of people enslaved in the British Caribbean have neglected how non-plan...